Friday, September 7, 2012

Follow-up: 10 Of The Most Valuable Coins In The World Seized By The Feds

http://americanhistory.si.edu/collections/numismatics/doubleea/1933or2.jpg

In July 2011 we posted "Where Did Ten of the Rarest Coins in the World Come From? (1933 Double Eagles)", here's the endgame.

From Russia Today sorry, RT:
Feds seize gold coins worth $80 mln from Pennsylvania family 
A federal judge has upheld a verdict that strips a Pennsylvania family of their grandfather’s gold coins — worth an estimated $80 million — and has ordered ownership transferred to the US government.

Judge Legrome Davis of the Eastern District Court of Pennsylvania affirmed a 2011 jury decision that a box of 1933 Saint-Gaudens double eagle coins discovered by the family of Israel Switt, a deceased dealer and collector, is the property of the United States.

In the midst of the Great Depression, then-President Franklin Roosevelt ordered that America’s supply of double eagles manufactured at the Philadelphia Mint be destroyed and melted into gold bars. Of the 445,500 or so coins created, though, some managed to escape the kiln and ended up into the hands of collectors. In 2003, Switt’s family opened a safe deposit back that their grandfather kept, revealing 10 coins among that turned out to be among the world’s most valuable collectables in the currency realm today.

Switt’s descendants, the Langbords, thought the coins had been gifted to their grandfather years earlier by Mint cashier George McCann and took the coins to the Mint to have their authenticity verified, but the government quickly took hold of the items and refused to relinquish the find to the family. The Langbords responded with a lawsuit that ended last year in a victory for the feds.

Because the government ordered the destruction of their entire supply of coins decades earlier, the court found that Switt’s family was illegally in possession of the stash. Even though they may had been presented to the dealer by a Philadelphia Mint staffer, Judge Davis agrees with last year’s ruling that Mr. McCann broke the law....MORE
HT: Economic Policy Journal 

Courthouse News Service has more detail.

One of the Double Eagles was sold for $7.6 Mil, (more accurately $7,590,020.00, all in cost) hence the valuation on the lot.
We ended last year's piece with:
That $7.6 mil. pricetag was the highest price ever paid for any coin anywhere until a 1794 "flowing hair" silver dollar was auctioned.

Here's the list at
Born Rich.
Here's the website of The Cardinal Collection Educational Foundation, the purchaser.