The Rosewood workers' camp in Blackwater has been the focus of negative attention for a couple of years now, and that continues with news that the State Department of Natural Resources and Mines has decided to renew the lease for another year.
She said that she doesn't care who took the rosewood box, but just simply wants to get it back. If the urn was indeed stolen, it doesn't get much lower than this, does it? Share your thoughts and comments in the section below…
Pamela Paul says she thinks thieves may have mistaken the handpainted rosewood box for a jewelry container. Paul said she returned home after a trip on May 15 to find the door open. A search showed her jewelry gone, along with the sealed box of ashes.
Pamela Paul says she thinks thieves may have mistaken the handpainted rosewood box for a jewelry container. Paul said she returned home after a trip on May 15 to find the door open. A search showed her jewelry gone, along with the sealed box of ashes.
Pamela Paul says she thinks thieves may have mistaken the handpainted rosewood box for a jewelry container. Paul said she returned home after a trip on May 15 to find the door open. A search showed her jewelry gone, along with the sealed box of ashes.
Pamela Paul says she thinks thieves may have mistaken the handpainted rosewood box for a jewelry container. Paul said she returned home after a trip on May 15 to find the door open. A search showed her jewelry gone, along with the sealed box of ashes.
Pamela Paul says she thinks thieves may have mistaken the handpainted rosewood box for a jewelry container. Paul said she returned home after a trip on May 15 to find the door open. A search showed her jewelry gone, along with the sealed box of ashes.
Pamela Paul, 64, said she was away for Mother's Day when a crook broke into her modest Fort Wadsworth home, stealing only some costume jewelry and the rosewood box containing her younger sibling's ashes. He likely mistook the elegant vessel for a ...
