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as a genuine Renoir.Last year, Fuqua planned to have the painting 
sold at auction, where it was expected to fetch at least $75,000. 
But the auction was postponed after it was learned that the Baltimore 
Museum of Art reported the painting stolen in 1951. Records show an 
insurer, the Fireman's Fund, paid a $2,500 claim on the theft.The insurer 
says it is now the rightful owner, based on payment of that 
claim.According to an appraisal commissioned by the FBI, Renoir painted 
"Paysage bords de Seine," or On the Shore of the Seine, on 
a linen napkin in 1879 on the spot at a riverside restaurant 
for his mistress.The appraiser says the Renoir's value is about $22,000, 
much less than the auction house estimated, because Renoir's paintings have 
fallen out of favor with some art collectors who consider them old 
fashioned and because questions about the painting's ownership and possible 
theft diminish its value to collectors.Fuqua, who had managed to remain 
anonymous until the court case was filed, told the FBI under penalty 
of perjury that she bought the painting at a flea market in 
Harpers Ferry, W. Va., never believing the painting to be a true 
Renoir, even though a plate reading "RENOIR" is attached to the frame. 
She describes herself as an "innocent buyer" and questions the FBI's authority 
to seize the painting."Because I am not an art historian, collector, appraiser, 
or dealer, I lacked the expertise to identify the Renoir Painting's authenti
 A constitutional attorney says the possibility that Foxnews.com reporter 
Jana Winter could go to jail for refusing to reveal her sources 
for a story in the aftermath of the Aurora movie massacre is 
enough for the government to re-evaluate state Shield laws.David Rivkin, 
who appeared on Fox & Friends Sunday, said there needs to be 
a national solution that would never put any reporter in that situation.In 
2012, Winter wrote an exclusive story detailing how alleged gunman James 
Holmes sent a package to a University of Colorado psychiatrist that included 
a notebook "full of details about how he was going to kill 
people," according to one of her sources.Rivkin said Holmes lawyers believe 
they wont get a fair trial if they dont know Winters source.Its 
a very weak argument, Rivkin said.Rivkin explained that New York, where 
Winter is based, has an Absolute Shield Law that protects reporters from 
revealing their sources. However, New York courts decided that Winters situation 
should be looked at under Colorado Shield laws, which contain exceptions 
that may allow reporters to testify.This whole story to me demonstrates 
that there is a need for a national solution, Rivkin said.Click for 
full coverage of Fox News' First Amendment fight.

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