Guatemala finds over 1,000 artifacts at Americans' home

Led by their lawyer Juan Pablo Aris Bravo, right, Stephanie Allison Jolluck, and Giorgio Salvador Rossilli exit out of a courthouse with their faces covered with a towel, after they were released, in Antigua, Guatemala, Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2022. Stephanie Allison Jolluck was first captured on Nov. 9th at Guatemala City's airport when she was found to be transporting two archeological artifacts in her luggage, she was arrested and taken to a courthouse in Guatemala City and placed on probation, but then the couple was arrested on Sunday, Nov. 13, with over 150 archeological artifacts in a vehicle. (AP Photo/Santiago Billy)

GUATEMALA CITY (AP) — Prosecutors in Guatemala said Thursday they have found 1,222 possible archeological artefacts at the home of an American couple accused of smuggling historical relics.

The apparently pre-Hispanic pieces found in a 12-hour inspection of the house in the tourist town of Antigua range from large stone carvings to small pottery pieces.

The ɫtv Press. All rights reserved.