that proves beyond any doubt that not only do we have Bahgdad, but it's secure enough for some schmuck to walk out with the evil dictator's artworkStolen Iraqi paintings nabbed in U.S.
TV news engineer caught with looted works at Dulles airport
ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON, April 23 A television news engineer faces smuggling charges after attempting to bring into the United States 12 stolen Iraqi paintings, monetary bonds and other items, federal officials said Wednesday. A criminal complaint filed in U.S. District Court in Alexandria, Va., charges that Benjamin James Johnson, 27, tried to bring the paintings into this country last Thursday.
An affidavit filed with the criminal complaint says that Benjamin Johnson, who accompanied U.S. troops in Baghdad, gathered up the paintings at a palace that belonged to Uday Hussein, one of Saddams sons.
THEY WERE CONTAINED in a large cardboard box that was examined by Customs agents at Dulles International Airport outside Washington.
An affidavit filed with the criminal complaint says that Johnson, who accompanied U.S. troops in Baghdad, gathered up the paintings at a palace that belonged to Uday Hussein, one of Iraqi President Saddam Husseins sons. The paintings depict Saddam and Uday.
Johnson, who initially told Customs officials he was given the paintings by Iraqi citizens, said he had planned to keep them for decoration and to provide one to his employer, the affidavit says. It is U.S. policy that all such items belong to the Iraqi people.
FIRED BY FOX NEWS
Johnson worked for six years as a satellite truck engineer for Fox News Channel, which fired him after learning he had admitted to taking the paintings, a network statement said.
This is an unfortunate incident and his supervisor took the appropriate action for this transgression, the statement added.
Juice: Rumor madness, deep denial
The case was one of several to be detailed later Wednesday by Customs officials, who have seized other Iraqi artworks, weapons and other materials people have tried to smuggle into this country.
Museums, businesses, government offices and homes were widely looted in Baghdad after the fall of Saddams regime. Among the items stolen were thousands of artworks and other antiquities, some thousands of years old, from Iraqs vast collections of items from Assyrian, Mesopotamian, Sumerian and other cultures.
An examination of Johnsons luggage also turned up 40 Iraqi Monetary Bonds and a visitors badge from the U.S. embassy in Kuwait. Johnson, who lives in Alexandria, Va., has not been arrested but is to appear before a federal magistrate next Tuesday.
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