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Leonardo Patterson, 82, High-Flying Antiquities Dealer Brought Low, Dies

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Leonardo Patterson, 82, High-Flying Antiquities Dealer Brought Low, Dies

Leonardo Augustus Patterson was born on April 15, 1942, in Limon, a town on the Caribbean coast of Costa Rica. Little is known about his family history. He said that his father left home when he was very young and that his mother, a farmer, died when he was a teenager.

He said he found his first antiquity, a shard of ancient pottery, in a yam field when he was 7.

He moved to San Jose, the capital of Costa Rica, when he was 15. There, he found work with a jeweler, who tasked him with melting down gold rings and necklaces that looters brought in from unprotected archaeological sites.

But Mr. Patterson saw further potential.

“I wondered why I should be melting these old things down to make a terrible ring out of them,” he told the German magazine Der Spiegel in 2016.

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After selling items locally for several years, he moved to Miami, where he imported them for local galleries. A chance encounter with a wealthy collector led to opportunities in New York, where he had moved by the late 1970s.

Mr. Patterson kept his family life largely secret. He claimed to have at least 13 children by five different women. A list of survivors was not immediately available.

Though few people doubted that Mr. Patterson had committed a long list of crimes, even some of his antagonists admitted that he had an endearing side. They cited his serene personality and his dry wit — a quiet charisma that seemed to undergird his entire career.

“He was a lovable guy,” Mr. Brand said.

When he told Mr. Patterson that he was planning to write a book about him, Mr. Brand recalled, Mr. Patterson replied, “Please, just wait until I’m dead.”

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Tom Mashberg contributed reporting.

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Video: Artemis II Completes Historic Journey Around the Moon

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Video: Artemis II Completes Historic Journey Around the Moon

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Artemis II Completes Historic Journey Around the Moon

NASA’s Artemis II crew received a call from President Trump, who congratulated them for the successful lunar flyby.

“Today you’ve made history and made all America really proud, incredibly proud. Well, I look forward to seeing you in the Oval Office. And I’ll ask for your autograph, because I don’t really ask for autographs much, but you deserve that. You really are something. Everybody is talking about this.” “Orion has come back around the other side of the moon. And that little crescent that you see is Earth, over 252,000 miles away.” “And it is so great to hear from Earth again. To Asia, Africa and Oceania, we are looking back at you. “We are Earth bound and ready to bring you home.” “We’ve got to explore. We got to go further, to expand our knowledge, expand our horizons.” “I’m not ready to go home. I can’t believe that something this cramped of quarters, can fly by and still be fun every single minute.

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NASA’s Artemis II crew received a call from President Trump, who congratulated them for the successful lunar flyby.

By Nailah Morgan

April 7, 2026

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Video: Watch Live: Artemis II Mission

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Video: Watch Live: Artemis II Mission

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The four Artemis astronauts will pass behind the far side of the moon, seeing parts of the moon never observed with human eyes.

April 6, 2026

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    How the Artemis Astronauts Plan to Live in Space for 10 Days

    2:05

    NASA Launches Artemis Astronauts on Journey to the Moon

    1:39

    For the First Time, a Toilet Heads Into Deep Space

    1:17

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Farther from Earth than any humans before, Artemis II crew prepares for lunar flyby

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Farther from Earth than any humans before, Artemis II crew prepares for lunar flyby

NASA’s Artemis II crew, farther from Earth than any humans before them, are preparing for their event-filled six-hour flyby of the moon after five days traveling through space.

At approximately 11 a.m. Pacific time, the crew reached another milestone: At more than 248,655 miles from our pale blue dot, no humans have ever traveled farther from our home planet.

“We do so in honoring the extraordinary efforts and feats of our predecessors in human space exploration,” said Canadian astronaut and Artemis II mission specialist Jeremy Hansen. “We will continue our journey even further into space before Mother Earth succeeds in pulling us back to everything that we hold dear. But we most importantly choose this moment to challenge this generation and the next to make sure this record is not long lived.”

The previous record holders were the Apollo 13 astronauts, who accidentally set the mark after an oxygen tank on their spacecraft exploded shortly after they reached space, forcing them to slingshot around the moon and back without landing on it.

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Over the next few hours, the crew will begin making observations of the far side of the moon. With the near side of our natural satellite permanently locked facing Earth in an eternal staring contest, the far side has been viewed many times with space-based telescopes and sensors, but seldom with the naked human eye.

At approximately 3:45 p.m. Pacific time, NASA expects the spacecraft to lose communication with Earth for roughly 40 minutes as it passes behind the moon. During this eclipse of Earth, the crew members will reach their closest point to the moon at about 4,070 miles, with the moon appearing about the size of a basketball held at arm’s length. Shortly after, the crew members will reach their farthest point from Earth at roughly 252,760 miles.

The crew will then experience an Earthrise — the sight of our home planet rising above the moon’s horizon, memorialized in a famous photo from the Apollo 8 crew — as it regains a signal from Mission Control at approximately 4:25 p.m. Pacific time.

At about 5:35 p.m. Pacific time, it will be the sun’s turn to get eclipsed by the moon, with the spacecraft plunging into the darkness of the moon’s shadow for an hour.

NASA is livestreaming the flyby across the internet, including on YouTube, X, Netflix and HBO Max.

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The Artemis II mission is one in a series of international efforts spearheaded by NASA to return humans to the lunar surface for the first time in over a half-century.

Artemis I in 2022 was an uncrewed flyby of the moon to test out the vehicle. Artemis II is primarily focused on assessing the life support systems. Artemis III, in Earth’s orbit, aims to test docking procedures with SpaceX’s and Blue Origin’s lunar landers next year, and Artemis IV, slated for 2028, hopes to put boots on the dusty lunar surface.

After a powerful liftoff Wednesday, Artemis II’s journey to the moon has been about as mundane as a deep space mission can get.

The crew spent some time troubleshooting the toilet, with NASA astronaut and Artemis II mission specialist Christina Koch proudly embracing the title of “space plumber.” The team suspected that a vent had frozen over, so they gently turned the ship so that the vent faced the sun, warming it up.

At another point, NASA astronaut and Artemis II commander Reid Wiseman called down to Earth to NASA’s IT specialists on the ground to report that both versions of Microsoft’s email program Outlook installed on his computer were not working.

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The crew’s back and forth with Mission Control also included a complaint that, after playing Chappell Roan’s “Pink Pony Club” to wake up the crew, Mission Control annoyingly cut off the song right before the chorus. The crew also called Mission Control to ask whether they could see the spacecraft wiggling as Wiseman rocked the ship while exercising on the flywheel (which both agreed was not an issue).

After the lunar flyby, the crew has another four days of (hopefully) mundane travel before a high-energy reentry and splashdown off the coast of San Diego on Friday.

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