Saturday, September 8, 2012

Judge: Family’s $80 Million Gold Coin Collection Belongs to Uncle Sam

Via Don

oldsarge commented on L&P "First they came for your coins. I did not bother, because I did not own coins......"

Judge: Langboard Familys $80 Million Double Eagle Gold Coins Belong to Government | Franklin Delano Roosevelt

A judge has ruled that ten rare gold coins worth roughly $80 million belong to the U.S. government, not the family that possessed them, according to ABC News.

In 2003 Joan Langbord and two other family members opened a safety deposit box that belonged to Langbord’s father, Philadelphia coin dealer Israel Switt, and found the valuable collection. When they asked the Philadelphia Mint to authenticate the find, the coins were apparently seized without compensation and taken to Fort Knox.

The 1933 Saint-Gaudens double eagle is “one of the most sought-after rarities in history,” according to Courthouse News. Originally valued at $20 each, one owned by King Farouk of Egypt reportedly sold for as much as $7.5 million at a Sotheby’s auction in 2002.

The Langbords unsuccessfully sued the government in 2011, alleging that the coins are rightfully theirs, and now they have the appeal.

Jacqueline Romero, assistant U.S. attorney in Philadelphia, explained that the coins legally belonged to the government after Franklin Delano Roosevelt ordered citizens to exchange their gold for cash in an effort to keep the banks afloat during the Great Depression.

“Those coins were all in a vault and were supposed to be melted,” she asserted.

Newsy contributes, including an explanation of FDR’s policy:

More @ The Blaze

8 comments:

  1. J. Romero, assistant US attorney and everyone involved on the fed side are thieves. Hope they're proud of themselves.

    Miss Violet

    ReplyDelete
  2. Oh rest assured the federal govt is very proud to be the owners of 10 VERY RARE Gold coins!!!
    "Thieves with a license" the license they wrote themselves, giving them (to their way of thinking) power to seize anything they see fit to seize!
    Imagine if those rare coins had been melted down.... would the fed gov give a rats ass who laid claim to a small amount of some nondescript gold bullion??

    ReplyDelete
  3. I've been surfing online more than 3 hours today, yet I never found any interesting article like yours. It's pretty worth enough for me.
    In my view, if all website owners and bloggers made good content as you did,
    the internet will be much more useful than ever before.
    Feel free to visit my webpage : Online Games

    ReplyDelete
  4. Wow, incredible blog laуout! Hоw long havе уou been blogging for?
    you made bloggіng looκ eaѕy. The overall
    look of your web site is magnіfіcent, as well
    as the сontent!

    Alsο visіt my homepagе: keyword

    ReplyDelete
  5. Every wееkend i useԁ to pay a quіck
    νisit this web sitе, for the гeаsοn that i want enjoyment, since this this site сonations truly nice funny material tοo.


    my blog post: loans for bad credit

    ReplyDelete
  6. Іf you ωiѕh foг to obtain much fгοm thiѕ
    article thеn уou haνе to aрplу theѕe
    tеchniquеs to your won blog.

    Аlѕo visіt mу wеblog; payday loans

    ReplyDelete