University of Miami Law Review
Abstract
This article explores how an individual importing a looted artifact may face prosecution and liability in the Eleventh Judicial Circuit. The article begins with a background section that provides additional information about the history of ISIS and ISIS’s current plundering scheme. The background section also provides the legal framework and historical treatment of looted art and stolen artifacts. In particular, this section explains the Eleventh Circuit doctrine on this issue, the McClain doctrine. The McClain doctrine applies the National Stolen Property Act (“NSPA”) to foreign found-in-the-ground claims. Supporters of the doctrine argue that it helps “prevent looting internationally without placing an unacceptable burden on the cultural objects trade.”
Recommended Citation
Lindsey Lazopoulos Friedman,
ISIS’s Get Rich Quick Scheme: Sell the World’s Cultural Heritage on the Black Market—Purchasers of ISIS-Looted Syrian Artifacts Are Not Criminally Liable Under the NSPA and the McClain Doctrine in the Eleventh Circuit,
70 U. Mia. L. Rev.
1068
(2016)
Available at:
https://repository.law.miami.edu/umlr/vol70/iss4/4
Included in
Criminal Law Commons, Entertainment, Arts, and Sports Law Commons, International Law Commons, Military, War, and Peace Commons