A restoration specialist at Cairo’s Egyptian Museum allegedly stole a 3,000-year-old bracelet belonging to King Amenemope on September 9th. The specialist reportedly contacted a silver jeweler, who sold the ancient artifact to a gold jeweler for $3,735. The gold jeweler then sold it for $4,025 to a foundry worker who melted it down with other pieces. All four individuals confessed after being arrested, the ministry stated. King Amenemope ruled Egypt from 1001–992 B.C. during the Third Intermediate Period of the 21st Dynasty. The ministry had circulated images of the bracelet to “antiquities units across all Egyptian airports, seaports, and land border crossings nationwide” to prevent smuggling. Officials delayed public notification to “ensure the progress of the investigation.” (Story URL)
Egyptian Museum Employee Stole 3,000-Year-Old Pharaoh’s Bracelet, Melted It Down For Gold

Trump unsure whether impact of economic policies will be felt in time for midterms, WSJ reports
4h ago
Police in Tasmania say missing Belgian woman's phone found two years after her disappearance
38m ago
India tightens pollution curbs as Delhi's air quality worsens
49m ago
Chile votes in presidential race expected to lurch country to the right
51m ago
Thailand declares curfew along coast as Cambodia border fighting spreads
57m ago
Golf-Higa makes history as first Japanese to win Asian Tour Order of Merit
1h ago






