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Updated: 2:17 PM- A vase that was a gift to Adolf Hitler was turned over to investigators, who are rounding up a collection of Nazi artifacts stolen from a Utah storage unit, authorities said Friday.
The vase, decorated with a swastika, was one of five items that were swiped in a 2005 burglary. Three other items were confiscated this week from an antiques dealer, who had been approached by a man who wanted to sell them.
The items apparently were taken from Hitler's "Eagle's Nest" mountain home in the Bavarian Alps by an American soldier, who brought them home after World War II. The soldier's son found the collection after his father died and put everything in storage.
The vase was recovered Thursday, a few hours after sheriff's detectives unveiled other pieces. Still missing: a bronze bust of Hitler.
The collection includes a scroll, an ornate parchment and an handbound history of Henry the Lion, the 12th century duke of Bavaria and Saxony. All are addressed to Hitler and were apparently gifts given to him when he came to power.
A German history professor at the University of Utah doubts the documents have much financial value.
"Priceless is a big exaggeration. ... He probably didn't even see most of these," Ronald Smelser said. "They probably piled up in a room."
Smelser said some of the documents likely bestowed honorary citizenship on Hitler, a common practice in German towns at the time.
"There must have been hundreds of those. Germans tried to curry favor," he said.
It's unclear whether the soldier's son, whose name was not released, will get the items.
Sheriff's Detective Scott Van Waggoner said he's trying to determine if they were brought to America legally. He's hoping there's paperwork that confirms they weren't smuggled.
"Let's find out who they really belong to. Do they belong in a museum in Germany? If so, let's return it to them," Van Waggoner said.