A federal judge ruled Friday that the United States government has enough evidence to move forward in court with its effort to seize a 10th century Cambodian statue that Sothebyâs had hoped to sell for $3 million.
The auction house had asked U.S. District Court Judge George B. Daniels to dismiss the case.
The judge issued no opinion on the fate of the statue, but said the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York could add new information to its original claims that Sothebyâs tried to sell the statue in violation of Cambodian law.
Sothebyâs had argued among other things that the federal lawyers had failed to provide evidence that Sothebyâs knew the statue was stolen.
âThe government has sufficiently pled facts regarding Sothebyâs knowledge that the statue was stolen at the time of import into the United States,â Judge Daniels wrote. âThe government need not provide unassailable proof to demonstrate Sothebyâs knowledge at this stage of the case.â
Sothebyâs said it still expects to prevail at trial.
âThe Courtâs decision,â the auction house said in a statement, âdefers to another day all the key questions: whether Cambodia declared ownership of the statue with the clarity required by due process; whether the good faith purchase of the statue in 1975 defeats Cambodiaâs claim, and whether Sothebyâs knew the statue belonged to Cambodia.
The massive sandstone sculpture, depicting a mythic warrior called Duryodhana, once stood inside a small temple built within a sprawling 1,000-year-old complex of temples called Koh Ker.
Sothebyâs pulled it from auction in March 2011 after Cambodia asked for its return.
No date has been set for the trial.