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Can anyone tell me what happened in this trial?

http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=345949&CategoryId=14919

Bolivia Wants a Look at Recovered Spanish Treasure


LA PAZ – The Bolivian government confirmed Wednesday that it has begun diplomatic efforts vis-a-vis the United States to have an expert examine the Spanish colonial treasure salvaged from the ocean bottom in 2007 by a U.S. firm to see if it came from Bolivian silver mines and, if that proves to be the case, to reclaim it.

The head of cataloguing at the Ministry of Cultures, Lupe Meneses, told Efe that diplomatic efforts are being undertaken in Washington to have an expert in Bolivian numismatics examine the booty consisting of some 500,000 silver and gold coins.

The $500 million treasure is already at the center of a legal battle between the Spanish government and Odyssey Marine Exploration, Inc., which recovered the coins in May 2007.

In a June 3 report, federal Magistrate Mark Pizzo said Spain had demonstrated that the source of the treasure Odyssey salvaged from Atlantic waters in May 2007 was the Nuestra Señora de las Mercedes, a Spanish navy frigate destroyed in battle in 1804.

Pizzo concluded the wreck and its contents were subject to the principle of sovereign immunity and that the loot should be handed over to Madrid.

The Mercedes sank in action against a British fleet on Oct. 5, 1804, off the coast of southern Portugal, and Spain claims not only the vessel and cargo, but a right to preserve the gravesite of more than 250 Spanish sailors and citizens who went down with the frigate.

Odyssey, however, contends that Pizzo ignored “clear and convincing evidence of the commercial nature of the Mercedes’ mission at the time of her demise,” a factor the firm “believes legally nullifies the claim to sovereign immunity of that vessel.”

“The majority of the coins aboard the Mercedes were merchant-owned, commercial cargo being shipped as freight for a fee and were never owned by Spain,” Odyssey maintains, and the U.S. courts have yet to definitively rule on the matter.

Meneses said Wednesday that if it proves that the treasure consists of coins minted in the Bolivian city of Potosi, home of the Cerro Rico mines that were the means of support for the Spanish crown, Bolivia also has the right to claim the treasure as part of its national patrimony.

She said Bolivia would enter into a dispute with the United States, Spain and Peru to recover the treasure, even if the U.S. courts ruled that it belongs to Spain because it was aboard one of that country’s vessels when it went to the ocean bottom.

Bolivia believes that its position would find support from a U.N. convention regarding the restitution of national wealth to its place of origin. EFE


Does anyone have any updated info or know how to find it?
Lurker since '02. Got the seven year itch!

Gary

Comments

  • MrEurekaMrEureka Posts: 24,412 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Wasn't Bolivia a Spanish colony at the time of the shipment? If so, what sovereign rights could they possibly have?
    Andy Lustig

    Doggedly collecting coins of the Central American Republic.

    Visit the Society of US Pattern Collectors at USPatterns.com.
  • That's besides the point. What, if any is/was the outcome?
    Lurker since '02. Got the seven year itch!

    Gary
  • HussuloHussulo Posts: 2,953 ✭✭✭
    They wait until someone does the hard work and then they all want a piece of the treasure.

    Anything that is been sunk in international waters for that amount of time shouldn't belong to any one country.
    At the end of the day both Spain and Bolivia have managed fine without it. If they really wanted it back why didn't they launch an expedition themselves?

  • SaorAlbaSaorAlba Posts: 7,593 ✭✭✭✭✭
    What other countries, notably Dominican Republic and Ecuador that sent their navies out to seize the gold and artefacts when it appeared that the salvers were nearly finished. In contrast even during the heady days of the Cold War, the USSR sent a representative out to the salvage ship during the salvage of the SS Edinburgh to insure they got their agreed upon portion of the gold. But even in US waters states have gone so far, and will do so even more now with the lousy economy, to attempt to claim the gold salvaged from their waters - notably Florida has attempted it with a well publicized case against Mel Fisher years ago and lost - but they will try again as may California.
    Tir nam beann, nan gleann, s'nan gaisgeach ~ Saorstat Albanaich a nis!
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