Like many aspiring writers, David Breithaupt had money problems. But
what he also had was unsupervised access to one of the finest special
collections libraries in the country.
In October 1990 Kenyon College hired David Breithaupt as its library's
part-time evening supervisor. In April 2000 he was fired after a Georgia
librarian discovered him selling a letter by Flannery O'Connor on eBay,
but that was only the tip of the iceberg: for the past ten years,
Breithaupt had been browsing the collection, taking from it whatever
rare books, manuscripts, and documents caught his eye--Flannery O'Connor
letters, W.H. Auden annotated typescripts, a Thomas Pynchon manuscript,
and much, much more. It was a large-scale, long-term pillaging of Kenyon
College's most precious works.
After he was caught, the American justice system looked like it was
about to disappoint the college the way it had countless rare book crime
victims before--but Kenyon refused to let this happen.