Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

■ Among those who stopped a would-be Magna Carta thief was a Louisiana tourist.

- By Danica Kirka

LONDON — An American tourist from Louisiana helped stop a hammer-wielding thief who unsuccessf­ully tried to steal the Magna Carta at Salisbury Cathedral, working in tandem with a church employee to prevent the man from escaping.

Matthew Delcambre, of New Iberia, Louisiana, said he and his wife, Alexis, were sightseein­g in the southweste­rn English city when a man tried to shatter the glass encasing the precious manuscript in the church’s Chapter House. After Alexis tried to raise the alarm to others, Delcambre and other bystanders banded together to try to hold the thief back behind the doors of the Chapter House.

When the thief pushed past them, the 56-year-old IT expert gave chase into an outer courtyard. He grabbed the man’s arm near the courtyard gate and knocked away the hammer. A church employee tackled him and held him down.

“It wasn’t me by myself,” he said. “It was completely a group effort.”

The Magna Carta, which was protected by two layers of thick glass, wasn’t damaged.

Wiltshire police said Saturday that a 45-year-old man was freed on bail until Nov. 20 as officers continue their investigat­ion.

Salisbury Cathedral’s Magna Carta is one of four existing specimens of the 1215 charter that establishe­d the principle that the king is subject to the law. It is considered the founding document of English law and civil liberties and influenced the creation of the U.S. Constituti­on.

Matthew Delcambre, the director of the Center for Business and Informatio­n Technologi­es at the University of Louisiana, Lafayette, said he has been a bit taken aback by the attention his efforts have earned, but he told his story so that his efforts would not be exaggerate­d at the expense of others.

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