I have a question: Is there a legitimate reason to 14C date something presumed to be >65 million years old?
I don't really have much to add...C14 is so wildly inappropriate for dinosaur fossils that you may as well try to date it by looking for a "Use By" date stamped on it; the two methods are equally valid.
My guess is that the numbers came from some sort of contamination. It's not uncommon--you'd be amazed how much stuff moves around in groundwater, and Creationists aren't known for proper sample handling.
This seems to be a typical Creationist tactic: test something in a way that's completely wrong, get nonsensical results, declare the method invalid. They did the same crap with the Mt. St. Helens eruption--they sent samples out to be dated via a method that doesn't work for anything less than a few million years old (it has the opposite problem of C14--not enough daughter product to be detected until then), used a mineral that didn't reach closing temperature during the eruption (ie, it preserved an older date), and got an absurdly old value (the value of when the xenocrysts last reached closing temperature). Therefore radiometric dating doesn't work! As Correa Neto said, it's doubly dishonest.
