Why This Coin is Illegal to Own - YouTube

Channel: Half as Interesting

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1933.
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Double.
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Eagle.
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It’s a series of words that means nothing to most people, but that inspires fantastic
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emotions in a very particular group of individuals.
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Like “Szechuan sauce” for Rick and Morty-heads or “brokered convention” for political
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junkies or “Tampa, Florida” for fraternity members, so too does 1933 Double Eagle provoke
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chills of excitement for its fans: coin collectors
 who you can also call numismatists, if you
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want to prove you have the best words.
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You see, from 1907 to 1932, the United States Mint produced something called the Saint-Gaudens
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double eagle gold coin.
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It was called Saint-Gaudens because that was the name of the man who designed it, it was
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called the double eagle because an eagle was worth $10 and it was worth $20, and it was
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called a gold coin because its gold-flavored design was inspired by the 2017 Brockhampton
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song entitled Gold.
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However, in 1933, the United States was going through this thing called the big bummer,
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which is also sometimes referred to as the great depression, and back then, the United
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States’ currency was on something called the gold standard—every piece of currency
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issued by the Federal Reserve had to be backed up by a piece of actual gold held in a government
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vault.
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Of course, that meant that in order to make the money printer go brrr you had to have
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actual gold, and it did so happen that the US President, Franklin Roosevelt, requested
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for the money printer to go brrr.
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Therefore, FDR issued Executive Order 6102, which forbade “the hoarding of gold coin,
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gold bullion and gold certificates within the continental United States.”
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By the way, if you were wondering, we moved off the gold standard in 1971, and now the
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US Dollar is backed up by nothing by trust, apple pie, and the American Dream.
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Anyways, when FDR issued executive order 6102, the US Mint had already produced a whole new
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batch of double gold eagles—but, of course, the US Government didn’t want to be distributing
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more gold coins when their whole goal was to have people turn in all their gold coins,
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so, they ordered all those beautiful new 1933 double gold eagles to be melted down, apart
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from two which were to be presented to the US National Numismatic Collection, which is
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a thing that exists for some reason.
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And that should have been the end of it, but we’re only about halfway through our six
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minute watch-time, so you know it isn’t, because while there should have been only
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2 left, we now know that at least 22 remained—which, of course, means that twenty were stolen.
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That’s why ownership of these coins is illegal—because all but two were supposed to be melted down
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in 1933, any 1933 double eagle currently out in the world can only exist—and not be a
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melted down hunk of metal—because it was stolen from the US Treasury in 1933.
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That’s why, in 1944, the US Secret Service put together a task force to investigate rumors
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of circulating 1933 double gold eagles, because the Secret Service’s job is both to protect
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the president and to investigate currency-related crimes.
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After all, why just have the coolest sounding job in government when you could also have
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the most-boring sounding job in government?
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Well, maybe not most boring—I’m looking at you, comptrollers.
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Anyways, in 1944, the Secret Service tracked down seven coins—stolen by a US Mint cashier
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and passed through Philadelphia jewelry dealer Israel Switt—and melted them down.
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Soon after, they found and melted another one, and in 1952, one more.
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Then, in 2005, over a half-century later, they found ten additional 1933 gold eagles
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in possession of Switt’s family, and after a lengthy court battle, the coins were declared
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to still be US government property, and are now held in a vault at Fort Knox.
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But if you’ve been counting carefully, you’ll have noticed that that’s only 21 coins—2
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in the numismatic collection, 9 melted down, and 10 in government possession—but, of
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course, in total, there were 22.
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You see, before any stolen double eagles were made known to the US government, King Farouk
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of Egypt bought one from Israel Switt in 1944, and when he did, he applied for an export
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license from the US treasury.
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Now, of course, what should have happened was the treasury said “actually sorry, but
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no—that coin is illegal to own and the one you have was clearly stolen from US in 1933,
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and we need it back,” but what they actually said was, “uh
 sure.”
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That “uh, sure” was the result of a mistake by an unnamed treasury official, whose identity
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we can only guess at, and as a result, the coin made its way to Egypt.
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The government wanted it back, but in 1944, a few countries were involved in a bit of
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a tussle, and Egypt was sort of in the middle of it, and the US figured then probably wasn’t
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the time to try to get their coin back.
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In 1952, King Farouk was overthrown in a coup for silly things like corruption, and the
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coin was supposed to be returned to America, but then, when the world needed it most, it
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vanished.
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It didn’t resurface until 1996, when its holder, a British coin dealer named Stephen
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Fenton, was tricked into selling it as part of a string operation by the Secret Service.
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Fenton was arrested, but after a long court battle, the US government and Fenton agreed
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to sell the coin at Sotheby’s and split the profits—profits which totaled $7.59
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million, when the coin was sold to an anonymous buyer who is now the proud owner of the most
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expensive $20 in the world.
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