Hypothetical question re: gold coins found on Federal land

fragment47

Tenderfoot
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First, the only “confederate “ double eagles were the 1861-O strikes. Mint records show only 17,000 struck. Only a portion of those were struck after the confederates took over the mint. The confederates sent about every dime they had to England to buy war matériels. Digging on most Fed land is prohibited. You can legally dig in a National Forest. I think BLM land is legal but I’m not positive. After you found them, you would have to pay income taxes on the actual value of the coins, not just face value. Payment must be made in the same yr they were found. That’s if you do it the legal way.
 

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Send them to me I will find out for you 1 No RETURN ADDRESS NEEDED EITHER :)
 

I will tell you some thing else also . NEXT time i need an ATTORNEY I am CALLING "TODDSPOINT" :)
 

All of this is a cool idea but don't forget, if you ever tried to sell them you would have to be very careful because they are coins that never saw circulation, from a country that only existed for 4 year, if authentic, anyone is going to be asking you where you got them.. that could be an issue..

Its like the guy that bought a storage unit with $8,000,000 in a safe, technically it was his because he bought the unit, but you can't exactly carry $8,000,000 into a bank and deposit it without a shitload of red flags..
(he returned most of it to the owner and kept 1.5 MIL I think)
You could hide it under your bed and worry for the rest of your life if someone would ever find out and come for you.. hahaha
 

First, the only “confederate “ double eagles were the 1861-O strikes. Mint records show only 17,000 struck. Only a portion of those were struck after the confederates took over the mint. The confederates sent about every dime they had to England to buy war matériels. Digging on most Fed land is prohibited. You can legally dig in a National Forest. I think BLM land is legal but I’m not positive. After you found them, you would have to pay income taxes on the actual value of the coins, not just face value. Payment must be made in the same yr they were found. That’s if you do it the legal way.
Very helpful! Thank you. I wish my question wasn’t hypothetical.
 

First, the only “confederate “ double eagles were the 1861-O strikes. Mint records show only 17,000 struck. Only a portion of those were struck after the confederates took over the mint. The confederates sent about every dime they had to England to buy war matériels. Digging on most Fed land is prohibited. You can legally dig in a National Forest. I think BLM land is legal but I’m not positive. After you found them, you would have to pay income taxes on the actual value of the coins, not just face value. Payment must be made in the same yr they were found. That’s if you do it the legal way.

All of this is a cool idea but don't forget, if you ever tried to sell them you would have to be very careful because they are coins that never saw circulation, from a country that only existed for 4 year, if authentic, anyone is going to be asking you where you got them.. that could be an issue..

Its like the guy that bought a storage unit with $8,000,000 in a safe, technically it was his because he bought the unit, but you can't exactly carry $8,000,000 into a bank and deposit it without a shitload of red flags..
(he returned most of it to the owner and kept 1.5 MIL I think)
You could hide it under your bed and worry for the rest of your life if someone would ever find out and come for you.. hahaha
If only….
 

Now that you found these out on YOUR back 40, land you inherited from dear ole grampa way back in the day ... it is yours. And no taxes are due for you to own them because that inheritance was tax free.
 

You should probably stick with your question being hypothetical for now.
 

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