Needless to say, I got it!
The camera is very nice, close to mint, and came complete with the two QV lenses (10-40mm f/1.4 and 11-120mm f/2), a few VF-10 video floppy disks, QE-110 Floppy Disk Eraser, and QS-10D DC battery charger.
The only thing missing from the original, full kit is the QV-1010T transmitter. According to the photographer who sold it, the transmitter was "simply lost during storage--perhaps thrown away".
Two of a kind:

According to its former owner, this particular camera (to the left in the photo above) was used for a Space Shuttle shot, a joint session of U.S. Congress and President George Bush (the first) Inauguration.
According to former Nikon engineer Kenji Toyoda, the manager in charge of the QV-1000C, only 180 or 190 units were made, making it one of the rarest Nikon cameras ever. Less than half of them were sold outside of Japan.
Jarle