Anonymous ID: d0c4cb Oct. 8, 2023, 4:01 p.m. No.19695971   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>6037 >>6117 >>6135 >>6204 >>6255 >>6352 >>6377

Witnesses to FBI hunt for Civil War gold describe heavily loaded armored truck, signs of a night dig

 

more FBI Fuggery

 

PENFIELD, Pa. (AP) — In the heart of Pennsylvania elk country, Eric McCarthy and his client, Don Reichel, got up before sunrise to scour the forest floor for so-called “brown gold” — a rack of freshly shed antlers to add to Reichel’s collection back home.

 

One hill over, a team of FBI agents was also hunting for gold. The metallic yellow kind.

 

The FBI’s highly unusual search for buried Civil War-era treasure more than five years ago set in motion a dispute over what, if anything, the agency unearthed and an ongoing legal battle over key records. There’s so much intrigue that even a federal judge felt compelled to note in a ruling last week.“The FBI may have found the gold — or maybe not.”

 

The FBI insists nothing came of the March 2018 excavation in Dents Run, a remote wooded valley about 110 miles (177 kilometers) northeast of Pittsburgh. But a treasure hunter who led FBI agents to the hillside wherean 1863 gold shipment might have been buriedis challenging the government’s denials. How could the dig have come up empty, he asks, when the FBI’s own scans showed the likelihood of a buried metal mass equaling hundreds of millions of dollars in gold?

 

McCarthy, a 45-year-old elk guide, had never met treasure hunter Dennis Parada. But he watched from afar as Parada took the FBI to court and told his story in the media. McCarthy recently decided to share his own story because he thought Parada, who spent years looking for the gold before approaching the FBI with his findings, has been treated unfairly.

 

https://apnews.com/article/civil-war-gold-fbi-dig-pennsylvania-6b5feca00ebf3e04638a8bbce992809d

Anonymous ID: d0c4cb Oct. 8, 2023, 4:12 p.m. No.19696065   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>6096

>>19695985

 

we already know each other

every one of us do whether we have been on QR or not

 

We are all connected

that + 90% part of the brain, the subconscious

it will get turned on

all Together, we are in it

KNOWLEDGE

 

Try to do things you would want played back on the screen of life for all to see cause that's how it works

 

this limited realm does not allow for the telepathy we had among ourselves in the beginning

Anonymous ID: d0c4cb Oct. 8, 2023, 4:30 p.m. No.19696204   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>6287 >>6352 >>6377

>>19695971

>>19696135

 

Treasure hunters doubt FBI’s word on dig for Civil War gold

 

The treasure hunters and Getler said they had an agreement with the FBI to watch the excavation. Officers instead confined them to their car — out of sight of the wooded hillside where a backhoe was digging — for six hours that first day before they were finally allowed up the hill. The digging proceeded for another hour before an agent called an abrupt halt at 3 p.m., saying the team was cold, tired and hungry and it would be getting dark soon. They were just 3 feet from the target.

 

Whether the FBI actually left the woods that afternoon is itself an open question.

 

Cheryl Elder, who lives nearby, told AP she heard what sounded like a backhoe and jackhammer at least until 2 a.m. and she saw that the hillside was brightly lit.

 

The second day of the excavation was similar to the first, according to the Paradas and Getler. They said they were confined to their car for several hours, then escorted up the hill to the dig site — by then a large, empty hole. The FBI had finished the excavation out of their presence, they said.

 

Garrett Osche, whose garage was used as a staging ground for the FBI’s initial foray to the Dents Run area weeks before the dig said “Why do you close the road down if you’re not loading something out? If you’re not sneaking something, why do you need to do what they did?”

 

According to the legend, the lost shipment had either 26 gold bars or 52 bars, each weighing 50 pounds (23 kilograms), meaning it would be worth about $25 million or about $50 million today. The Paradas and Getler say the government contractor’s scan detected a much larger quantity of precious metal — 7 to 9 tons — an eye-popping haul that could be worth more than $250 million if every ounce of it was gold.

 

https://apnews.com/article/b8b4d27254814894b3a79aa3083fb356