aquanut
Bronze Member
Yeah, anything over 50 years old found on public land which includes the beach, belongs to the state.
I agree just don't get caught.
Anything found on the beach in Florida, 50 years old or not, belongs to the finder.
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Yeah, anything over 50 years old found on public land which includes the beach, belongs to the state.
I agree just don't get caught.
Anything found IN A NAVIGABLE WATERWAY made or modified by man, more than 50 years old, belongs to the state. Drop that 1960 Quarter you felon!
This law makes me a felon if I find my lost High School Ring in a Florida Navigable Waterway and keep it. What kind of Bu!!$heet is this?
Yeah, anything over 50 years old found on public land which includes the beach, belongs to the state
This law makes me a felon if I find my lost High School Ring in a Florida Navigable Waterway and keep it. What kind of Bull is this?
If no one knows the site then why not just keep it that way, and take what you want?
Once it is declared an aquatic preserve the marine patrol will watch it like a hawk. It is better to search for a wreck without a permit and if you find something don't say anything.
As agflit stated, you will get caught and may spend some time in jail. Also, they have their' spies trolling the beaches and waters and know who have and who does not have Salvage Permits and salvage rights. This was even the case back in the early 1980's when I took the family to Sebastian Inlet back in the early 1980's when we were on our way to Charleston, SC to visit my' sister, brother-in-law, nephews and niece. They were there watching and warned me to stay out of the Sand Dunes.
Frank
Read the book "Sunken Spanish Treasure Quest" by Richard Joseph Johnson https://www.amazon.com/SUNKEN-SPANISH-TREASURE-Richard-Johnson/dp/1490745742 and you will get a gleam of what the State of Florida and some of it's personnel will resort to to confiscate found treasure often with no contest by the finder or finders.
Frank
Do you have more details on what happened with the State
Read the book "Sunken Spanish Treasure Quest" by Richard Joseph Johnson https://www.amazon.com/SUNKEN-SPANISH-TREASURE-Richard-Johnson/dp/1490745742 and you will get a gleam of what the State of Florida and some of it's personnel will resort to to confiscate found treasure often with no contest by the finder or finders.
Frank
They may have found the ship bit they will never find the real tresure. Two of the chests have been recovered. One made it to the media stream before the state could react, the other never saw the light of the media. There are still many others available in the state but unless you know the path they will only be discovered on occasion and dumb luck. I have stood on the path but cant uncover the rest until Florida gives up the right to treasure hunt on public lands, WMA areas etc.I will state it again! It is past time trying to work with the State of Florida and it is time to get the U.S. Attorney General and Justice Department involved with investigating the State of Florida's Departments, employees and especially the Archies for Criminal Misconduct when it comes to granting permits to Treasure Salvors, for putting up roadblocks at every step of the process, for circumventing Treasure Salvor's Salvage Rights by notifying Foreign Countries that a find is one of their' long lost ships, for Breach of Contract, for possibly taking under the table payouts and bribes, for possibly taking many of the finds salvaged from Treasure Ships and giving them to Politicians and other entities for favors or political influence or keeping the finds for themselves when they should be cataloged and locked away in the State's Treasury. The State of Florida, it's employees and Archies have a long history of misconduct, on some of which I believe Criminal charges can be brought. It is bad enough that the void I found in the entrance way of the West Martello Towers (a former Civil War Fort) which lead to a cache (three cases I was told) of Civil War Brown Bess Rifles, barrels of Black Powder and other items which were removed from under the Fort and disappeared with the exception of one, which I was told (but can't verify) made it to the Florida Museum but to continue this criminal misconduct even today when Treasure Salvors and their' Investors spend tens to hundreds of millions of dollars a year to research, search and locate valuable and other historic shipwrecks and their' cargo, then get shot down by some new ruling or even the courts that side with the State and/or with Spain or other countries.
Frank