Feds return ancient coins - some from 500 BCE - to Greece after they were seized at O’Hare Airport

Ancient Greek coins were returned to Greece after being seized when transiting through an O’Hare Airport cargo facility.

The tiny coins may not look all that impressive. Some are smaller than a shirt button. But the 21 Greek coins date back to the time before Christ. Some of them are 2,500 years old.

"This is a very big deal," said Sean Fitzgerald, Director of Homeland Security Investigations (HSI). "This is the largest repatriation of Greek coins in recent history for Homeland Security Investigations."

The coins were likely stolen or looted from Greece years ago and only recently showed up in two packages coming into Chicago's O’Hare.

"These coins were found at the DHL cargo facility out at O’Hare," said Paige Williamson, HSI Agent. "They were coming from Austria, and they were going to private individuals here in the U.S."

On Wednesday, during a ceremony at the HSI office in west suburban Lombard, the ancient coins were turned over to the Greek consul general of Chicago, who says they’ll be headed to Athens in a few days.

HSIChicago hosted a press event highlighting the first repatriation ceremony at the field office. SAC Fitzgerald provided remarks regarding the repatriation of 21 Ancient Greek coins to Mr Emmanuel Koubarakis, Consul General of the Hellenic Republic of Greece in Chicago.

"Greece has a huge culture," said Emmanuel Koubarakis of the consul. "Our contribution to western civilization, and all these items should come back to the motherland."

Repatriating ancient artifacts is not as unusual as you might think. Since 2007, HSI has seized and returned over 20,000 antiquities and art pieces to more than 40 countries.

"This is really a theft and a pillaging of cultural heritage," Fitzgerald said. "These countries, want our help, and they need our help to bring back their history for them."

The coins may have been stolen from Greece, he said. Antiquities often are looted during times of turmoil, such as World War I and II, he said.

Illegal sales of antiquities is a multibillion-dollar industry, Fitzgerald said. He would not put a price on the 21 coins other than to say they are worth thousands of dollars. He said prices could reach "astronomical" heights if sold on the black market.

All the coins in the case Wednesday are thousands of years old. At least one dates to around 500 B.C., when Greece was inventing democracy. Each coin has a different person engraved on it.

"They (traffickers) are robbing from the cultural heritage of a nation," Fitzgerald said.

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