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Ronald Reagan’s blood auction sparks outrage

The late president's foundation is objecting to a British company's auction of what it says is a vial of his blood taken at the hospital where he was treated after the 1981 assassination attempt.

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Ronald Reagan's foundation is objecting to a British company's auction of what it says is a vial of the late president's blood taken at the hospital where he was treated after the 1981 assassination attempt.

PFC Auctions, a British based online auction house on the island of Guernsey, is making available to the highest bidder a glass vial it says once held the president’s blood.

Sixty-nine days after being sworn in, Reagan was attacked outside a Hilton Hotel in Washington by John Hinckley, Jr., a schizophrenic young man who later said he was trying to impress the actress Jodie Foster.

The Secret Service had rushed the president to George Washington University Hospital, where he underwent emergency surgery.

Despite significant internal injuries and bleeding, Reagan recovered and was back at work at the White House only weeks later.

Reagan went on to become one of America’s most beloved figures.

Now fans can put in a bid for a five-inch long, plasma-stained glass tube and an accompanying medical form listing Reagan’s patient identification number, age, sex, and the name of the hospital’s chief cardiovascular and thoracic surgeon.

None of the boxes on the form indicating which tests should be done are ticked off, but instructions are written onto the page requesting the sample’s “lead level” be examined.

The anonymous seller provided online auctioneers with a “letter of provenance,” claiming that his mother, then a technician at Bio Science Laboratories in nearby Columbia, Md., was given permission by a supervisor to take the vial home at the end of the week Reagan was shot.

The seller has revealed that the vial was passed on to him after the death of his parents.

“About three to four months ago I contacted the Reagan National Library (sic) and spoke to the head of the library, a Federal Agent. I told him what I had, how I came across it and so on. We spoke for about 45 minutes. The reason that I contacted the Reagan National Library was to see if they would like to purchase it from me. He indicated that if I was interested in donating it he would see to it that he would take care of all of the arrangements,” ABC News quoted him as saying.

But he wanted to sell it, and after finding that the “National Archives was not interested in what I had, nor was the Secret Service, the FBI and other agencies,” he decided to put it on the block

“Pres. Reagan when he was my Commander in Chief when I was in the ARMY from ‘87-’91,” the mystery man writes, “and that I was a real fan of Reaganomics and felt that Pres. Reagan himself would rather see me sell it rather than donating it.

The auction opened on Wednesday, May 9, with a bid of 1,500 British pounds sterling.

By late Monday, “Lot 160 – Ronald Reagan Blood Vial” had a new top offer of 9,910.36 dollars.

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