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Stolen statue returned

Mother finds the $30,000 Virgin Mary figure in her rose bed. Catholic church is delighted that the statue is back on Newport site.

November 19, 2008|By Joseph Serna

When a Tustin mom approached her son about the sudden appearance of a nearly 5-foot tall bronze statue of the Virgin Mary in her rose bed Sunday, he replied simply, “It’s a gift. Don’t ask; just say thank you.”

After all, he reasoned with her, that’s what his friends told him when they set the statue-from-nowhere on his driveway Saturday night while a party went on in the garage.

But lo and behold, as the mother, who asked that her name be withheld, found out in a bleary-eyed 5:30 a.m. phone call from a friend Wednesday, the statue from nowhere was from somewhere. It belonged to Our Lady Queen of Angels Roman Catholic church in Newport Beach, and members of the parish had been worrying about it since it vanished from outside the church overnight Friday.

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When the mom arrived home from out of town Sunday, she said, she saw the statue, valued at $30,000 and created by the late Mexican artist Victor Salmones, in her rose bed. Immediately, she began asking questions. Who had given her such a gift?

She said her friends had no idea, and not until her son came home later that night did she find out it was a mysterious gift from some partygoers who said it could be her guardian angel because she had been sick recently.

But when the story of the stolen Virgin Mary hit the papers Wednesday, her friends immediately called her. Right away she called Newport Beach police with a heavy, scared heart.

“I was just sick to my stomach it was here. The spiritual nature of it bothers me a lot. I mean, a church? Baby Jesus’ angel, I mean, I just felt literally ill,” she said. “I do feel bad. I do feel horrible. I have two little kids, it’s something I don’t want to be associated with.”

Authorities picked up the statue and returned it to the church. It now sits in the church’s lobby.

“I think we have to wait and see what would be safe [out] there,” said Rosemary Quinn, the administrative assistant to the church’s pastor, Father Kerry Beaulieu.

“People go out to a lot of our art pieces and meditate and pray. It’s a shame to have to think about putting those things away.”

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