Mason jars in the ground....keep it simple stupid (KISS rule.) They gained legal traction with the undercover agent who obtained the initial evidence to lead to the warrant’s....personally I keep what I consider valuable in what I consider secure spots...Retna scans and fingerprint to access your box ...all of that is in the governments hands now....They know who owns what ...databases have been building since early 2000’s....(watch “Minority Report)
My grandmother did this to hide the change she earned selling egg - we have no idea what happened to them, a couple of them were left when she died.
We believe my mother did the same thing - we sold her house last year after she died and have a feeling there were a number of mason jars buried in the yard with cash and coins.
—”Mason jars in the ground....keep it simple stupid (KISS rule.) “
My best friend went through a very nasty divorce and she claimed big bucks were buried in the back yard!
Her lawyer wanted a court order to dig!
My buddy said the attorney did not understand the papers provided to the court, he owns a successful business.
He showed me the papers if you do not have your very own green-eyeshade; unlikely you can read them correctly.
Back in my metal-detecting days, I'd read of guys who worked the fence lines of old abandoned farms, etc. with their detectors. They said that after the Depression, a lot of people still distrusted banks, so they saved their bucks in "post hole banks".
They'd take a fencepost and cut a foot off the bottom, put their money in an old cast iron Dutch Oven, put it in the hole with the shortened post on top - nobody the wiser.
Dunno if it is an Urban Legend, as I never had the chance to find out- I was in California and they were talking about the midwest.