Get an attorney. They will respond more quickly to an attorney. You’ll have to provide proof of your claims, though.
Sent from my iPhone > On Jul 14, 2024, at 16:44, Alan Perry via cctalk <[email protected]> > wrote: > > >> On 7/14/24 2:48 PM, Henry Bent via cctalk wrote: >>> On Sun, 14 Jul 2024 at 17:45, cz via cctalk <[email protected]> wrote: >>> >>> Well, a contract is secured with a trusted trasher to come in and clear >>> the place out. Much like what happens when an old person dies. They come >>> in, load up trucks, take it to the recycling center and get an >>> appropriately sized check. >>> >>> No point dealing with little money things. The goal is to get rid of >>> everything, not to sit there and preserve stuff. >>> >> Unless you know something that the rest of us don't, it is pure speculation >> that this is what is going to happen in the case of the LCM. All of the >> threads on this topic have been full of speculation to greater and lesser >> degrees and it's very frustrating. > > > I have sent a letter to the Museum asking that am item that I donated be > returned for violation of the terms of the deed of trust. I have not yet > received a response. I doubt that it will be in the Christie's auction, but, > if it is, I will notify them of this. I am also trying to figure what legal > options that I have, even if it will cost more than what the item is worth. > > > alan > > >
