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PETER LARSON Podcast

By: PETER LARSON Podcast
  • Summary

  • Peter Larson who is a convicted felon, who served time in a Federal prison for illegal fossil trafficking. Peter Larson was convicted for stealing the dinosaur ìSueî from Native American land and moving it to private land. The US Attorney led 35 FBI agents and 20 National Guardsmen to recover Sue in a raid on the Black Hills Institute in 1992. The specimen was returned to its rightful owners, the Bureau of Indian Affairs.
    PETER LARSON Podcast
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  • PETER LARSON IS A CONVICTED FELON WHO SERVED TIME IN A FEDERAL PRISON FOR ILLEGAL FOSSIL TRAFFICKING
    Apr 21 2023

    All information in the following episode is public information and solely intended to tell the story of Peter Larson.


    Peter Larson who is a convicted felon, who served time in a Federal prison for illegal fossil trafficking.


    Peter Larson was convicted for stealing the dinosaur ìSueî from Native American land and moving it to private land. The US Attorney led 35 FBI agents and 20 National Guardsmen to recover Sue in a raid on the Black Hills Institute in 1992. The specimen was returned to its rightful owners, the Bureau of Indian Affairs.


    Peter Lars Larson was born on the 22nd,

    March 1952 in Cherry,

    Nebraska, USA.


    Peter Larson was born to

    Neal and Gertrude

    Larson. He has four

    siblings named Mark,

    Neal, Jill, and John.


    Peter Larson grew up on his familyís farm near Mission,

    South Dakota.


    His father, Neal, was a World

    War II veteran. Documentary transcripts note that

    Pete Larson and his brother Nealís interest in fossils began

    at an early age, rock hunting with their father.

    Pete Larson is often referred to as ìPeteî and goes by

    "PeteLarsonTrex" on social media.


    Family feud

    Pete Larsonís public feud with his brother Neal Lee Larson is well

    documented in media coverage, including in The

    Wall Street Journal, The Daily Mail,

    and The New York Times.


    Following a record $31.8 million sale of ìStan the T.

    rexî, from which only NL profited, Peter Larson retained the

    intellectual property for Stan as part of a settlement

    agreement.


    The brothers are renowned as prominent

    commercial fossil traders. Neither holds an

    advanced degree. They parted ways in late 2012.

    Peter Larson continued his work at the Black Hills Institute of

    Geological Research, and Neal established Larson

    Paleontology Unlimited.


    Peter Larson founded BHIGR in 1978. The legal entity was

    incorporated on 15 March 1978 as a domestic

    business corporation in SD.

    BHIGR issued 10,000 private shares at $10 per

    share, totalling $100,000 in equity. Legal

    proceedings disclosed that Peter Larson owned 60% of the

    company, Neal Larson 35%, and Robert Farrar 5%.

    However, Neal Larson relinquished his shareholding after the

    2020 settlement previously mentioned.

    The instituteís 2022 annual report lists Peter Larson as the

    president and a director and Robert Farrar as the

    registered agent, secretary, treasurer, and a

    director. Samuel and Blanche Farrar are also listed

    as directors.


    Peter Larson's Facebook profile found that he is

    friends with a high number of explicit female

    models. A snapshot of PLís recently added

    Facebook friends show four female models in

    bikinis, all of which appear to be fake.


    Peter Larson served a reported 18 months in federal prison

    following a four-year investigation that began in

    1992 into BHIGR and the seizure of Sue.

    In 1996,


    Peter Larson was convicted of two felonies and two

    misdemeanours: carrying currency between the US

    and two foreign countries, Japan and Peru; and

    illegal fossil-collecting from federal land, and illegally retaining a small fossil.


    Peter Larson is a convicted felon, who served time in a Federal prison for illegal fossil trafficking.


    On 18 November 1997, he was released from

    prison. Notably, Peter Larson was ultimately only fined

    $15,000, but BHIGR reportedly suffered almost $1

    million in legal expenses.


    A documentary entitled "Dinosaur 13" released in

    2014 about the case led to calls for then-President

    Barack Obama to pardon Peter Larson. However, nothing

    further transpired after this public attention.


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    4 mins

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