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Particularly after the Aubitz and Harner thefts, Brachfeld, who became inspector general in 1999, has pushed to make thievery more risky. "I want to make people scared," he says. He's hired an "investigative archivist" to help with cases; tightened security in rooms set aside for viewing documents; and cultivated "sentinels," people inside and outside the Archives who are alert to theft. If anyone—an employee, a private dealer, a citizen who loves history—sees a document for sale, "I want them to be somewhat skeptical, and be knowledgeable that I exist."
Dean Thomas, in other words, is Brachfeld's kind of guy, the kind who picks up a phone when he sees something amiss.
As soon as Thomas spoke with Special Agent Maltagliati, she had a suspect. This required no super-sleuthing. The seller's name had accompanied the eBay offers of Arsenal documents. Though it was possible that he had unwittingly bought them from the true thief, the name was a first-class lead. After hanging up with Thomas, Maltagliati phoned the Archives branch in Philadelphia, where the Frankford Arsenal documents had been been moved in 1980.
Until then, officials there knew nothing of a theft. But they certainly knew the name Maltagliati gave them: Denning McTague had just finished a two-month, unpaid internship at the Archives branch in Philadelphia. The conclusion was painfully clear. "I recall being really mad," says Leslie Simon, the director of archival operations at the branch.
McTague, who declined through his attorney to be interviewed for this article, was then 39, which might seem old for an intern. But his family business, Denning House Antiquarian Books and Manuscripts, had been struggling. So he had enrolled at State University of New York at Albany to pursue a master's degree in information systems in the hope of becoming a librarian, according to court records. Was hiring McTague unwise, given that his business involved precisely what the Archives held? "It gave me pause," Simon says. But his degree adviser had vouched for him.
Among McTague's tasks was to sort through Arsenal files for items to help mark the 150th anniversary of the Civil War, which begins in 2011. Simon recalls that he sometimes showed her Arsenal documents he liked, including "some of the things he ended up taking."
So, by lunch on September 25, an often-nettlesome part of an investigation—who did it—was in all likelihood settled. But an equally critical riddle remained.
What, precisely, had the perpetrator done?
If a house is burgled, figuring out what's gone is usually no challenge. But major libraries and archives often have so many rare items that they haven't been able to make a proper record of each one. It's not always obvious they've been robbed even when they have been.
The University of Texas, for example, learned only in 2001 that its copy of a rare 16th-century book on lettering had been swiped as part of a larger theft in the early 1990s. The school had acquired the book when it purchased a large collection, but the volume had been stolen before it was recorded in the main catalog. Inventory checks never detected its absence. Only when the book appeared on an auction-house list years later did the university realize it was gone.
Last year, the Archives discovered that it owned a letter written by President Abraham Lincoln three days after the Battle of Gettysburg. It reflected his hope that Union Gen. George Meade would pursue the beaten Confederate Army because its destruction could end the war. Despite its obvious importance, the Archives had no clue it even had the letter until an employee found it while searching Civil War files to answer a reference query. "We have no item-level inventory," Brachfeld says. "We can't. We have billions of records."
In Philadelphia, the Archives knew that among the boxes in its 11 basement rooms were Frankford Arsenal documents, but it did not know the contents of each box. There was no easy way to find out what was no longer inside. Agents could raid McTague's house to recover what he had not yet sold. But if he wasn't keeping the documents there, and if he refused to cooperate after being arrested, the Archives might never know the total number he took or where he cached the remainder. So instead of going after the suspect immediately, investigators went after the documents. They would buy them on the open market, find the hiding place, or both.
After making the 83-mile drive to Gettysburg, Maltagliati and a second agent crafted a sting operation. Jim Thomas would offer via e-mail to buy more documents from McTague, giving him a cellphone number so they could talk directly. If McTague called, however, the phone would be answered by an agent pretending to be Jim. If a buy could be arranged, the government would get firsthand evidence—and maybe a crop of documents.
But the sting would take a while. "With each passing day, these documents were at risk of being sold to third parties or being damaged," says Ross W. Weiland, the Archives assistant inspector general. Moreover, investigators were contacting people who had bought Arsenal documents, raising the likelihood that word of the pursuit would reach McTague. So, as the sting was being put in place, federal agents also tried to figure out from where McTague was mailing the documents he sold. If they could find out, they would go after what was left.
Simultaneously, in Philadelphia, Simon and the branch archivist, Jefferson Moak, were using the few clues they had to pin down what was missing from the Arsenal files. "They were working day and night," Maltagliati says. "I could tell by the e-mails I was getting at home."
From eBay, of course, the pair learned not only what was for sale but what had sold. But they could not assume that was everything, so they used deduction to identify other stolen documents. For example, Arsenal officials had often replied to letters from munitions companies. If a copy of such a reply was still in the files, but the incoming letter to which the reply referred was not, McTague probably had it.
Related topics: American History Crime American Civil War
Additional Sources
"A Theft in the Library," by William Finnegan, The New Yorker, October 17, 2005


Comments
Great Website I accidentally found it . I'm so lucky today because I'm a journalist as well as environmentalist. I like the presntation but only thing I can only read one page today because I have to go for work. In the evening I will open again and read it.Now I read "to cach the thief" . It's super. Soe Myint Than
Posted by SoeMyintThan on March 27,2008 | 05:37PM
"To Catch A Thief" is a fascinating article. As a custom picture framer I often see valuable items such as these and often wonder where my customers come up with this stuff. Is there a list of missing items we(as a group) might avail ourselves of to assist in the search? I imagine that not every "collector" can frame their own purloined items! Keep up the good work, our history depends on it! Thanks for the opportunity of emailing! Mary Lewis
Posted by Mary Poole Lewis on March 31,2008 | 05:47AM
The general public tends to sort of laugh at these types of crimes, even though they carry jail sentences. I mean, it's not murder. But it is in a way, it's murder of history. Priscilla Estes
Posted by P. Estes on April 5,2008 | 08:02AM
i seen the new yorker story about the map thief, and stories like that really get me worked up; who do them people think they are that they can steal what's rightly belongs to the american people;
Posted by bob terrill on April 5,2008 | 10:45AM
Great Job from the National Archives and the OIG's Office in recovering these and other documents that are part of the American Heritage. Keep up the good work!!!
Posted by Jeffrey Turner on April 9,2008 | 07:06AM
Glad to hear the story has generated so much interest. My office, the National Archives Office of the Inspector General, is prominently featured here and the work we do to investigate document theft. In response to Mary's question, the public may take a look at what is missing on our website: http://www.archives.gov/research/recover/ There, you will also find a telephone number and e-mail address to contact our office directly. Thanks for your interest. Mitch Yockelson Investigative Archivist NARA, OIG
Posted by Mitch Yockelson on April 9,2008 | 07:07AM
While I certainly want to express my general disgust with those that would think of stealing from universities and archives. There is one part of this article that that I find troubling. While there are 100's of millions of documents in public archives - there are likely billions of documents owned by ordinary people and honest dealers. Yet, the quote from Brachfield is [b]"I want to make people scared"[/b] And the non-Brachfield quote from the article (If anyone - and employee - a private dealer, a citizen who loves history - sees a document for sale) "I want them to be somewhat skeptical and be knowledgeable that I exist" This is a huge diservice and disrespect to the vast majority of honest people that would never knowingly traffic is stolen goods and seems to be intended to cast doubt on all documents transactions in the country. This quote is very troubling - Tom Bowen Jr.
Posted by T. E. Bowen on April 10,2008 | 11:40AM
In response to Mr. Bowen's comment I would note that the traditional function of law enforcement is to protect citizens from those who threaten the general welfare of the public. We are simply following that time tested theory and practice. We want to stem the theft and illicit selling of documents or artifacts that may have been removed from our holdings and thus, by extension the holdings of the American public. The knowledge that we exist and will act in an appropriate law enforcement capacity should give you comfort and I would hope a measure of pride in the work that my staff performs for the nation. The best part of my job is witnessing the recovery of alienated documents which speak to our shared national history. These documents are placed back where they rightfully belong, in the care and custody of the National Archives and Records Administration. Thus, these records (including two U.S. Grant Presidential Pardons recovered just this past week)are once again within our holdings and those of all the American people
Posted by Paul Brachfeld on April 21,2008 | 03:50AM
I wonder about the unarchived documents stacked up in state libraries and archives. I am sure Kentucky's State Library and Archives here in Frankfort does not have the money or staff to establish strong security. I am emailing this article to them in hopes they will take measures to protect our documents. Kudos to Mr. Brachfeld and Mr. Yockelson and keep up the good work.
Posted by Lisa Aug on April 23,2008 | 10:11AM
As a descendant of something my whole family was very much a part of, I'm proud to see americans preserving and standing guard over americans heritage. Too many times, I get comments of the other variety.
Posted by Linda Reynolds on April 24,2008 | 01:09PM
All of the examples of thefts that you discussed told of thefts, the impacts, and the convictions EXCEPT you gave ol' Sandy "Burgler" a pass. Why didn't you tell the reader what type of documents were that he had stolen? Why didn't you tell the reader about how many of these documents were intentionally destroyed and others that were never recovered, and the fact he got probation instead of jail time? He is a scumbag and the American Archives community should have been more vocal and politically aggressive in seeing him get what the law demands!
Posted by Tom on May 2,2008 | 10:37AM
I'm with Tom, why did Sandy Berger get off so light? A fifty thousand dollar fine for stealing CLASSIFIED documents. He didn't even have the excuse of needing the money. That's probably an equivalent to fining Mr. McTague twenty five hundred bucks but he gets 15 months in jail. I guess it's true that it's not what you know....
Posted by Dave Daniels on May 14,2008 | 01:46PM
Theft is only part of the cultural tragedy. Collections in private hands are split up daily by letterhead, autograph, and just curiosity collectors wanting only individual items that catch their fancy. Last year a collection of KKK material from the civil rights years was rescued in an estate sale by institutional purchase. The seller would not even allow prior examination, he expected the hype to drive up prices. Theft of blank paper is even more common. I was involved around the edges of the 1985 Hoffman bombings and was assigned to search books at Utah State. We later discovered Hoffman had used blanks from our 1641 Fox's Book of Martyrs as the substrate for at least two Myles Standish receipts. FYI, the Mona Lisa was stolen, and its led to a curious question of was it the only one or even the original. See Seymour V. Reit, The Day They Stole the Mona Lisa (Summit, 1981). Great story.
Posted by R. Saunders on May 15,2008 | 08:31AM
while theft directly is a quantifiable crime, careless loss of documents and damage to them by failed storage methods caused by budget priorities is also a severe problem. loss of census data during conflagration of San Francisco 1906 and others remains in my mind. Floods and natural disasters loom at every town hall built on flood plains and watershed regions. Temporary storage in fungal/moldy basements and mice infested attics and closed rooms will render many document useless as yet.
Posted by Pete krohn on May 27,2008 | 09:04PM
Not only treasures of our history are being stolen every day, but many times the original was the only link to the truth of our Nation. Maybe done sometimes to revise what was taken to fit their agenda!
Posted by Jim Lingle on October 9,2008 | 04:26PM