Posted on 12/17/2014 9:38:04 PM PST by Theoria
Shortly before his death in 2007, Manhattan landlord and lawyer Edward Giaimo Jr. revealed to his two siblings a secret he had hidden a stash of silver and gold worth millions.
While being treated for cancer at Mount Sinai Hospital, Giaimo allegedly told his brother and sister that he had stowed away a large amount of precious metals and they would need a truck to move it. The lifelong bachelor added that the metals, believed to be silver bullion and South African gold coins known as Krugerrands, were safe, but they needed to be removed from their hiding spot in the near future.
What he didnt say was where it was hidden and that missing bit of information caused years of litigation and a treasure hunt that has, apparently so far, come up empty.
Since Giaimos death at age 64 on March 26, 2007, his brother and sister have been pitched in an acrimonious court battle over how to split his $48 million fortune, including his share of a family real estate business with 18 properties on the Upper East Side and other parts of Manhattan.
One part of the legal tug-of-war has been over what Giaimo told the siblings and others about his hidden precious metals and access to documents that might lead to the bounty.
Giaimos brother, Robert Giaimo, seized on the deathbed confession and a 1998 note written by Edward indicating that he had roughly 200,000 Troy ounces of silver and 1,000 Krugerrands somewhere in the United States as proof of the secret stash. He has claimed in court papers that the silver bars and gold coins, worth about $4.5 million today, could be in an unknown storage facility or buried on family property.
Their sister, Janet Vitale, said Roberts search has turned into a costly fishing expedition.
In March 2008 Robert accused his sister in a legal filing in Westchester Surrogates Court of blocking him from searching the Pelham Manor, N.Y., home that Edward and their mother shared and Edwards Manhattan office on First Avenue.
Robert a Virginia-based businessman who started a Mid-Atlantic restaurant chain called, coincidentally, Silver Diner demanded access to the home and the office because he believed they might hold clues, or the treasure itself.
Robert filed the demand shortly after his sister discovered roughly $7 million in cash that Giaimo had squirreled away in a secret spot behind a closet in the attic of the Pelham Manor home. Around the same time Vitale found another $3 million in cash in a safe in the basement of Edwards office, according to court records.
Edward had run the familys real estate business since their father died, and the $10 million came from him skimming rents on subsidized apartments, court records show. (The found money resulted in the family paying more estate taxes to the Internal Revenue Service.)
Following Vitales discovery, a lawyer and private detective for Robert visited the Pelham Manor home.
There, Janets husband, Paul Vitale, suggested that they look under the porch, according to court papers. A search turned up live ammunition that the U.S. Army subsequently removed after the police, the FBI and the ATF were called.
Paul Vitale also told the lawyer and investigator that Edward once had landscapers dig a hole on the property and buried something there, Roberts filing says. Vitale refused to say what was buried but suggested they bring a shovel the next time they visit.
"He did not identify what was buried or where," Robert's filing says. "Conceivably, it is the silver bullion."
Paul Vitale also provided documents to Roberts lawyer showing that in the 1990s Edward had removed a significant amount of silver bullion from a storage facility in Lower Manhattan, the filing says.
The documents also showed Edward hired companies to remove a much more significant amount of silver bullion from a Canadian facility. He also rented a 26-foot-long truck that was driven for more than 600 miles and returned to a U-Haul facility not far from his Pelham Manor home, according to the documents.
Robert's filing asked a judge to compel Vitales husband to answer questions about what he might know about the location of the silver and gold.
We need to search for additional cash and precious metals, Roberts filing says. The only person to date who seems to have knowledge regarding what has been found so far is Paul Vitale, but he has refused to answer our questions.
Janet Vitale, who took over the familys real estate business shortly before Edwards death, countered in court papers that the Pelham Manor property has been thoroughly searched and turned up nothing.
She also fought a 2010 filing by Robert, who demanded she hand over all computers and electronic files connected to the family business to see if they contained any information about Edwards precious metals.
A court-appointed referee determined in 2011 that the files didnt make mention of any silver or gold.
Janets lawyers have also claimed that Robert has cast too wide a net to track down the treasure, at points proposing sending out subpoenas to 14 financial institutions, five high-security storage facilities and 294 moving companies and storage facilities around the country in hopes that one would have information about the loot.
Her lawyers have also accused Robert of costing the estate $24,000 by hiring a private investigator to look for the silver and gold and taking out ads about the missing booty in trade publications.
We must consider whether the benefit justifies the expense and whether the cost will realistically result in the recovery of assets, the probability of which appears to be remote in the case of the missing silver, Janets lawyer, Mitchell Geller, wrote in a March 4, 2010, letter to Roberts attorney.
Janet and Robert have also disputed what Edward told them at his hospital bed.
The two siblings agree that sometime between Feb. 28, 2007, and March 1, 2007, Edward said to them that he had precious metals.
Robert has said that Edward told them the metals were in a storage facility. However, Janet has said she never heard that part and claimed that Robert cut off the conversation out of fear that knowing the silver and gold's whereabouts could put them at risk for criminal charges.
Edward mentioned that there was some gold and silver bars or whatever you want to call them. And I was cut off immediately by Robert and he said, You dont want to know about that. You will go to jail, so I didnt hear any more about it. That was the end of it, Janet recalled in an Oct. 10, 2007, deposition.
Janets attorney, Geller, suggested in a 2010 letter to Roberts lawyers that while the two brothers were alone, Edward may have mentioned a storage facility to Robert. If so, Geller wondered, why didnt Robert get the facilitys location.
We cannot understand why Robert Giaimo failed to ask the critical questions as to the identity and location of such alleged storage facility, Janets lawyers wrote in a 2010 letter to Roberts lawyers. Had he asked these critical questions, the estate would have been able to obtain these alleged precious metals in 2007.
While parts of the litigation between Robert Giaimo and Janet Vitale have been decided, court documents do not indicate that the two sides found the treasure.
Robert and Janet are currently fighting over how some of the discovered $10 million in cash should be distributed, according to court records.
Robert Giaimo and his lawyer, Chris Houlihan, did not respond to requests for comment.
Janet Vitale did not respond to a request for comment. Her lawyer, Mitchell Geller, declined to comment.
siblings suing each other? really!
the ‘Rands I understand, but silver bullion?
I find $7 million or $3 million in cash and ain’t no one ever gonna hear a word about it.
I’ll blow it on women, booze and a leaky boat to store my new stash of firearms.
Of course, I’d set aside $1 million for a rainy day. Life happens.
These idiots should simply split the $40 million and be happy with whatever else they find...keep their mouths shut too...
Egomaniacs.
Well said. Anything else would be a waste.
Look for the palms bent to form a giant W.
reads like a trashy novel, although I predict that when comments start they will be funny
This would make a great movie, probably a comedy, or maybe an opera. Each Sibling would have their own Soliliquy, Ode and Aria.
It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad, World......
For some people $20M or $100M or$20B is not enough.. Greed and avarice is not a virtue although I have a friend who sees it that way.
Skimming millions from “ subsidized” apartments. Not what that means except that someone and perhaps taxpayers were getting screwed.
Excellent.....
That’s the movie I was thinking of, but this time it would be done in the style of Federico Fellini.
Some people would waste the money. I approve of your plan.
She said "Aren't you dating yourself"?
I said "Well, no one else will"
Turns out that reels 2 and 3 (of 4) were run in reverse order. Who could tell?
Tell her to move out of her parents’ basement and get back to you.......
It was only after my mom recently died that I had thought of my Dad’s stash in the old family home that was sold when he died 20 years ago.
He had a heavy-duty envelope ties to a string, and then dropped down between the joists and the laundry chute in the hallway wall. The chute had a little door and you would toss the dirty clothes down and they would land in a bin in the downstairs laundry room.
He usually had about a thousand bucks in that envelope for emergencys. I lived out-of-town when they sold it - I wonder if anyone grabbed it!?
Maybe next time in town I’ll go up and knock on the door and tell them part of the secret. And if it is there - split it with them!
Got a younger sister like that.
Thinks she is entitled to some insane portion of our parents estates.
I laughed at her a few years back “You should never count on your ridiculous idea of an inheritance. Old people are weird.
Better to make a life than wait on some patronage to miraculously occurr, if it does.
People in our family die pretty old and it would suck to live miserably and suddenly, at 65, be given enough money to buy a new car.
How freakin much was the wait worth?”
She’ll always be impoverished and it’s a stupid way to live, when there is no reason for it.
But, co-dependency is a life style for some.
Skip that.
I prefer great things, awesome experiences and a full life of friends and family.
And a garage full of booze, cigarettes, ammunition and guns...
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