15 December 2016

Three tons of gold and jail

The Washington Post has an article (via Amazon) by Avi Selk about a guy with a lot of gold and no explanation for where it went:

Tommy G. Thompson (photo) was once one of the greatest treasure hunters of his time, a dark-bearded diver who hauled a trove of gold from the Atlantic Ocean in 1988, which was dubbed the richest find in US history.
Years later, accused of cheating his investors out of the fortune, Thompson led Federal agents on a great manhunt, pursued from a Florida mansion to a mid-rent hotel room booked under a fake name.
Now Thompson’s beard has grayed, and he lives in an Ohio jail cell, held there until he gives up the location of the gold. But for nearly two years, despite threats and fines and the best exertions of a Federal judge, no one has managed to make Thompson reveal what he did with the treasure.
The wreck of the SS Central America waited over a hundred years for Thompson to find it. The steamer went down in a hurricane in 1857, taking over four hundred souls and at least three tons of California gold to the sea floor off South Carolina. Many tried, but none succeeded until a young, shipwreck-obsessed engineer from Columbus, Ohio, built an underwater robot called Nemo to pinpoint the Central America, then dive eight thousand feet under the sea and bring up the loot.
“A man as personable as he was brilliant, Thompson recruited more than a hundred and fifty investors to fund his expedition,” Columbus Monthly noted in a profile. He “spent years studying the ship’s fateful voyage and developing the technology to plunge deeper in the ocean than anyone had before to retrieve its treasure.”
Thompson’s crew pulled up rare nineteenth-century coins, the ship’s bell, and “gold bars fifteen times bigger than the largest California gold bar previously known to exist,” the Chicago Tribune reported in 1989.
Over ninety percent of the wreck site remains unexplored, potentially worth four hundred million dollars in gold alone, The Washington Post reported. “The treasure trove is the richest in American history and the deepwater salvage effort the most ambitious ever undertaken anywhere.”
The expedition’s loot captured the country’s attention, as did the peculiarities of its leader, a scientist-seafarer hybrid who worked on nuclear submarine systems before he hunted treasure.
Thompson is not exactly the romantic, swashbuckling sort,” Forbes wrote during the years-long recovery of the ship’s treasure. “He is scientific and methodical, with none of the P.T. Barnum that infuses (and inflates) other salvors.” In his late thirties, during the height of his fame, Thompson said little in public and tended to play down his role in the discovery. “This gold is part of the largest treasure trove in American history,” he told reporters in 1989. “But the history of the SS Central America is also a rich part of our nation’s cultural treasury.” He added: “It’s a celebration of American ideals: free enterprise and hard work.”
But, before long, some of Thompson’s bankrollers began painting a very different picture of the man. Two of the expedition’s biggest investors took him to court in the 2000s, accusing him of selling nearly all the gold and keeping the profits for himself.
When a Federal judge ordered Thompson to appear in 2012, he didn’t show. An arrest warrant was issued, but the man who found a long-lost shipwreck had disappeared.
There followed a two-year manhunt for what a top United States Marshal called “perhaps one of the smartest fugitives” the agency had ever chased.
Thompson had “almost limitless resources and approximately a ten-year head start” in the chase, US Marshal for the Southern District of Ohio Peter Tobin said in a statement.
Thompson and his girlfriend had been living for years in a Florida mansion, paying rent with cash that was damp and moldy from the earth it had been buried in, The Washington Post’s Abby Phillip reported last year. The couple had fled by the time authorities found the house.
Government records detailed what they left behind: disposable cellphones, money straps stamped $10,000, and a guide on evading law enforcement titled How to be Invisible.
Thompson was finally caught in January of 2015, after agents tracked his girlfriend to a $200-a-night hotel near West Palm Beach, Florida, The Washington Post reported.
In a celebratory statement, Tobin said the Marshals had used “all of our resources and ingenuity” to find the treasure hunter. But they did not find the treasure.
Thompson’s investors, who originally expected to make tens of millions of dollars from the venture, said that they believe he had hundreds of gold coins secreted in a trust account for his children. At first, their search for the coins looked promising. Thompson pleaded guilty to contempt of court in April of 2015, according to the Columbus Dispatch. He said the coins were in Belize and agreed to reveal their exact location. But that did not happen.
Thompson’s attorney said last month that his client couldn’t remember who he gave the gold to, even after poring over thousands of pages of documents related to the treasure, according to the Dispatch. A Federal judge ruled that Thompson was faking memory problems, the newspaper reported, and has held him in an Ohio jail cell for a year.
Thompson could remain behind bars until he talks, The Associated Press reported, and is being fined a thousand dollars a day in the meantime.
“Who knows, he might have an epiphany,” US District Judge Algenon Marbley remarked when he ordered Thompson to answer questions about the gold’s location.
But, so far, the SS Central America’s treasure remains missing for the second time in two centuries, and perhaps the only man able to find it remains as silent as the lost sailors of that old wreck.
Rico says the guy didn't handle this very well...

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