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Their target was Hui Malama I Na Kupuna O Hawaii Nei, a group founded in 1989 to rebury native Hawaiian remains and burial items from museums and construction sites. In February 2001, Hui Malama took the 83 items as a "one-year loan" from the Bishop Museum where they had been held since being taken from the caves in 1905. Hui Malama reburied them. Despite repeated requests from the museum and other claimants, Hui Malama has refused to retrieve the items.
DRESSED all in black with his hair cascading over his shoulders framing his tattooed cheek, Edward Halealoha Ayau left a federal courtroom yesterday flanked by U.S. marshals. He was sentenced to "an indeterminate amount of time" in prison for violating a court order to identify specific locations within Big Island caves where he reburied 83 native Hawaiian artifacts.
When told he could face prison, Ayau answered: "I would be honored."
Hui Malama and Bishop Museum will have to share the $330,000 cost for the recent retrieval of 83 burial artifacts from Big Island caves, under a settlement approved yesterday in U.S. District Court.
U.S. District Judge David Ezra approved the settlement, which was reached by the parties on Thursday. The deal also releases Edward Halealoha Ayau, head of Hui Malama I Na Kupuna O Hawaii Nei, who had been placed under home confinement for 11 months.
All 83 items were retrieved over the summer by the group, which included the Department of Hawaiian Homelands, the state Attorney General's office and Bishop Museum representatives.