Posted on 08/25/2005 9:52:28 AM PDT by LibWhacker
Any more so than the value of a piece of paper?
US GOVERNMENT MINT STEALS 10 RARE GOLD COINS
If they were Rembrandt paintings stolen from the Gardiner Museum and some pawnshop dealer brought them in to be verified, no one here would claim that the pawnbroker was the legitimate owner.
I tend to side with the government on this one. As I understand it, these coins were never released into circulation. Anyone who owns one has obtained them through a chain that involves some sort of illegality.
A thief cannot give a customer any better title to property than the thief held.
As a kid I used to collect coins, and they told me that at one time they had a few gold coins but they were confiscated (their words were "stolen") by the government inspectors.
"Hello, we're from the government and we're here to help."
It's not my opinion, it's the law of the land. Would it have been more honorable to send in jackbooted thugs with sub-machine guns to knock the doors down? That's how stolen property is most often recovered by the government.
Very interesting. I didn't know about that agreement though I remember reading that at first the mint wanted to confiscate the coin and then some deal had been struck.
It should be noted that there are other rare coins that have made their way out of the mint in questionable ways. The 1913 Liberty nickel comes to mind. Also some of the 1804 dollars. There are others but I am not able to recall them at the moment.
Morons! They should have shipped them to London and sold them there.
No, it should read "US GOVERNMENT MINT RECOVERS 10 STOLEN GOLD COINS"
Value "is what it is": Value.
It's worth is determined by the "value" that people place upon it. Some place a little, others place a lot. Some have no need, thus no "value", for gold.
Same principle with oil,water or oxygen.
This story is no different than a war trophy NFA weapon being found in the attic. Once contraband always contraband to the gubermint.
The first article I ever posted on FR, about 8 years ago, was FDR's executive order ordering the confiscation of gold. Amazing reading. Talk about a fascist in socialist clothing. I'm amazed that the debunking of FDR hasn't reached more corners of the universe than it has.
The war trophy analogy is not correct. Owning full auto machine guns is illegal. Owning any an all manner of gold coins is not. US Citizens were required to turn in gold coins in 1933. Many did not. Many coins were outside the USA and thus outside the jurisdiction of FedGov. When citizen ownership of gold was permitted again (Nixon?) it again became legal to own all years and types of gold coins. For instance my grandmother gave me a 1898 $2 piece before she passed. That was legal. It may have been illegal for her to hold it (or not, because there was an exception for rare coins in collections and obviously even in '33 and 1898 piece was old, and obviously she didn't try to spend it in the intervening 50 years :-) but today it is totally legal to own.
I think the argument here is that none of these were ever placed in circulation so they are stolen. But that says that the Treasury dept's 70 year old records are more accurate than the facts on the ground (ie: this lady has 10 of them). It's a corner case.
So if you're a king of Egypt the mint doesn't "seize" the coins, just splits the profits, but if you're an American citizen then those coins belong to the Mint.
The government has already allowed others who have the coins to sell them (including, apparently, her father). What's the difference now?
Yes, the "Kelo Rate".
Never trust a government agency. Period.
they should have only given up one coin to authentic. Why would they trust the mint with all the coins or anyone else, surely they knew some of the coin's history before turning them over.
Absolutely correct. However, none of them were documented as having been stolen. These were, by Special Agent George Drescher of the Secret Service, in the Forties.
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