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Gary Lofgren Lunar Sample Curator NASA JSC A
year has passed since the last publication of Lunar News and many changes have
taken place here at JSC. Carl Agee has
left the Astromaterials Research and Exploration
Science Office to take the position vacated at the Lunar
samples made the news in a way we all hoped would never happen. A NASA Co-op student and 2 college interns
were able to steal a safe with Lunar and meteorite samples from a research
scientist’s laboratory here at JSC. The theft happened on a Saturday, when
no one was working in the lab. The safe was missed by an employee the following
Monday morning. Fortunately, the FBI recovered the stolen samples in a little
more than a week. The 3 individuals that
stole the safe and a fourth individual involved in the attempt to market the
samples have been charged with conspiracy to commit the theft and sale of
government property. The FBI launched an
undercover operation in response to a series of e-mails offering priceless moon
rocks for sale prior to the theft. When
the theft occurred, the FBI set up a buy and apprehended the individuals. The interns and the co-op student have all
been fired. A year later we now know that the 2 interns were sentenced to
probation for 3 years. The Judge
determined that they were the least culpable.
The fourth individual has been sentenced to 6 years in a Federal
facility (for a Federal sentence a minimum of 85% is served before parole is
considered). The NASA Co-op, the main
perpetrator, has been sentenced to 8 years.
Six Apollo space flight missions between 1969 and 1972 brought back 842
pounds of lunar rocks, core samples, and regolith
from the moon’s surface. Most of it is stored at the Lunar Sample Facility at
the JSC. This theft did not occur from
the Curatorial Facility where the bulk of the samples are worked and stored. We
have completed the samples allocations through March 2003 after receipt of
approval of the CAPTEM-Recommended Lunar Sample Allocation Plan by NASA
Headquarters. We received 14 sample requests for the Fall CAPTEM meeting which
was held at the Lunar Planetary Institute on The
transition of our Remote Storage Facility from Brooks Air Force Base in A
new effort has begun to produce a version of the lunar samples catalog on CD-ROM. This is a time consuming effort because in
addition to reproducing the text, it is necessary to substitute original
versions of the photographs for the CD version.
There is no projected completion date, but we hope to have it ready in
approximately a year from now. The
recent theft of lunar samples point up the need to return lunar samples for
which there are no future research plans.
To return samples check our web site for the instructions. Even if you are not planning to return
samples soon, you should consider preparing the sample history forms (F-75,
available on web site) for your samples in recognition that they will have to
be returned one day. CAPTEM’s
lead baton has been passed to Dr. Gary Huss of |