Monday, December 10, 2012

Album Signing That Led To John Lennon Murdered Up For Sale

The idea of owning a piece of history isn't anything new. I've always been fond of autographed sports memorabilia, t-shirts, guitar picks and drum sticks from musicians and I once forked out fifty bucks for a construction worker in Charlotte, NC to let me step behind a fenced in area to retrieve a concrete chunk of the old Police station...which still sits proudly in the backyard. My gut ached this year when a pair of Elvis Presley's soiled underwear went up for auction. I laughed at how a fan pulled in some bucks when selling a beat up van painted by Kurt Kobain. I'm not sure how I feel about the album signed by John Lennon for his murderer Mark Chapman is up for auction. Even more shocking is the timing of when it being offered; on the anniversary of the ex-Beatle’s death. Very easily someone can shout out, "Yo DJ boy! You're only disturbed because the subject of your new book is based on John Lennon! You're too close to the subject to offer an opinion!" It doesn't matter! When does evidence from a murder scene become an object of value? Lennon autographed the copy of Double Fantasy on December 8, 1980. Just hours later its owner shot him dead outside his apartment, in an event that shook the entertainment world. The record was later used in evidence at the trial of Chapman, who was refused parole for the seventh time earlier this year. Classic Rock Magazine reports Bob Zafian, spokesman for auction house Moments In Time, tells NME: “We are very excited to bring such a historically significant piece to the market. I have never come across a piece with such provenance – police reports, fingerprint documentation, letters from the district attorney. It goes on and on.” The album was last sold in 2003, when it fetched $525,000 (£327,000). In 1986 Chapman wrote a letter to an auctioneer inquiring about the potential value of the item, saying: “On December 8, 1980 I shot and killed John Lennon. Before this, earlier in the afternoon, I had asked him to sign his Double Fantasy album. He did this also signing the date: 1980. I then placed this album behind the security guard’s booth where it was found after my arrest. “I have tried unsuccessfully for years (and 2 attorneys) to get this item back, seeking to place it at auction and donating the money to a children’s charity. I felt it was the least I could do. Now, is there any way to assess the value of an item such as this?” The unnamed recipient’s response is not recorded.

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