PAGES

Friday, March 01, 2019

Man who died in 2014 left a home filled with Native artifacts and bones, likely grave-robbed; rightful owners still sought

Sperling's Best Places map
Thousands of Native American items, including the bones of about 500 people, were among the artifacts authorities removed from the home of a rural Indiana man who died in 2014 at 90. Don Miller of Waldron was known collecting souvenirs from his global travels, but many items appear to have been illegally obtained through grave robbing, Anna Werner reports for CBS News.

More than four years after Miller's death, FBI agents are still trying to return the items to their rightful owners. Holly Cusack-McVeigh, an archaeology professor from Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis, has been helping them. She calls the grave robbing a racist act: "We have to think about the context of, 'Who has been the target of grave robbing, for centuries?" Whose ancestors have been collected for hobby?" she told Werner. "This comes down to — racism. They aren't digging white graves."

Arikara tribal official Pete Coffey in North Dakota is working with the FBI to bring some of the remains back to tribal land. "They could very well be my own great, great, great, great grandfather, or grandmother, you know, that had been — I characterize it as being ripped out of the Earth, you know," Coffey told Werner.

No comments:

Post a Comment