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Mon Sep 5 10:24:59 PDT 2005
Feds seize $10M in coins, owner to sue
After a family asks U.S. Mint to authenticate 10 old coins, gov't grabs
them. Potential value: $10M.
August 27, 2005: 4:26 PM EDT
PHILADELPHIA (Reuters) - A Philadelphia antiques dealer plans to sue the
U.S. Mint to recover rare gold coins worth millions of dollars that the federal
government has seized because it says they were illegally obtained.
Ten "Double Eagle" $20 coins minted in 1933 were discovered in September in
a Philadelphia antiques and jewelry store and voluntarily handed by its
owners, the Langbord family, to the Mint for authentication.
In June, the Mint confirmed they were the coveted Double Eagles but informed
the Langbords that the coins were being sent for safe-keeping to the U.S.
Bullion Depository at Fort Knox, Kentucky, because the family had no right to
them.
The coins have grail-like status for coin collectors. Only about 25 out of
445,500 are known to have survived destruction after the United States
abandoned the gold standard in 1933 and ordered them melted down. Two of the coins
were given to the Smithsonian Institution in Washington for display.
A few more survived, and the 10 recently discovered were obtained in 1937 by
Israel Switt, an antiques dealer and ancestor of the Langbord family, in
whose store the coins were found. Switt died in the 1980s.
Mint officials believe Switt got at least 20 of the coins from a cashier at
the Philadelphia Mint who was later convicted of a crime relating to his work
there.
One of Switt's coins is believed to have found its way to the former King
Farouk of Egypt, and was auctioned to an anonymous buyer in 2002 for $7.59
million, the largest sum ever paid for a coin. In that case, the government
retained title to the coin but agreed to split the proceeds because of a dispute
over evidence, a Mint official said.
Barry Berke, a New York lawyer for the Langbord family, argues the Mint
cannot prove the coins were illegally obtained and should return them to the
family.
"We anticipate bringing litigation," he said on Thursday. "We do not think
there is any basis in fact or law for the government's conduct." He said he
would likely file suit in the next couple of months.
A Mint official, speaking to Reuters on condition of anonymity, said no such
proof is needed because the coins were never issued and so always remained
government property.
Mint officials say they will fight any lawsuit, and if they succeed the
Double Eagles will be shown in museums.
"We believe there is an important principle at stake," the official said.
"Someone should not be able to profit from the possession of stolen property."
Beth Deisher, editor of Coin World, estimated the Double Eagle coins could
be worth around $1 million each. The coin sold in 2002 fetched a much higher
price because of its history and because it was believed to be the only one in
circulation.
Although 10 have come to light, "They are very special and in a class by
themselves," she said.
Other extremely rare coins include the 1913 Liberty Nickel, one of which
sold for $4.15 million last month, and the 1804 dollar, of which only 15 are
known to exist.
(http://money.cnn.com/2005/08/27/pf/gold_coins.reut/index.htm#TOP)
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