Three artists on Tuesday demanded that New York police return a bust of fugitive US whistleblower Edward Snowden to public display or threatened legal action. Civil rights lawyer Ronald Kuby said the artists would remain anonymous because they feared arrest and prosecution after authorities removed the sculpture from a Brooklyn park last week.
"We hope New York City will release the statue so it may continue to spark healthy conversations about issues central to our freedoms," the artists said in a written statement.
They erected the 100 pound (45 kilo) bust at an American Revolution war memorial in Fort Greene park shortly before dawn on April 6 but within hours it was confiscated by police.
At a news conference on the spot where the bust was impounded, Kuby described the sculpture as a "valuable and well-crafted piece of art" that took six months to create. "It is somewhat ironic that as Edward Snowden is in exile in Russia his statue is being held hostage in the basement of a police precinct in New York City," Kuby said.
"Whatever the right of the parks department to remove an unauthorised sculpture, that does not translate into the right of the police to indefinitely detain a work of art," he added. A Manhattan gallery wants to put it on display next month as part of an exhibition on surveillance and privacy, Kuby said. Police could offer it on loan to the gallery as a "compromise" but if they do not respond, the artists would prepare litigation, Kuby said. New York police did not immediately comment.
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