From today's Fredericksburg Free Lance - Star:
Third caught relic hunter gets 2 years
November 9, 2007 12:36 am
By RUSTY DENNEN
By RUSTY DENNEN
The last of three men caught illegally relic hunting on Spotsylvania Court House battlefield has been sentenced in federal court.
Jeremy Burroughs, 30, of Spotsylvania, was sentenced Monday in U.S. District Court in Richmond. He received two years in jail, a year of supervised probation, and was ordered to pay $28,600 in restitution to the Fredericksburg and Spotsylvania National Military Park.
In March, Burroughs and two other Spotsylvania men, Fenton E. Terembes Jr., 28, and Vincent E. Williams, 37, were caught by a park ranger who saw them digging in the national park on a Sunday, during the day. Their metal detectors and the relics they unearthed were confiscated.
Among the items recovered were bullets, and a Confederate belt buckle. According to evidence in the case, the men had found the buckle during an earlier foray into the park and had sold it for $3,300. The buckle was recovered and is now in the park's collection.
"These are public property and owned by future generations. Once these artifacts are gone and in private collections, they cannot be replaced," said Keith Kelly, military park's chief ranger.
"If someone is poaching deer or cutting trees, those can be replaced. With Civil War artifacts, once every bullet is removed there's no way we can have that back."
Terembes was sentenced on Sept. 24. He received two years in jail, one year of supervised probation, and ordered to pay $28,600 in restitution.
Williams, who authorities said had a lesser role, was ordered to pay $1,400 in restitution.
The men were charged with felonies under the Archaeological Resource Protection Act. It's a federal crime to damage archaeological sites on or remove property from federal lands. It is illegal to collect or search for artifacts on federal land without permission.
Violators can be fined up to $250,000 and sentenced to two years in prison.
A week after Burroughs, Terembes and Williams were caught, two juveniles were caught metal detecting in the Hill-Ewell Drive area of the Wilderness battlefield.
They were from Orange and Spotsylvania and pleaded guilty to misdemeanor charges in federal court in Charlottesville. The 16- and 17-year-olds were sentenced to community service and ordered to pay restitution.
The Fredericksburg area is home to some of the nation's most significant Civil War sites. The park commemorates four battles--Spotsylvania Court House, Chancellorsville, Wilderness and Fredericksburg--and encompasses more than 8,000 acres.
Third caught relic hunter gets 2 years
November 9, 2007 12:36 am
By RUSTY DENNEN
By RUSTY DENNEN
The last of three men caught illegally relic hunting on Spotsylvania Court House battlefield has been sentenced in federal court.
Jeremy Burroughs, 30, of Spotsylvania, was sentenced Monday in U.S. District Court in Richmond. He received two years in jail, a year of supervised probation, and was ordered to pay $28,600 in restitution to the Fredericksburg and Spotsylvania National Military Park.
In March, Burroughs and two other Spotsylvania men, Fenton E. Terembes Jr., 28, and Vincent E. Williams, 37, were caught by a park ranger who saw them digging in the national park on a Sunday, during the day. Their metal detectors and the relics they unearthed were confiscated.
Among the items recovered were bullets, and a Confederate belt buckle. According to evidence in the case, the men had found the buckle during an earlier foray into the park and had sold it for $3,300. The buckle was recovered and is now in the park's collection.
"These are public property and owned by future generations. Once these artifacts are gone and in private collections, they cannot be replaced," said Keith Kelly, military park's chief ranger.
"If someone is poaching deer or cutting trees, those can be replaced. With Civil War artifacts, once every bullet is removed there's no way we can have that back."
Terembes was sentenced on Sept. 24. He received two years in jail, one year of supervised probation, and ordered to pay $28,600 in restitution.
Williams, who authorities said had a lesser role, was ordered to pay $1,400 in restitution.
The men were charged with felonies under the Archaeological Resource Protection Act. It's a federal crime to damage archaeological sites on or remove property from federal lands. It is illegal to collect or search for artifacts on federal land without permission.
Violators can be fined up to $250,000 and sentenced to two years in prison.
A week after Burroughs, Terembes and Williams were caught, two juveniles were caught metal detecting in the Hill-Ewell Drive area of the Wilderness battlefield.
They were from Orange and Spotsylvania and pleaded guilty to misdemeanor charges in federal court in Charlottesville. The 16- and 17-year-olds were sentenced to community service and ordered to pay restitution.
The Fredericksburg area is home to some of the nation's most significant Civil War sites. The park commemorates four battles--Spotsylvania Court House, Chancellorsville, Wilderness and Fredericksburg--and encompasses more than 8,000 acres.
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