Mike wrote:
The known survivors are all well documented, and the only one in private hands is Paul Allen's, which he paid IIRC $1m+ for to IWM Duxford.
Never heard of this. From what is written here, I would consider this to be bordering on the unethical on the part of the IWM by my personal standards.

EDIT: After thinking on it, I would like to tone down what I said a bit. I was a little harsh in my statement. My point is it just doesn't seem right for the museum to do that. It comes across as: "If I have enough money, I can do whatever I want, including buy artifacts from a national museum.".
A little extra info:
In May 2005, [Me 163B, Werknummer 191660, "Yellow 3"] was sold, reportedly for £800,000, to raise money for the purchase of a de Havilland/Airco DH.9 as the Duxford museum had no examples of a World War I bomber in its collection. Permission for export was granted by the British government's Department for Culture, Media and Sport as three other Komets were held in British museums.
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