The Arizona Republic

Judge OKs return of Native American shield sent to Paris

- MARY HUDETZ ASSOCIATED PRESS

ALBUQUERQU­E - A federal judge on Wednesday approved a prosecutor’s request for U.S. officials to try to recover a Native American ceremonial shield that tribal officials say turned up for sale at a Paris auction house in May after it was stolen in the 1970s from a New Mexico pueblo.

The decision by U.S. District Judge Martha Vasquez approving the warrant that federal officials requested for the shield came a month after the U.S. attorney’s office in New Mexico asked for it.

Federal officials had no immediate comment on how they would try to use the judge’s order in their effort to obtain the shield and bring it back to the United States. Court documents filed in New Mexico do not say where the shield has been stored since its auction was canceled.

The judge’s decision marks the latest developmen­t in a push for the shield’s return involving top federal officials, U.S. lawmakers and tribes.

Tribal officials, especially in the U.S. Southwest, have protested for years the sale of items they consider sacred that vanished from reservatio­ns and appeared years later in foreign auction house catalogues.

Tribal leaders say the multicolor­ed, circular shield with leather straps was stolen during a 1970s home break-in at Acoma Pueblo, where a centuries-old village sits atop a mesa. A federal investigat­ion supports the claim.

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