I went to CoinTalk.com, one of my favorite sites, and found a long discussion since last Tuesday. One fact is that one of the coins was struck at Dahlonega, which closed at the start of the Civil War, long before Walter Dimmick worked at the SF Mint: "There was a $5 Dahlonega coin in the hoard as well. Dimmick started work at the mint in 1898."
Kagan is the only person to have earned a Ph.D. in numismatics from an American university. About 15 years ago, his father was arrested in Kansas City, coming home from Turkey, with "beads" that the Turkish government claimed were its "cultural patrimony." That is a whole other issue.
The difference between me and them is this getting to the press. I love non- disclosure agreements. Also, I would have only ever shown off a small handful of them to the coin guy after he agreed to keep his mouth shut.
It is interesting that adverse possession only requires 20 years. If the gold was lost long enough, then it should be treated like someone finding a gold nugget. But the government is too GREEDY to let that happen.
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This SFGate story has better details.
http://www.sfgate.com/bayarea/article/Go...
Kagan is the only person to have earned a Ph.D. in numismatics from an American university. About 15 years ago, his father was arrested in Kansas City, coming home from Turkey, with "beads" that the Turkish government claimed were its "cultural patrimony." That is a whole other issue.