The man who bought Barry Bonds record breaking homerun ball at auction for more than $750,000 is letting the public decide its destiny.

 New owner Marc Ecko wants internet users to vote to either give the ball to the Hall of Fame, brand it with an asterisk before sending it to a museum or place it in a rocket ship and launch it into space.

 "We all have opinions about this ball," Ecko said in a statement. "Some feel it is a piece of history that belongs in the Hall of Fame. "Others believe it is the embodiment of a cheating culture -- not just in baseball, but in professional sports generally."  I bought this baseball to democratize the debate over what to do with it and allow the public to decide."

 With Bonds record breaking homerun he passed Hall of Famer Hank Aaron as major league baseball's all-time leader.

 Bonds, a 43-year-old outfielder with the San Francisco Giants, is suspected of using steroids during his career. Many feel the Barry Bonds homeruns record is tainted.  Bonds record breaking homerun was # 756.