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Garrett told the newspaper he did not recall what "crime" Ashmole was referring to in the letter.
The museum filed documents several years ago arguing that Italy has no claim to the piece because it originally was Greek and was found in international waters.
The Getty is one of several museums that in recent years have returned Roman, Greek and Etruscan artifacts that the Italian government suspected were looted and smuggled from the country.
That didn't include the life-sized bronze "Victorious Youth," also called the "Athlete of Fano." The Greek masterpiece was sculpted between 300 B.C. and 100 B.C. and later carried away by Roman soldiers, but the boat carrying it apparently sank. The artist is unknown but some scholars believe it was Lysippos, Alexander the Great's personal sculptor. The statue was found in the nets of Italian fishermen trawling in international waters in 1964. It allegedly was buried in an Italian cabbage patch and hidden in a priest's bathtub before it was taken out of Italy.
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