A person who labored on the Museum of the Plains Indian on the Blackfeet Reservation in Browning, Montana, was sentenced on 6 April for stealing quite a lot of Indigenous artefacts from the museum’s assortment, together with a grizzly bear necklace and golden eagle feathers.
In accordance with the Flathead Beacon, Preston Jay Noticed Eagle took a plea deal that resulted in a sentence of 5 years of probation, 250 hours of neighborhood service and $16,860 in restitution on fees of presidency property theft—the museum operates below the auspices of the US Division of the Inside and the Indian Arts and Crafts Board (IACB). Noticed Eagle pleaded responsible in October 2022 to thefts that occurred between Could and August 2021, whereas he was engaged on web site as a museum aide.
A curator initially observed {that a} bear claw necklace containing 11 giant claws was lacking from its show, prompting an investigation by the US Fish and Wildlife Service. Safety footage revealed that Noticed Eagle had taken the necklace, though he initially claimed he had eliminated it as a result of it was damaged. Additional inventories confirmed that moccasins, 26 eagle feathers plucked from a sacred conflict bonnet and a number of other extra bear claw artefacts had additionally been faraway from their shows and drawers. The previous aide took pictures on his telephone of the objects; he additionally donned a historic Loopy Canine Society shirt that was too small, damaging it within the course of. Noticed Eagle additionally posted photographs of golden eagle feathers to social media, regardless of by no means having utilized for or acquired golden eagle components from the Nationwide Eagle Repository.
“Mr. Noticed Eagle not solely stole from the museum, but in addition from the individuals of the Northern Plains Tribes”, Edward J. Grace, assistant director of the US Fish and Wildlife Service’s regulation enforcement workplace, mentioned in an announcement. “He additionally wore and broken culturally important gadgets which are irreplaceable in spirit and worth and his actions have robbed present and future generations of seeing this stuff intact and having fun with their significance.”
An appraisal decided that the grizzly bear necklace was value $3,200, the feathers amounted to $7,800. Whereas the conflict bonnet doesn’t have any authorized US market worth, gross sales of comparable gadgets overseas fetched upwards of $18,000.
“The IACB shares the outrage expressed by Blackfeet neighborhood members concerning the mishandling, destruction and theft from the Museum of the Plains Indian of culturally important and sacred Blackfeet collections by Mr. Noticed Eagle—somebody entrusted with their care and safety as a then-museum worker,” IACB director Meridith Stanton mentioned in an announcement