A case of the skeleton out of the cupboard
Date October 18, 2012
Oversize baggage ... the skeleton of a Tyrannosaurus Bataar dinosaur allegedly smuggled from Mongolia to the US. Photo: Reuters
A Florida man has been charged with smuggling dinosaur fossils into the United States, including a nearly complete Tyrannosaurus Bataar skeleton from Mongolia, federal prosecutors say.
Eric Prokopi, a self-described "commercial palaeontologist" who buys and sells whole and partial dinosaur skeletons, was arrested on Wednesday at his home in Gainesville, according to a complaint unsealed by prosecutors. He was charged with smuggling goods into the US and interstate sale and receipt of stolen goods.
If convicted on all of the charges, he could face up to 35 years in prison.
The skull of the Tyrannosaurus Bataar. Photo: Reuters
During an appearance on Wednesday in federal court in Gainesville, US District Judge Gary Jones ordered Prokopi to be held on $US100,000 ($A96,828.85) bond. He must also surrender his passport and will be under home detention.
Manhattan US Attorney Preet Bharara said the investigation "uncovered a one-man black market in prehistoric fossils". The US government seized the Tyrannosaurus skeleton earlier this year after it was sold by an auction house for $US1.05 million ($A1.02 million).
Prokopi did not immediately respond to a phone call, but his lawyer has said he did nothing wrong.
Prokopi has been involved in a lawsuit in New York over the auction because the Mongolian government has said it may belong to that country. Prokopi's lawyer in the lawsuit, Michael McCullough, has said his client is entitled to keep the creature he spent a year putting together at great expense.
McCullough has said the US government was incorrect when it alleged that the skeleton pieces were brought into the country in one $US15,000 shipment. He said there were three other shipments and only 37 per cent of the completed skeleton came from one specimen.
Federal prosecutors said Prokopi misrepresented the identity, origin and value of the skeleton of the Tyrannosaurus bataar, a dinosaur that lived approximately 70 million years ago.
Prokopi also is accused of illegally importing from Mongolia the skeleton of a Saurolophus, another dinosaur from the late Cretaceous period that he sold to a gallery in California along with fossils of two other dinosaurs native to Mongolia, Gallimimus and Oviraptor mongoliensis. He also imported the fossilised remains of a Microraptor, a small, flying dinosaur from China, the complaint said.
Prokopi brought the fossils into the country between 2010 and 2012, prosecutors said.