Klik hier om deze tekst aan te passen.
Published on 14 July 2011
Type:
News
A Brooklyn man was arraigned Thursday on charges that he smuggled mummy coffins through New York City ports.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents arrested Mousa Khouli, 37, alleging that he sneaked in Egyptian artifacts more than 2,000 years old using his midtown antiques business. Khouli used his business to sell the priceless items, according to prosecutors.
Khouli and Joseph Lewis, part of the alleged smuggling ring, were arraigned in Brooklyn Federal Court. Another man, Salem Alshdaifat, was arraigned separately in Michigan on Wednesday.
Officials said the three men shipped Egyptian antiquities from the United Arab Emirates to the United States by lying to customs officials, telling them the objects were “wood panels” or just a “painted box.”
Federal agents said they found Khouli hiding this Egyptian sarcophagus dating back to 600 B.C., along with items at right
Instead, when officials searched Khouli’s business and his Brooklyn home, they found several centuries-old Greco-Roman Egyptian sarcophagi, the coffin-like receptacles where mummies were stashed. They also found hidden Egyptian funerary boats, a three-part coffin dating back to approximately 600 B.C. and a thousand antique coins.
Nabbing smugglers bringing in mummy coffins is a first for federal prosecutors here in Brooklyn.
“We’ve had a few cases where we’ve recovered stolen art,” said Robert Nardoza, a spokesman for the United States Attorney’s Office in the Eastern District of New York. “But I don’t recall sarcophagi,” he added. “Coffins, no.”
Each man faces up to 20 years in prison.
The artifacts will likely be shipped back to Egypt.
Latest news
20 May 2012
Cultural diversity is crucial for development
Dhaka outcome should be built up on
19 May 2012
Turkey's cultural ambitions - of marbles and men
18 May 2012
Ancient mosques under threat from rebel groups
Director of the Archeological Institute at the Academy of Sciences is on a mission
17 May 2012
Cooperation between ministeries is missing badly