Donald C. Miller, who claimed to have worked on the Manhattan Project during World War II, died nearly a year after the FBI's art crime division seized roughly 42,000 rare cultural artifacts from his Indiana compound.
By Antonia Noori Farzan Antonia Noori Farzan Reporter for Morning Mix Email Bio Follow February 27 at 6:45 AM By all accounts, the amateur museum that Donald C. Miller ran out of his home in the cornfields of central Indiana wasn’t exactly a secret. Newspaper reporters, Boy Scout troops and residents of the rural farming community of Waldron, Ind., were all invited to drop in and look around in his basement, where glass cases covered most of the walls.
At the time, officials said that they had received tips about his cache of treasures, and were investigating to see if any of the items were illegal for private citizens to possess. In addition to copious Native American artifacts, Miller had reportedly collected priceless relics from countries including China, Russia, Peru, Haiti and Australia, and stored them in outbuildings scattered around his remote Waldron compound as well as in his commodious basement. Robert A.
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