DENVER POST ARTICLE ON THE LETTERED-EDGE SACAGAWEA DOLLAR Pubblico Deposited

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  • The E-Sylum: Volume 10, Number 50, December 9, 2007, Article 18

    DENVER POST ARTICLE ON THE LETTERED-EDGE SACAGAWEA DOLLAR

    [The Denver Post ran an article this week about the local
    man who discovered a Sacagawea dollar lettered in error
    on the edge. -Editor]

    Andrew Moores tossed a Sacagawea coin into a dish on his
    desk and forgot about it - until a few weeks ago when he
    realized he possessed a treasure.

    Moores had a golden dollar with "In God We Trust" encircling
    the edge of the coin, which was struck in 2007 at the Denver
    Mint.

    Those words are the hallmark of the new presidential dollar
    coins, not the Sacagawea. And so far, Moores' Sacagawea is
    the only one of its kind.

    "I kind of feel like I won the lottery. It's that much of
    a rarity," said the 23-year-old data-entry technician
    from Lakewood.

    After examining the odd dollar, he sought the advice of
    a friend who collects coins.

    His friend found out that Professional Coin Grading Service
    in Newport, Calif., had a $10,000 bounty on such a coin.
    The PCGS authenticates rare coins and offers cash for new
    discoveries.

    After Moores spoke to the president of the company, he
    packaged his prize in a FedEx box, insured it for $50,000,
    and shipped it off for examination. The company verified
    the coin's authenticity and sent Moores a $10,000 check. He
    gets to keep the coin, too.

    In 2000, some Sacagawea coins were struck so that there was
    a "quarter die on one side and a Sacagawea die on the other,"
    said Mike Faraone, an expert on error coins at the PCGS. "I
    think about 10 came out, and one of those sold for $65,000."

    Michael White, a spokesman for the U.S. Mint, said officials
    are aware of the reported error and are looking into it.

    The PCGS believes the next major error might be an overstrike
    with both the Sacagawea and presidential designs on the same
    coin. That will be worth a $10,000 finder's fee, too.

    To read the complete article, see:
    Full Story

URL di origine Data di pubblicazione
  • 2007-12-09
Volume
  • 10

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Autore NNP