Okay, gang.
I’ve been sitting on this for two years. One of my sources told me the story behind the so-called “hero” phaser which was auctioned off by Profiles in History, and sent me scans of relevant documents from the auction. At the time, my source suggested I wait until after the auction to present these scans for public discussion, if at all.
I think it’s been long enough. I’ve grown deeply tired of this whole thing, and maybe letting this one particular cat out of the bag will get people thinking and talking about the level of fraud we’re dealing with, here.
Set faces to “stunned”.
Here’s the story.
Allegedly, during the production of “Friday’s Child”, a hero phaser was damaged while on location, and so a member of the crew gifted it to one of the guest actors working on that episode. But ONLY the P1. And that P1 was later re-gifted by the actor to a friend whose daughter was a TREK fan, who eventually sold it to a third party.
Meanwhile, the damaged P2 body had supposedly been sent to Wah Chang for repairs, but he “never got around to it”, and ended up selling it after the show was cancelled.
Years later, the owners of the individual phaser components came into contact with each other, and got together to determine if the P1 fit into the P2, which it did. They then eventually decided to to consign the phaser to Profiles in History for auction.
The consigners each wrote their Letters of Authenticity, but were initially unable to get one from the (still living) “Friday’s Child” actor who had originally acquired the P1, since the actor had asked for a cut of the final sale price before agreeing to provide a LoA. Yet, oddly, a copy of a vintage, handwritten letter from the actor to their friend (the one who was re-gifted the P1) appeared and was submitted to PiH very shortly thereafter.
This entire story and all of the documents submitted are full of red flags. Scans of those very documents are included below, but I’ve redacted the names. Well, except for one. The most important one.
“Phillip Boyce”.
Now, your average person—maybe even your average STAR TREK fan—wouldn’t react to that name. But we hardcore fans all know that Doctor Phillip Boyce (John Hoyt) was the
Enterprise’s chief medical officer in the original pilot episode, “The Cage”.
So, is the person who consigned the P2 just a HUGE fan of the pilot episode, to the point of changing his name to that of the ship’s doctor? Is it just a staggering coincidence that someone consigning what was allegedly an authentic STAR TREK prop
just so happened to share the name of an obscure STAR TREK character?
Or maybe, just
maybe, could it be that the perpetrators of this fraud arrogantly wanted to sign their work with a little inside joke which they thought no one would ever notice?
Another red flag includes the handwritten letter from the actor suddenly appearing right when it was convenient to help prove the phaser’s “authenticity” (…and just why would the actor have a handwritten, duplicate copy of a handwritten letter
which they gave—along with the phaser—to their friend?).
Also, the actor’s signature on their LoA clearly exhibits vector-processing artifacts. As if it was copied and pasted into the LoA from a digital source (perhaps an image of their signature found online), rather than hand-signed.
If I were to speculate, I’d say that the actor in question may not actually have been involved in any of this (and, as noted above, their signature on the LoA thus likely falsified), or, if they
were involved, then their advanced age may have allowed them to be misled or coerced. Worst case scenario would be that they were in on the scam, but I sincerely doubt that.
I would not recommend that anyone here try to seek out or contact this actor to verify any of this. As it happens, there were many actors and extras in that particular TOS episode, which is helpful in terms of concealing the actor’s identity for the purposes of this discussion. I’d also like to point out that they may or may not still be alive, at this point. I’ve left this all very deliberately vague.
Anyway, this is the story behind the “hero” phaser auction prop. Red flags across the board. Logic holes big enough to fly a starship through. No actual proof. Highly-questionable documents (which all read to me like they were written by the same person).
And they got away with it.