STILL MORE ON OHIO'S "COINGATE" Public Deposited

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  • The E-Sylum: Volume 8, Number 22, May 29, 2005, Article 11

    STILL MORE ON OHIO'S "COINGATE"

    The Toledo Blade seems relentless in its coverage of Ohio's
    rare coin investment, publishing an article May 23 highlighting
    the key dealer's absence from a coin show:

    "Tom Noe was a no-show at a large coin show in Columbus
    this weekend, but that did not squash the buzz surrounding the
    state's controversial $50 million rare-coin venture with the
    Maumee coin dealer.

    Mr. Noe was scheduled to give a speech about the state
    quarter program on Saturday morning, but organizers of the
    Ohio State Numismatic Association Coin Show said he
    canceled a few days ago.

    The three-day show at the Franklin County Veterans Memorial,
    which ended yesterday, included more than 100 dealers
    from Ohio and as far away as Texas, California, and Illinois.

    The Blade first reported April 3 that Mr. Noe - the central
    figure in the scandal dubbed "Coingate" by Ohio Democrats -
    had received two installments of $25 million since 1998
    from the Ohio Bureau of Workers' Compensation to invest
    in rare coins for the state."

    [I hadn't picked up on the "Coingate" term before, an allusion
    to President Nixon's "Watergate" scandal of the 1970s. It
    will be interesting to see in the end just how well the coin
    fund fared compared to the state's other investments in the
    same period. -Editor]

    To read the article, see: Full Story

    On Friday, May 27 the paper reported that "Federal and state
    authorities are pursuing criminal and civil charges against Tom
    Noe for allegedly misappropriating $10 million to $12 million
    from the state’s rare-coin investment."

    "Asked where the state’s money went, Mr. O’Brien replied:
    “I don’t know the answers to that question. The search warrant
    might partly answer that.”

    He referred to the search warrant executed yesterday afternoon
    at Mr. Noe’s Vintage Coins & Collectibles, his Monclova
    Township headquarters.

    As many as 10 fraud investigators pored over evidence at
    Mr. Noe’s office as Ohio Highway Patrol troopers stood
    guard outside.

    A technician photographed all the evidence inside the
    headquarters before it was brought outside and put into a
    state van backed up to the office warehouse. Late into the
    night, state inspectors loaded numerous boxes and at least
    eight desktop computers and a laptop into the van.

    Inspectors confiscated more than coins in their sweep
    yesterday. One investigator said they found that Mr. Noe
    had purchased other collectibles with the state’s money,
    including a Christmas card signed by former First Lady
    Jacqueline Onassis and a document signed by Thomas
    Jefferson."

    To read the complete article, see: Full Story

Source URL Date published
  • 2005-05-29
Volume
  • 8

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