Navarro said the good Samaritan, who is a collector, told him, “They were at the swap meet in Tacoma a few weeks ago. She thought they were great and the person who sold them wanted $100 apiece. … She ended up buying all five for $300. She could tell they were old and she thought they might be worth money, so she started researching on the internet. She came across the news story. In her mind, she went, ‘ohhh, (expletive)!’ She had no idea they could be stolen. When she found out, she told me, she was sick to her stomach.”