Source:The Hartford Courant
By JOSH KOVNER
Harlyn Geronimo, on the 100th anniversary of his great-grandfather's death, has stirred up questions about whether the great Indian warrior's skull resides at the Tomb — the New Haven headquarters of Yale's most secret of societies, Skull and Bones.
Harlyn Geronimo, a 61-year-old sculptor and Vietnam veteran, filed a federal lawsuit in Washington, D.C., Tuesday seeking to claim the remains of his great-grandfather, who was buried at the Apache Prisoner of War Cemetery at Fort Sill, Okla., in 1909.
It has long been rumored that several of Yale's "Bonesmen," including, by one account, Prescott Bush, father of one Bush president and grandfather of the other, robbed Geronimo's grave and brought back his skull and femurs, and his horse's bit and saddle horn, to the Tomb.
A 1918 letter, found buried in the Yale archives by a writer three years ago, says as much, but one tribal leader and others who have studied the matter reiterated Wednesday that they don't believe it was Geronimo's grave that was disturbed.
http://www.courant.com/news/local/hc-geronimo219.artfeb19,0,4370368.storya couple of videos, and several background links at the site.