“It’s a very upsetting thing,” Davis told the wire. “It’s very detrimental, very humiliating, all of it a lie.”
Davis reportedly wrote to a NASA contractor in May in an attempt to
sell the rock. “I’ve been searching the internet for months attempting
to find a buyer,” she said in an email. “If you have any thoughts as to
how I can proceed with the sale of these two items, please call.”
She later told a NASA agent that she wanted to sell the lunar rock
for “big money underground,” and reached a deal to sell the piece of
dust for $1.7 million, the AP said.
Davis and her current husband met with Norman Conley, an agent for
the inspector general, at Denny’s restaurant in Riverside County,
Calif., as a part of the sting operation. When she took out the moon
sample, Davis said she was forced out into the parking lot and
questioned and detained for two hours.
“They grabbed me and pulled me out of the booth,” Davis told the AP. “I had very, very deep bruises on my left side.”
Davis’s attorney called the incident “abhorrent behavior by the
federal government to steal something from a retiree that was given to
her,” the wire said.