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  • 67 bodies secretly exhumed at Fort Craig, NM

    67 Bodies Secretly Exhumed From NM Grave
    2008-04-08 18:30:57
    By MELANIE DABOVICH Associated Press writer


    ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — Working in secret, federal archaeologists have dug up the remains of dozens of soldiers and children near a Civil War-era fort after an informant tipped them off about widespread grave-looting.

    The exhumations, conducted from August to October, removed 67 skeletons from the parched desert soil around Fort Craig — 39 men, two women and 26 infants and children, according to two federal archaeologists who helped with the dig.

    They also found scores of empty graves and determined 20 had been looted.

    The government kept its exhumation of the unmarked cemetery near the historic New Mexico fort out of the public's eye for months to prevent more thefts.

    The investigation began with a tip about an amateur historian who had displayed the mummified remains of a black soldier, draped in a Civil War-era uniform, in his house.

    Investigators say the historian, Dee Brecheisen, may have been a prolific looter who spotted historical sites from his plane. Brecheisen died in 2004 and although it was not clear whether the looting continued after his death, authorities exhumed the unprotected site to prevent future thefts.

    "As an archaeologist, you want to leave a site in place for preservation ... but we couldn't do that because it could be looted again," Jeffery Hanson, of the Bureau of Reclamation, told The Associated Press.

    The remains are being studied by Bureau of Reclamation scientists, who are piecing together information on their identities. They will eventually be reburied at other national cemeteries.

    Most of the men are believed to have been soldiers — Fort Craig protected settlers in the West from American Indian raids and played a role in the Civil War. Union troops stationed there fought the Confederacy as it moved into New Mexico from Texas in 1862.

    The children buried there may have been local residents treated by doctors at the former frontier outpost, officials said.

    Federal officials learned of the looting in November 2004, when Don Alberts, a retired historian for Kirtland Air Force Base, tipped them off about a macabre possession he'd seen at Brecheisen's home about 30 years earlier.

    Alberts described seeing the mummified remains of a black soldier with patches of brown flesh clinging to facial bones and curly hair on top of its skull. Alberts said the body had come from Fort Craig.

    "The first thing we did was laughed because who would believe such a story," Hanson said. "But then we quickly decided we better go down and check it out."

    Weeks later, Hanson and fellow archaeologist Mark Hungerford surveyed the cemetery site and found numerous holes — evidence of unauthorized digging.

    While records show the cemetery had been disinterred twice by the Army in the late 1800s, it wasn't known how many bodies remained. Hanson said ground-penetrating radar revealed the Army left behind about one-third of the bodies.

    A lack of funding and various federal procedures delayed the excavation until last summer.

    Brecheisen's son told authorities where the mummified remains from his father's home were, and a person who hasn't been publicly identified handed over a more-than-century-old skull packaged in a brown paper bag. Alberts said that skull, which still had hair attached, was the one he'd seen years earlier.

    Authorities also found some Civil War and American Indian artifacts in Brecheisen's home, but the display rooms that showcased Brecheisen's collections had already been emptied out and auctioned off by his family after his death, Hanson said.

    Investigators believe Brecheisen did most of his looting alone, but they also know he dug with close friends and family at the Fort Craig site. Some who accompanied him led authorities to the grave sites, Hanson said.

    Brecheisen was a decorated Vietnam veteran and flew for the Air National Guard during a 26-year military career. His family described him as "one of the state's foremost preservationists of historical facts and sites" in his obituary.

    Those close to Brecheisen said his looting may have been motivated by anger toward the Bureau of Land Management, but no further details were available. Alberts described him as a collector; it wasn't clear whether Brecheisen sold any of the items.

    Investigators believe he also dug up grave sites in Fort Thorn and Fort Conrad in southern New Mexico as well as prehistoric American Indian burial sites in the Four Corners region.

    Hungerford said they also believe he may have taken the Fort Craig burial plot map, which is missing from the National Archives.

    The criminal case against Brecheisen was closed upon his death and there are no plans to investigate his family members, assistant U.S. Attorney Mary McCulloch said.

    Alberts said he asked Brecheisen to come clean.

    "I had urged him to simply return the remains, about 10, 15 years before he got ill. I offered to act as an honest broker to the deal and see that they were returned, but I didn't get a response," Alberts said. "I didn't want to get a friend in trouble."

    He added: "But you look back and think you would have done everything differently if you would have known everything was going to disappear."


    All I can say is..."WTF?"
    Tim Blackmon
    Hedgesville Blues
    SHOCKER MESS

  • #2
    Re: 67 bodies secretly exhumed at Fort Craig, NM

    Originally posted by Private Longshanks View Post
    All I can say is..."WTF?"
    Amen to that, Shanky!

    Eric
    Eric J. Mink
    Co. A, 4th Va Inf
    Stonewall Brigade

    Help Preserve the Slaughter Pen Farm - Fredericksburg, Va.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: 67 bodies secretly exhumed at Fort Craig, NM

      It's hard to believe that people do things like that. You wonder what is going through their head when the desecrate a cemetery.
      Pvt. Rudy Norvelle
      20th Maine Vol Inf Co. G
      Third Brigade, First Divison, Fifth Corps
      Army of the Potomac

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: 67 bodies secretly exhumed at Fort Craig, NM

        I'm wondering about several aspects of this story.

        First, the timeline:

        1978? - Alberts sees mummified soldier in Brecheisen's home.

        1994 or 1989 (?) Alberts urges Breicheisen to go with him to the authorities. Neither man does anything. Alberts "didn't want to get a friend in trouble."

        2004 - Breicheisen dies.
        2004 - November - Alberts goes to the authorities.

        Sometime later, authorities approach Breicheisen's family, but "much already sold."

        2007 - August to October - Exhumation of bodies


        So, what was happening between 2004 and 2007? Obviously at this point someone went looking for the Ft. Craig burial map and found it was missing. Why did it take two years to get things moving to exhume the rest of the bodies?

        Second Issue:
        If Don Alexander didn't say anything, obviously we wouldn't know about it. But if he's described as a "retired historian with Kirkland Air Force Base", does that mean that 30 years ago he was a professional historian, at Kirkland or some other location? A historian employed by the armed services of this country knew about this and did nothing?


        Does he then bear part of the responsibility for the looting that he may have been able to prevent? And the recovery of artifacts or bodies that might have been possible if he had acted sooner?

        Third issue:
        If the family returned the skull, does that mean that there might be records showing where the rest of Brecheisen's collection of looted artifacts and (potentially) other soldiers' bodies, went, if they were sold at the time of his death?


        I find the whole idea of professional historians using their knowledge to steal and loot very disturbing. This story makes me sad and angry in some of the same ways as the story about the stealing of documents and maps from the National Archives and the New York State Archives.

        Karin Timour
        Period Knitting -- Socks, Sleeping Hats, Balaclavas
        Atlantic Guard Soldiers' Aid Society
        Email: Ktimour@aol.com
        Last edited by KarinTimour; 04-09-2008, 05:03 AM.

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: 67 bodies secretly exhumed at Fort Craig, NM

          Did digging with close friends and family? Wonder what exactly he had told those people that would've kept anyone from making mention of the activity. Wouldn't anyone wonder why they were unearthing human remains? Or why their friend had human remains and so forth on display in his home? The part that really gets me is the friend who knew of it years ago and thought that just talking would do something. I'm led to believe that if I were to encounter an intersting display in a home such as mentioned in the article, I might just go out and try to tell someone. Don't know who exactly, but I'd still try to talk to someone about it.
          Looting graves... the obvious choice of action when having difficulties with the Bureau of Land Management... some interesting people out there.
          [FONT=Palatino Linotype][COLOR=Black]Nicholas A. Keen
          Cannoneer Battery B, 3rd Penna. Artillery
          "When our boys went about the citizens they seemed surly and unaccomadating and showed no disposition to grant us any favors, for which I could not blame them because the soldiers I know to be a great nuisance"- Robert Patrick "Reluctant Rebel"
          [url]http://www.authentic-campaigner.com/forum/armysystem.php?do=recruit&uniqueid=37[/url]
          Harper's Weekly May 4 1861: "War they have invoked; war let them have; and God be the judge between us."

          "There is nothing so exhilarating in life as to be shot at without effect."

          - Winston Churchill





          [/COLOR][/FONT]

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: 67 bodies secretly exhumed at Fort Craig, NM

            You wonder what is going through their head when the[y] desecrate a cemetery.

            Visions of money. Lotsa money.

            And people think "relic hunting" is a harmless hobby.

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: 67 bodies secretly exhumed at Fort Craig, NM

              Alberts described seeing the mummified remains of a black soldier with patches of brown flesh clinging to facial bones and curly hair on top of its skull.
              A skull wouldn't creep me out, but the flesh and hair still clinging to it would be disturbing to have in my home. It would be an interesting conversation starter at gatherings in the Breicheisen home I'm sure. People have no respect for anything these days.
              Gregory Randazzo

              Gawdawful Mess http://www.gawdawfulmess.com
              John Brizzay Mess
              SkillyGalee Mess
              http://skillygalee-mess.blogspot.com/

              "The Northern onslaught upon slavery was no more than a piece of specious humbug designed to conceal its desire for economic control of the Southern states." Charles Dickens, 1862

              “These people delight to destroy the weak and those who can make no defense; it suits them.” R.E. Lee referring to the Federal Army.

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: 67 bodies secretly exhumed at Fort Craig, NM

                "The investigation began with a tip about an amateur historian who had displayed the mummified remains of a black soldier, draped in a Civil War-era uniform, in his house."

                What?!

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: 67 bodies secretly exhumed at Fort Craig, NM

                  There are something that you read and you can't explain. :thinking: Here's one of them.
                  Micah Trent
                  Tar Water Mess/Mess No. 1
                  Friends of Perryville Battlefield State Historic Site

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: 67 bodies secretly exhumed at Fort Craig, NM

                    Investigate the survivor. As Karin says - some holes here.
                    Soli Deo Gloria
                    Doug Cooper

                    "The past is never dead. It's not even past." William Faulkner

                    Please support the CWT at www.civilwar.org

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: 67 bodies secretly exhumed at Fort Craig, NM

                      These days!?! The corpse was seen on display in the fellows house in 1978, three decades ago. ;-)

                      If you ask me , people haven't really changed there are just a lot more of them and more avenues for telling about their actions. Grave robbing, collecting bones, etc all occurred out here during the war as well, except then it was frequently the soldiers looting native American burial sites.

                      And just a bit of trivia for you: Company F, 1st California Infantry was stationed at Fort Craig after marching from California to Texas and before being moved back to Fort Whipple in Prescott, AZ. I'll have to check my notes to see which members of the unit may have passed away there.

                      Originally posted by BishopLynch View Post
                      People have no respect for anything these days.
                      Troy Groves "AZReenactor"
                      1st California Infantry Volunteers, Co. C

                      So, you think that scrap in the East is rough, do you?
                      Ever consider what it means to be captured by Apaches?

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: 67 bodies secretly exhumed at Fort Craig, NM

                        Brecheisen ought to be exhumed and placed on display in someone's parlor, as a conversation-starter. Let's see how he likes it.

                        Ridiculous.
                        [B]Joe Fox[/B]
                        Columbus, Ohio

                        [FONT="Book Antiqua"]"Find me a unit. [I]Please[/I]."[/FONT]

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: 67 bodies secretly exhumed at Fort Craig, NM

                          Originally posted by Private Longshanks View Post
                          The investigation began with a tip about an amateur historian who had displayed the mummified remains of a black soldier, draped in a Civil War-era uniform, in his house.
                          That is one of the most disturbing things I think I have ever imagined. I feel nauseous. Relic hunting bothers me enough as it is...but that's just sick. I imagine some serious psychopathy at work here.
                          [FONT=Garamond]Patrick A. Lewis
                          [URL="http://bullyforbragg.blogspot.com/"]bullyforbragg.blogspot.com[/URL]

                          "Battles belong to finite moments in history, to the societies which raise the armies which fight them, to the economies and technologies which those societies sustain. Battle is a historical subject, whose nature and trend of development can only be understood down a long historical perspective.”
                          [/FONT]

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Thieves steal remains from Civil War-era graves

                            67 skeletons secretly exhumed after tip-off about looting at N.M. cemetery


                            updated 7:32 a.m. ET, Wed., April. 9, 2008

                            ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. - Working in secret, federal archaeologists have dug up the remains of dozens of soldiers and children near a Civil War-era fort after an informant tipped them off about widespread grave-looting.

                            The exhumations, conducted from August to October, removed 67 skeletons from the parched desert soil around Fort Craig — 39 men, two women and 26 infants and children, according to two federal archaeologists who helped with the dig.

                            They also found scores of empty graves and determined 20 had been looted.

                            The government kept its exhumation of the unmarked cemetery near the historic New Mexico fort out of the public’s eye for months to prevent more thefts.

                            Tip led to probe
                            The investigation began with a tip about an amateur historian who had displayed the mummified remains of a black soldier, draped in a Civil War-era uniform, in his house.

                            Investigators say the historian, Dee Brecheisen, may have been a prolific looter who spotted historical sites from his plane. Brecheisen died in 2004 and although it was not clear whether the looting continued after his death, authorities exhumed the unprotected site to prevent future thefts.

                            “As an archaeologist, you want to leave a site in place for preservation ... but we couldn’t do that because it could be looted again,” Jeffery Hanson, of the Bureau of Reclamation, told The Associated Press.

                            The remains are being studied by Bureau of Reclamation scientists, who are piecing together information on their identities. They will eventually be reburied at other national cemeteries.

                            Most of the men are believed to have been soldiers — Fort Craig protected settlers in the West from American Indian raids and played a role in the Civil War. Union troops stationed there fought the Confederacy as it moved into New Mexico from Texas in 1862.

                            The children buried there may have been local residents treated by doctors at the former frontier outpost, officials said.

                            Macabre home display
                            Federal officials learned of the looting in November 2004, when Don Alberts, a retired historian for Kirtland Air Force Base, tipped them off about a macabre possession he’d seen at Brecheisen’s home about 30 years earlier.

                            Alberts described seeing the mummified remains of a black soldier with patches of brown flesh clinging to facial bones and curly hair on top of its skull. Alberts said the body had come from Fort Craig.

                            “The first thing we did was laughed because who would believe such a story,” Hanson said. “But then we quickly decided we better go down and check it out.”

                            Weeks later, Hanson and fellow archaeologist Mark Hungerford surveyed the cemetery site and found numerous holes — evidence of unauthorized digging.

                            While records show the cemetery had been disinterred twice by the Army in the late 1800s, it wasn’t known how many bodies remained. Hanson said ground-penetrating radar revealed the Army left behind about one-third of the bodies.

                            A lack of funding and various federal procedures delayed the excavation until last summer.

                            Brecheisen’s son told authorities where the mummified remains from his father’s home were, and a person who hasn’t been publicly identified handed over a more-than-century-old skull packaged in a brown paper bag. Alberts said that skull, which still had hair attached, was the one he’d seen years earlier.

                            Authorities also found some Civil War and American Indian artifacts in Brecheisen’s home, but the display rooms that showcased Brecheisen’s collections had already been emptied out and auctioned off by his family after his death, Hanson said.

                            Investigators believe Brecheisen did most of his looting alone, but they also know he dug with close friends and family at the Fort Craig site. Some who accompanied him led authorities to the grave sites, Hanson said.

                            Brecheisen was a decorated Vietnam veteran and flew for the Air National Guard during a 26-year military career. His family described him as “one of the state’s foremost preservationists of historical facts and sites” in his obituary.

                            Those close to Brecheisen said his looting may have been motivated by anger toward the Bureau of Land Management, but no further details were available. Alberts described him as a collector; it wasn’t clear whether Brecheisen sold any of the items.

                            Other grave sites also looted?
                            Investigators believe he also dug up grave sites in Fort Thorn and Fort Conrad in southern New Mexico as well as prehistoric American Indian burial sites in the Four Corners region.

                            Hungerford said they also believe he may have taken the Fort Craig burial plot map, which is missing from the National Archives.

                            The criminal case against Brecheisen was closed upon his death and there are no plans to investigate his family members, assistant U.S. Attorney Mary McCulloch said.

                            Alberts said he asked Brecheisen to come clean.

                            “I had urged him to simply return the remains, about 10, 15 years before he got ill. I offered to act as an honest broker to the deal and see that they were returned, but I didn’t get a response,” Alberts said. “I didn’t want to get a friend in trouble.”

                            He added: “But you look back and think you would have done everything differently if you would have known everything was going to disappear.”


                            [COLOR=Indigo][B]Regina Dante[/B][/COLOR]

                            Es mejor tener tierra en el cuerpo que el cuerpo en la tierra
                            It is bettter to have dirt on the body than the body in dirt

                            “Because I am a woman, I must make unusual efforts to succeed. If I fail, no one will say, ‘She doesn’t have what it takes.’ They will say, ‘Women don’t have what it takes.”
                            [B]Clare Boothe Luce[/B]

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Re: Thieves steal remains from Civil War-era graves

                              Um, this has been covered.

                              Comment

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