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Double Eagle 1933 (20 dollars) - Verdens dyreste mønt

I 1933 blev der præget  445.500 stk. Double Eagle 1933. For at få stoppet bankkrisen i 1930'erne blev det forbudt at eje og benytte guldmønter i USA, dog fik møntsamlere lov til stadig at have dem i samlingerne. US Mint omsmeltede nu alle eksemplarer af Double Eagle 1933 undtagen 2 stk., som blev overdraget til Den Amerikanske Numismatiske Samling.

9 eksemplarer dukkede op på auktioner i 1940'erne

På auktioner mv. dukkede der alligevel i alt 9 eksemplarer op. De 8 blev konfiskeret og destrueret. Man var sikker på der må havet været en uærlig person ansat på US Mint og man fandt den formodede tyv, men han kunne ikke restforfølges, på grund af forældelse.

Læs mere på Dansk på Om Guld 

 

A judge ruled that 10 rare gold coins worth $80 million belonged to the U.S. government, not a family that had sued the U.S. Treasury, saying it had illegally seized them.

The 1933 Saint-Gaudens double eagle coin was originally valued at $20, but one owned by King Farouk of Egypt sold for as much as $7.5 million at a Sotheby's auction in 2002, according to Courthouse News.

After the U.S. abandoned the gold standard, most of the 445,500 double eagles that the Philadelphia Mint had struck were melted into gold bars.

However, a Philadelphia Mint cashier had managed to give or sell some of them to a local coin dealer, Israel Switt.
In 2003, Switt's family, his daughter, Joan Langbord, and two grandsons, drilled opened a safety deposit box that had belonged to him and found the 10 coins.
When the Langbords gave the coins to the Philadelphia Mint for authentication, the government seized them without compensating the family.
The Langbords sued, saying the coins belonged to them.
In 2011, a jury decided that the coins belonged to the government, but the family appealed.
Last week, Judge Legrome Davis of the Eastern District Court of Pennsylvania, affirmed that decision, saying "the coins in question were not lawfully removed from the United States Mint."
Barry Berke, an attorney for the Langbords, told ABCNews.com, "This is a case that raises many novel legal questions, including the limits on the government's power to confiscate property. The Langbord family will be filing an appeal and looks forward to addressing these important issues before the 3rd Circuit."

The family said in its suit that in another seizure of the 1933 double eagle, the government split the proceeds with the owner after the coin sold for $7.59 million in 2002, according to Coinbooks.org.

 

 

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Nyeste kommentarer

24.11 | 07:01

Hvor kan man købe denne her ?

19.12 | 16:59

??? jeg har i går modtaget nævnte katalog, man har ikke gidet at rette prisen mellem 10 kr 2016 JS og LGS ???

14.11 | 00:55

Hej BK,

Nej, jeg køber ikke alm. danske årgangs mønter, men evt. andre mønter skillinger m.m

Men til dig og evt. andre, skriv i ''Kontakt Os'' vedr. salg

12.11 | 20:14

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