Santa Fe New Mexican

Woman sues NASA to keep moon dust

- By Kristine Phillips

It was a Saturday, and Laura Murray was a 10-year-old girl hanging out with her nanny outside her family’s Cincinnati townhouse. Her mother, giddy with excitement, handed the little girl a small glass vial filled with light-gray dust. It was from the moon, her mother told her.

Along with it was a handwritte­n note:

“To Laura Ann Murray — Best of Luck — Neil Armstrong Apollo 11.”

Murray, who’s now Laura Cicco, didn’t see the vial for decades after that day, though she kept the autograph in her bedroom. Five years ago, after her parents had died, she found it while going through her parents’ possession­s.

“I came running where my husband was and I said, ‘This is the vial of moon dust. I have it,’ ” Cicco said. “At that time, we didn’t really know what to do with it.”

Last week, Cicco sued NASA to make sure she can keep what is “rightfully” hers. It was an attempt to get ahead of the space agency, which has not taken ownership of the vial but has a history of seizing suspected lunar material from private citizens, said Cicco’s attorney, Christophe­r McHugh.

Cicco claims in her lawsuit, filed June 6 in federal court, that the moon dust was a gift from Armstrong, who was friends with her father, a pilot for the U.S. Army Air Corps during World War II and for the Federal Aviation Administra­tion. Armstrong and Tom Murray, who spent much of his career flying politician­s and dignitarie­s, were both members of the Quiet Birdmen, a secretive club of male pilots, Cicco said. And sometime in the 1970s, when Armstrong was an aerospace engineerin­g professor at the University of Cincinnati and the Murray family was living in the city, the astronaut gave the vial of moon dust to his friend’s little girl.

There’s no law prohibitin­g private citizens from owning materials from the moon, McHugh said, and Cicco is the rightful and legal owner of the moon dust. The proof is Armstrong’s handwritte­n note, which has been authentica­ted by a handwritin­g expert, McHugh said.

Citing the pending lawsuit, a NASA spokeswoma­n said it would be “inappropri­ate” for the agency to comment.

An expert who tested and analyzed the dust found that the sample “may have originated” from the moon’s surface, court documents say. One test found that the dust’s mineralogy is consistent with the known compositio­n of lunar soil. Another test found the sample’s compositio­n similar to “average crust of Earth.” Despite the varied findings, the expert wrote in his report that “it would be difficult to rule out lunar origin” and that it’s possible that some dust from Earth “mingled with this likely lunar sample.”

Cicco’s complaint cited a previous case involving an elderly California woman who accused NASA officials of wrongfully seizing lunar mementos that her late husband, an Apollo program engineer, had given her. Joann Davis said her husband left her two paperweigh­ts that contained a rice-grain-sized fragment of lunar material, or “moonrock,” and a piece of the Apollo 11 heat shield. Davis said Armstrong gave the mementos to her husband, Robert Davis.

Joann Davis decided to sell the paperweigh­ts in 2011. She reached out to NASA, hoping the agency would help her find a buyer. But a NASA official suspected that Davis had committed a crime by being in possession of contraband or stolen government property.

 ?? PHOTOS BY CHRISTOPHE­R MCHUGH/ ?? Laura Murray Cicco has sued NASA so she can keep a vial of moon dust that she says Neil Armstrong gave her when she was young. At right is a note from the astronaut.
PHOTOS BY CHRISTOPHE­R MCHUGH/ Laura Murray Cicco has sued NASA so she can keep a vial of moon dust that she says Neil Armstrong gave her when she was young. At right is a note from the astronaut.
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