All the AP people, or whoever wrote the original article, had to do was add the simple caveat that all non-Antarctic lunar meteorites and meteoritical materials are perfectly legal to possess, buy and sell. A simple distinction between the legality of non-Antactic lunar meteorites and the illegality of NASA moon rocks would have done it. These people are, after all, journalism majors, unschooled in the esoteric, highly specialized field of meteoritics.

Returning to the gist of the thread, it looks like the Feds and NASA are cracking down on the private possession of lunar dust retrieved from space paraphenalia. NASA workers regularly used strips of tape to clean lunar dust off space suits before they were returned to their manufacturer for inspection and repair.

The Slezak lunar dust and other dust collected by Florian Noller from a moon bag carried on Apollo 16 has been in a gray area, apparently up until now. Unless the Feds are talking about some of the smuggled dust from the space suits. Sounds like they're talking about the Slezak dust which Noller has openly sold in the past. I think he was taken in for questioning and maybe charged but it came to nothing and he kept the dust. Looks like now they want all the dust for themselves.

Phil Whitmer
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