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Old 01-20-2013, 12:37 AM   #11
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The judge's verdict was only that the prosecution failed to prove their case beyond a reasonable doubt.

When the police raided Golan's house, they found a fully equipped forgery lab. The had evidence from an Egyptian who worked for him on his forgeries, but this person left Israel and was not available at the trial.

You can read a highly partisan account here and more articles here.
That was some fascinating reading. From what I've read the integrity which allows for good analysis was compromised by cleaning detergents on the inscription, and then the Israel police who pulled of a soft patina layer. Allowing for that, the scientific analysis may still be most in favor of authenticity since there is old patina on a couple letters of the brother of Jesus part.

But, common sense leads to a different conclusion:

To me there are 3 things stand out as most damning against Golen, that together would seem to render all of the scientific analysis moot:

1. I highly doubt that he kept it for 30 years before discovering that Jesus had a brother named James. How could a serious collector not know? And not check around--since he surely would have known that 'brother of Jesus' would ONLY have been on the box if Jesus was someone important. Had he never heard of Jesus either? Doesn't wash.

Against this is the photo which shows a date in the 1970s. I read the date was the date the photo paper was manufactured, and that no proof was given that the photo was taken back then. EDIT: see 2 posts down..very interesting article from a Jerusalem reporter.

2. His connection to the Jehoash inscription, a shoebox-sized tablet inscribed with Biblical-style Hebrew instructions on caring for the Jewish Temple, shortly after the James ossuary. The odds of one man -- even with a reputation for paying top dollar -- owning and producing 2 historic pieces even in one lifetime are virtually nil.

3. The discovery of tools and materials AND half-finished forgeries in his apartment when police raided his apartment.

I question this. Is this guy a complete idiot? Why would have have such materials after already knowing he is under suspicion? Is it even a true story? I find it hard to believe he could be so stupid.

All 3 of these have something in common: They show an incredible arrogance by the man and a belief that he can get away with doing or saying anything. That, perhaps is the mindset of a highly successful forgerer..

And, guess what? He is right. Unlike the OJ trial, it wasn't a jury that was taken in by emotion, or overwhelmed with testimony. It appears that the judge just couldn't find enough evidence to convince him. I find the verdict unfathomable though. Did they not find damning EVIDENCE of what he was up to? How could they ignore the materials found in his apt and warehouse? How could this be the sentence?:

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On May 30, 2012, Oded Golan was fined 30,000 shekels and sentenced to one month in jail for minor non-forgery charges related to the trial. As he spent time incarcerated at the start of the case, he will not have to serve any time in prison.
The verdict is bizarre.

Is there going to be a writeup of the testimony? I'd like to know how he was able to divert attention from the findings by the police..

What if they discover that it really was stolen from Talpoit, but originally said James, son of Joseph? What if he really was James the brother of Jesus? How ironic would that be?!
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Old 01-20-2013, 01:33 AM   #12
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3. The discovery of tools and materials AND half-finished forgeries in his apartment when police raided his apartment.
Ah, perhaps I was right to be suspicious of the truth of this one. The response sounds possible.

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The prosecution claims it found forgers’ tools in Golan’s apartment. Golan claims they were used in restoring antiquities from his collection, not for making forgeries. None of these tools, however, could be used to engrave the inscription on this ossuary.
http://www.biblicalarchaeology.org/d...ct-not-guilty/

Perhaps the judge decided that the police and news reports mishandled the reporting here..but there's those bags of dirt. Did they really find those? How would he use dirt for restoring antiquities?
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Old 01-20-2013, 01:53 AM   #13
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1. I highly doubt that he kept it for 30 years before discovering that Jesus had a brother named James. How could a serious collector not know? And not check around--since he surely would have known that 'brother of Jesus' would ONLY have been on the box if Jesus was someone important. Had he never heard of Jesus either? Doesn't wash.

Against this is the photo which shows a date in the 1970s. I read the date was the date the photo paper was manufactured, and that no proof was given that the photo was taken back then.
check this out:

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Golan says it was some time in the early 1970s that he purchased a simple stone ossuary from one of these dealers, Ot’man Waz-Waz, that was typical of the type used by Jews in Roman times. After death, the corpse would be wrapped in a shroud and laid in a cave. After a year, relatives would unseal the tomb, collect the bones and place them in an ossuary. Sometimes, they would inscribe the name of the deceased on the box. Ossuaries of the wealthy were often richly decorated with carved rosettes and other motifs.

The limestone box was added to Golan’s growing collection. A photograph snapped by chance in the mid-1970s – deemed genuine by a former FBI photographic expert – shows it beneath the shelves on the porch outside his bedroom at his parents’ home. Books from the Technion library that Golan was using at the time for his studies are clearly visible, together with a telephone directory from 1974.

This photograph would later become a key piece of evidence in Golan’s defense.

The indictment accused him of adding the second part of the inscription – “brother of Jesus” – to the original text. The words are clearly visible in the photograph. The prosecution was unable to convince Judge Farkash that the picture was another cunning Golan forgery. In interviews published before any criminal charges were even considered, Golan’s parents recalled him taking the box with him when he left home after college.

A former girlfriend who was with Golan between 1972 and 1977 – and whose picture is on the shelf in the photograph – testified that she remembered the box and the inscription because her name was Mor Yosef and she could clearly read the words “bar Yosef” (son of Joseph). She also remembered thinking that it was a disgusting thing to keep in a bedroom and she had urged Golan to get rid of it. Golan says he kept the ossuary but thought little of it.
http://www.jpost.com/JerusalemReport...aspx?id=273554

All I can say is this: wow. I don't think they had photo-shop in the 70s! hmm...This is a powerful piece of evidence against forgery.

Thoughts? How could that all be a hoax?

A few thoughts:
1. Someone else forged it before he got it in the 70s, but he didn't understand the significance.
2. The photo is a complete hoax -- staged perhaps even by Golan -- but his parents won't testify against him.
3. The photo is real -- he had the old box but it was missing the words brother of Jesus -- he sent the photo to someone who had it photo-shopped with putting the words in, and then had that transferred onto the same kind of older manufactured photo paper.
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Old 01-20-2013, 02:45 AM   #14
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Another really good article. This one makes a strong point about the photo being the ONLY one he had with Kodak on the back..hmm...

http://www.haaretz.com/weekend/week-...ittal-1.421645

Edit: next post says he found the photo when living with his parents after being charged.
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Old 01-20-2013, 03:16 AM   #15
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This website presents a strong case for the authenticity of the ossuary and the innocence of Golan. I'm not saying they are right, but am saying they've done some good homework.

http://www.2all.co.il/Web/Sites/ossuary/PAGE2.asp

I've been on a rollercoaster tonight with this issue..from convinced it is an elaborate hoax to leaning toward believing it is authentic..
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Old 01-20-2013, 03:30 AM   #16
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very long report, lots of info:

http://magazine.bible-translation.ne...ial_Report.pdf
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Old 01-20-2013, 06:12 AM   #17
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Originally Posted by sotto voce View Post
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Has anyone ever formulated a coherent account of how the nominal leader
James was not the leader, nominal or otherwise. Neither was anyone else.
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I absolutely do NOT wish to get into a debate on either the historicity of James or the reliability of the secular historians.
Thank You.
I'll take that as a climb-down.
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Old 01-20-2013, 08:47 AM   #18
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FWIW IF Golan possessed the ossuary in the early 1970's then it seems unrelated to the Talpiot tomb which was excavated later (c 1980) .

Andrew Criddle
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Old 01-20-2013, 08:58 AM   #19
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That's right. That's the bottom line. Succinct as always Andrew
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Old 01-20-2013, 10:47 AM   #20
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FWIW IF Golan possessed the ossuary in the early 1970's then it seems unrelated to the Talpiot tomb which was excavated later (c 1980) .

Andrew Criddle
I agree.

Woke up this morning with 2 issues on mind:

First, the bags of soil. What reason did Golan give for having those? Only legit one can think of would be to do his own testing on items he was about to purchase, or had purchased..sounds far fetched though. What was said in court about those? I haven't seen anything.

Second: his treatment of the ossuary. The packaging when sent to Canada and keeping it on a toilet in a shed seem inconsistent with the idea that it was a prized possession. What other prized possessions (and he had many) were treated that way?


Is the full report of the trial ever going to be made public?
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