Jer 24:6–7 [Eshel and Eshel 2007] Jer 48:29–31 [Puech?; Charlesworth 2010]

“… [William] Noah acquired two fragments in Ferrini’s possession that belonged to the Kandos: a tiny portion of the Book of Jeremiah, and a small fragment of rabbinic commentary about the Book of Genesis. “’Dead Sea cornflakes’ we used to call them, they were so small,” Noah says.
Noah attempted to return the fragments to the Kando family, but the Kandos instead agreed to sell the fragments at a discount to Noah and Sharpe” [Greshko 2020, revised version of article].

Dan 5:13–16

“Found at Qumran … in Cave 4, some time between 1952 and 1956. The fragment itself dates between 50 BC – AD 68” (cited by Davila 2009]

Dan 6:22–24

“… Zurich, Switzerland, where the scroll fragments had been kept for decades in a vault at the UBS Bank. ‘Old Man Kando,’ … being a shrewd businessman, had known that the time for taking any artifacts out of the country was short. He thus took fragments of the scrolls in his possession out of the country before the enactment of laws that would have prevented any such movement” [Patterson 2011, 30].

Dan 7:18–19

“… Zurich, Switzerland, where the scroll fragments had been kept for decades in a vault at the UBS Bank. ‘Old Man Kando,’ … being a shrewd businessman, had known that the time for taking any artifacts out of the country was short. He thus took fragments of the scrolls in his possession out of the country before the enactment of laws that would have prevented any such movement” [Patterson 2011, 30].

Amos 3:4–5

“This fragment was found in Cave 4 in 1952 by a bedouin family, who sold it to a Bethlehem antiquities dealer known as Kando. It remained in the hands of the Kando family in Switzerland until 2002. From 2002 to 2004 it was held by a private collector in the United States. It was bought by another collector – the present owner – in 2004.”