Something that everyone dreams of is getting valuable, life-changing heirlooms from their family. In real life, many self proclaimed “treasure hunters” have been searching for the motherlode. But there was one grandson who didn’t have to look very far to find immensely valuable items. The man lives in Tenessee and stumbled on his grandparents’ horde under the carpet of their old farmhouse.
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You should not try to clean coins yourself, you can completely ruin them!
These videos that have AI voices, are so annoying. This probably would’ve been a really good story, but I just can’t get past the lazy video making.
Cleaning coins only hurts their value. NEVER CLEAN OLD COINS!!!
Cool
AI speech-bot is totally messed up!
How irritating using the same word over and over .spoiled the whole story..ilingwished illingwished on and on and on not exciting at all
Your robot voice mispronounces a word wrong every minute or more. Pretty lazy and unenjoyable to watch.
Never report that kind of stuff to the news or anything because the city/government can and likely will confiscate and keep the “treasure”. They can, will, and have required it to be valued to determine its worth and then you will be taxed based on that value. Even if it’s found on yours or someone in your family’s private property, they can and will do this. Even if it’s private property that was hidden intentionally by an immediate family member who then died, they will tax or just outright claim if from you. Heirlooms hidden and then found by a surviving descendent can be taxed or taken if they are valuable and declared. It doesn’t matter if the intentions are to keep it in the family.
Absolutely never announce or declare that you have found actual money/gold etc. People often are understandably shocked and excited to have found hidden stashes of large amounts of money/gold their grandparents hid many years ago and want to share that information with the world by contacting the news. That can be a very regrettable risk.
You can find all kinds of examples of this happening. One grown adult man found tens of thousands of dollars hidden in the wall by his dead grandfather and called the news. The city government soon paid him a visit and said he must declare it or face fines and jail time. Even though that money was most certainly earned lawfully and had likely already been taxed, they said he had to pay taxes on the money again. Even if he proved it had already been taxed when his grandfather earned it, the sum of money would be taxed again anyways. It was no joke money too, something like $100,000 up in Minnesota or Wisconsin, I can’t recall. The taxes were so obscene that the government got more of that money they he did. It was taxed based off the current inflation and I want to say it was something around $75,000 paid in taxes and he got to keep $25,000.
There was another recent case in Arizona where the family found their grandparents hidden gold and silver bars, various amounts of gold and silver coins, and other valuable gems and stones. It has been stored underground in a storm shelter on their property which was given to their surviving grandkids in their will. So it was still private family property. The government came in a took every single bar, coin, and gem they had which weren’t attached to another item. For example, if a Ruby wasn’t attached to a band or part of a piece of jewelry, it was taken. All the ended up with was jewelry and other less valuable heirlooms. This case was even more insane because the previous metal and stone values translated into over ONE MILLION dollars. The family took the case to court and lost. And can’t remember the terminology for how the government got away with having the rights to all that.
I sold a business a few years back and since have became a serious treasure cache and relic hunter. What I’ve learned after intense research and hunts is if people knew how much wealth was still waiting out there to be found they would be losing a lot of sleep lol. I think it’s a perfect storm of technology helping research, technology helping recovery, and the price of gold and other relics that makes the decision to put real time and money into the space a smart one.
Say his name, one more time.. I think we missed it.
I found my moms sex swing under her bed after she died. One could say that was her treasure.
looks like toms house 🙂
I like the idea of having a hiding place in my home he was very fortunate to have found the treasure that was in the last place someone would have looked
It may be just me, but I'd restore that house. It still looks structurally sound.
who is evil english ???
Terrible way of telling a story.
Fake
What was the grandson's name?? Evil English was that it.
You ruined the story completely. Detailed into zombie mode.
My uncle told me a story of homeless guy in Coney island Brooklyn always was sitting on the boardwalk with a sing asking $ every day for year and years like clockwork he was always sitting on his spot…dirty smelly ragged guy probably there for at least 20 years my uncle grow up there and worked with his dad on the boardwalk selling hot dogs seen the same guy since 3 and his 28 living in Manhattan but came back to his parents and the homeless guy is still there..the homeless guy lived in some makeshift house he built under the boardwalk well one day they found his body as he didn't report to his same spot on the boardwalk for few days and someone noticed it found it strange…so cops go in his shack house under the boardwalk and there he is dead! On his long long box that he made into a bad well they took his body out and opened the box and BOOM…100sand 100s and 1000s and 10,000$ a huge tall long box jammed with $100s bills stuffed and stuffed no more in total over $30 million dollars!!!! Back in 1982ish…story went like this, when he turn 19 his mother and father died in there jet flying and they were ultra ultra rich and he had some sort of metal break down because of their death ended up in a metal instation at 20 he went to family lawyer and asked for the $ all in 100 bills ( cops didnt write exactly how much but said around 30$ million dollars)…he took the briefcases of the money and went missing no one knew where he was for 30yrs!! He lost his mind cookoo ended up on the boardwalk in Coney island Brooklyn with a sign and on top of that every month he was supposed to as well collect monthly payments of the rest of the family furniture ruffly around $200 million!! But he didn't so the lawyer put it in some sort of investment fund in 1960s as he went missing and probably will one day return? So now in 1980s when the guy died that $200mil was still his now its over $500 million!!! It grown by the investment!!!! and now no one is the owner of 500 million dollars!! So what they did as the lawyer as well past away they gave 150 million to the lawyers family and rest to charity!! Insanity right!! Ohh and the 30 million in the box went to homeless fund donation
funny you were talking about a farmhouse and a clip of a chalet in video
The bot voices are awful
Who narrated this? He or IT said MOTH Er Lode instead of motherload. MOTH? Must be some sort of technology, not a real person. Also talked about grandchildren's LIVS – should be lives. Come on, give us REAL LIVE people doing the narration. These mistakes only 47 seconds into the video.
Bogus
Painful to listen to all the mispronunciations
LOL WOW,,,,, This is now the third time I have seen pics of these items and the story was different for each one. I wonder if any of them are the real story
What’s the grandsons name. I didn’t get it
It sounds like the speaker is saying evil English, what is he saying?
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A lot of people think that "Barr Notes," that is dollar bills with the signature of Joseph Barr as Secretary of the Treasury, are particularly valuable because of his short term in that position. Unfortunately, they are actually pretty common and a $1 note with Barr's signature in average condition is only worth between $6 – $15. Pristine, uncirculated notes from that era will bring more, obviously, especially if you can find a collector who is passionate about them. But they won't make you rich. Still, as a collector myself, finding that hoard would have really made my day. I have a few rare coins collected by my grandparents. Not rare, but difficult to come by these days. What is most interesting is that my grandparents saved them out of their pocket change in the 1930s through the early 1950s. I have them in my collection, but I have a separate list describing which ones came from them so they can not be sold.
BULLSHIT American robotic CRAP!