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Northern California Couple find $10M in Gold Coins

California Couple Finds $10M in Gold Coins Buried in Yardadvertisement
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A Northern California couple out walking their dog on their Gold Country property stumbled across a modern-day bonanza: $10 million in rare, mint-condition gold coins buried in the shadow of an old tree.

Nearly all of the 1,427 coins, dating from 1847 to 1894, are in uncirculated, mint condition, said David Hall, co-founder of Professional Coin Grading Service of Santa Ana, which recently authenticated them.

Although the face value of the gold pieces only adds up to about $27,000, some of them are so rare that coin experts say they could fetch nearly $1 million apiece.

"I don't like to say once-in-a-lifetime for anything, but you don't get an opportunity to handle this kind of material, a treasure like this, ever," said veteran numismatist Don Kagin, who is representing the finders. "It's like they found the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow."

Kagin, whose family has been in the rare-coin business for 81 years, would say little about the couple other than that they are husband and wife, are middle-aged and have lived for several years on the rural property where the coins were found.

They have no idea who put them there, he said.

The pair are choosing to remain anonymous, Kagin said, in part to avoid a renewed gold rush to their property by modern-day prospectors armed with metal detectors.


This image provided by the Saddle Ridge Hoard discoverers via Kagin's, Inc., shows one of the six decaying metal canisters filled with 1800s-era U.S. gold coins unearthed in California by two people who want to remain anonymous.
 
Yeahup... Crazy
 
I'm glad for the couple, but those loose lips will cost them a fortune....count on it.
 
I agree with the comments made on another blog site....I would have sold them individually through a confidential buyer. Ta hell with Uncle Sugar getting one penny of this treasure!!:ranting:
 
Going public was the worse thing they could have done!
I would have rapped up a few,
Checked the collectable value vs the melt,
A coarse file would made some of them fit real good in 1/2 oz containers,
I would have spent the next few years cashing them in one at a time in shavings form in a bunch of different location, in a bunch of different states.

They screwed up really bad!
Mark
 
MarkCZ said:
Going public was the worse thing they could have done!
I would have rapped up a few,
Checked the collectable value vs the melt,
A coarse file would made some of them fit real good in 1/2 oz containers,
I would have spent the next few years cashing them in one at a time in shavings form in a bunch of different location, in a bunch of different states.

They screwed up really bad!
Mark

Man you got that right.

I even shake my head when I see some of the rings and watches that get posted on the forums that are worth thousands of dollars. It is so easy to locate these forums on the internet if one wanted to.
 
totally agree worse thing they ever did . They should have kept quiet and sold privately to coin collectors The government will get their share of these coins if not all of them they have their ways just like what happened before they can just say they were stolen from the mint and confiscate them its happened before .
 
By selling them legit they may be a to sell them for many times the value they would have gotten by selling them under the table , at least more than enough to cover the taxes, and not have to look over their shoulder for the IRS. jmo
 
Hobo lobo said:
By selling them legit they may be a to sell them for many times the value they would have gotten by selling them under the table , at least more than enough to cover the taxes, and not have to look over their shoulder for the IRS. jmo

Taxes, LoL! it won't be taxes, in this country when large caches are found either state or federal government will grab all of it.
Like I said put some of them in coin wrappers, file the rest down and spend a few years selling the gold one ounce at a time and never at the same place.

Plain stupid!

Mark
 
tarajudy said:
we all know that these coins were stolen at one time
I don't know that.

The coins, in $5, $10 and $20 denominations, were stored more or less in chronological order, McCarthy said, with the 1840s and 1850s pieces going into one canister until it was filed, then new coins going into the next one and the next one after that. The dates and the method indicated that whoever put them there was using the ground as their personal bank and that they weren't swooped up all at once in a robbery.
 
Latest news is the coins have been traced back to a robbery of the San Francisco mint in 1899.
 
tarajudy said:
we all know that these coins were stolen at one time
Yea, but now the claim is they were stolen from the Government!, that means that they will never NOT be property of the Government. In the other post I said it wouldn't surprise me if they don't end up getting arrested, I can read the headlines now!
"Couple Knew They Had Stolen US Mint Coins And Fabricated The Story Of Finding Them When They Had Actually Hidden Them To Begin With" LoL!

Its still not over!
Finding treasure in this country and going public with it is a BAD idea!

Selling them in their glory (NICE, Rare, Coin Form) in un-circulated condition makes them traceable, so one would need to go to great lengths to move them very SLOWLY over a long period of time and never in the same location.
Then you have the fact that there were over 1400 of them! so, to get some in between cash a few of them would (in my case) get transformed into a not traceable form (Just Gold) and sold. Later in life my Grandkids would get a really cool 20th birthday gift!

Its bad for the couple and that's the way our Government is!

Mark
 
Same story different person.
 
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