Hutchinson A year has passed since the Kansas Cosmosphere and Space Center gave law enforcement the results of an internal audit showing more than 100 artifacts missing, but no one has been arrested or charged.
Investigators have recovered an undetermined number of items, but none has been returned to the Cosmosphere, said President and Chief Executive Jeff Ollenburger.
Officials with the U.S. Attorney's Office in Wichita and the FBI both acknowledge having begun investigations into the disappearance of artifacts but won't say whether they are still looking into the matter or when charges might be filed.
The Cosmosphere has around 12,000 items, ranging from gloves and helmets and small tools used by astronauts to hardware provided by NASA that has been in space.
Cosmosphere officials first became suspicious in August 2003 when they noticed that artifacts were being sold without the board of directors' approval -- and that the Cosmosphere wasn't receiving the money. None of the items had been on display but some were loaned by NASA.
An internal audit the following month confirmed that items were missing but couldn't tell when they disappeared.
Ollenburger, who is the only public source of what limited information there is, said he didn't know when authorities might announce a break in the case. But he says he'll be happy if and when they do.
"The good news is that sometime soon the truth will be brought forward by credible people outside of this organization," he said.



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