MADRID, Spain(AP)
Spain formally laid claim Thursday to a shipwreck that yielded a
$500 million treasure, saying it has proof the vessel was
Spanish.
Officials demanded the return of the booty recovered last year
by a U.S. deep-sea exploration firm, saying the 19th-century
shipwreck at the heart of the dispute is the Nuestra Senora de las
Mercedes _ a Spanish warship sunk by the British navy southwest of
Portugal in 1804 with more than 200 people on board.
Tampa, Fla.-based Odyssey Marine Exploration on Thursday
disputed Spain's claim. In May 2007, Odyssey announced that it
had discovered a wreck in the Atlantic _ and its cargo of 500,000
silver coins and other artifacts worth an estimated $500
million.
At the time, Odyssey said it did not know which ship it was, and
flew the treasures back to Tampa without Spain's knowledge,
from an airport on the British colony of Gibraltar on Spain's
southwestern tip.
The company said Thursday that there isn't enough evidence
to prove the vessel is the Mercedes. Officials said in a company
statement that they found only cargo from a shipwreck, not the
actual vessel.
The Spanish government filed evidence in a Tampa federal court
to support its claim.
"We are talking about the remains of a Spanish navy vessel
and the human remains of Spanish naval servicemen who died on board
which have been illegally disturbed," Culture Ministry
Director General Jose Jimenez said.
"It is the property of the Spanish navy, government and
people, and we want it all back," said Adm. Teodoro de Leste
Contreras, who runs a naval museum owned by the ministry.
Washington-based lawyer James Goold, representing the Spanish
government in the case, said U.S. Judge Mark Pizzo will convene the
two parties to review the case before deciding who gets to keep the
treasure.
Goold said at a Madrid news conference that he expected Odyssey
would keep "not a penny" of the salvage.
In its statement, Odyssey officials said they are surprised the
Spanish government has conclusively said "the "Black
Swan" treasure is from the Mercedes after viewing site
photomosaics and video that show no hull, ballast pile, keel or
vessel, and only a statistically insignificant sample of the coins
from the site."
Naval and coin experts say they have proof that the treasure,
now held in a warehouse in Tampa, came from the Mercedes. The coins
included gold doubloons, or "pieces of eight," minted in
1803 in Lima, Peru, bearing the image of Spain's King Carlos
IV, ministry coin expert Carmen Marcos said.
But Odyssey officials said that if the coins are found to be
from the Mercedes, it will be "up to the U.S. District Court
to determine the final disposition of the Black Swan
treasure," according to the statement.
The Mercedes exploded and sank in a naval battle as it sailed
back to Spain from South America.
Spain argues that the entire treasure should be returned because
naval vessels remain the property of the nation that flagged them,
regardless of where they lie, under the principle of sovereign
immunity.
"Spain has not abandoned or otherwise relinquished in any
way its ownership of Mercedes," Spain's petition said.
Spain's claim said artifacts on the seabed, their
distribution and other characteristics, as well as artifacts taken
by Odyssey, "further identify the site as the remains of
Mercedes."
Odyssey also said the ship was probably the Mercedes after Pizzo
last month forced the company to disclose information on the
salvage, including the identity of the ship and its location.
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