SS CENTRAL AMERICA LAWYER FINED FOR LYING TO COURT Público Deposited
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John Kleeberg writes:
I came across this article from last month in the Columbus Dispatch, which indicates that things are getting very hot indeed.
A federal judge has ruled that the attorney for a shipwreck salvager repeatedly lied to the court about documents detailing how much gold had been recovered from a site off the coast of South Carolina.
U.S. District Judge Algenon L. Marbley concluded last week that Richard Robol âcommitted a fraud upon the courtâ by denying that his client possessed inventories of the more than $40 million in gold coins and bars brought up from the SS Central America shipwreck more than two decades ago.
Robol was the longtime attorney for companies operated by Tommy Thompson, who is now a federal fugitive. Investors in Thompsonâs Recovery Limited and Columbus Exploration companies had tried for seven years to obtain the inventories.
They wanted to determine how much of the recovered gold was sold to California Gold Marketing in 2000 and whether any had been missing. Robol said in numerous court proceedings that California Gold possessed the only inventory.
A court-appointed receiver who took over Thompsonâs companies last summer found more than 20 inventories of the gold in file cabinets taken from properties owned by Robol. Some were the original inventories made when the gold was removed from the shipwreck from 1988 to 1991.
The Dispatch Printing Company, an investor in Thompsonâs expedition, filed motions for sanctions against Robol in October as part of a larger federal lawsuit regarding the shipwreckâs proceeds.
Steve Tigges, an attorney for Dispatch Printing, said that withholding the inventories and âmisrepresenting their existence to the courtâ kept the court-ordered accounting of the gold and its proceeds hidden for years.
âIt is very important to vindicate the integrity and dignity of the court,â Tigges said. âIf lawyers are allowed to misrepresent facts without any consequences, the entire system does not work.â
Thanks. Messy, indeed. No wonder it's taking over two decades to sort this out. -EditorDave Bowers adds:
Very complex matter as it has been since the 1980s. Continually, each âsideâ feels it is right. In the long run numismatics will benefit greatly. With Bob Evans a part of both recovery efforts we can be certain that finds will be reported and curated accuratelyâlucky for all of us!
To read the complete article, see: Judge finds that attorney lied in case related to gold ship (www.dispatch.com/content/stories/local/2014/05/14/attorney-ordered-to-pay-costs.html)
is an introduction for the collector and historian; volume 2 covers Connecticut, Maine, and New Hampshire. Join author Q. David Bowers, Whitman publisher Dennis Tucker, and editor Caitlyn Mitchell in Memphis for a discussion of the obsolete paper-money market, Friday, June 13, 2014. - 2014-06-08
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