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Elvis is Alive Museum set to die

  • Story Highlights
  • Owner Andy Key tries to sell Elvis is Alive Museum twice on eBay
  • Key receives no bids by end of auction
  • Military duties will keep Key from running museum, he says
  • Baptist minister who started museum says he has no plans to buy it back
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WRIGHT CITY, Missouri (AP) -- The Elvis is Alive Museum will not live, at least not for now.

The museum includes memorabilia that supports the theory that Elvis Presley never died.

The museum includes memorabilia that supports the theory that Elvis Presley never died.

Andy Key tried to sell the Missouri museum twice on eBay. He received no bids by the time the auction ended Friday.

He did get one bid at his first asking price of $15,000, but it turned out to be from a child playing on a computer.

Key bought the museum on eBay last year for more than $8,000. He says military duties will keep him away from home and he can't operate it.

The collection includes photos, books, FBI files, DNA reports and other memorabilia that aim to support the theory that Elvis Presley never died.

Bill Beeny, a Baptist minister who started the museum in 1990, says he has no plans to buy it back.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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