6/09/2020

And the treasure was found



After 10 years, a chase for a hidden treasure in the Rocky Mountains has come to an end.
Forrest Fenn, who created the treasure hunt, announced over the weekend that someone who did not want to be named  had found the bronze chest filled with gold nuggets, coins, sapphires, diamonds, pre-Columbian artifacts and other items worth $2 million.
The chest discovery was confirmed through a photograph the man sent him.
“I congratulate the thousands of people who participated in the search and hope they will continue to be drawn by the promise of other discoveries,” Mr Fenn said on his website this weekend.
Forrest Fenn in 2016 at his home in Santa Fe, N.M. He has not revealed where he buried gold, gems and artifacts estimated to be worth $2 million.Mr. Fenn will turn 90 in August. He is a millionaire, a former Vietnam fighter pilot, a self-taught archaeologist and a successful art dealer in Santa Fe, New Mexico. He had the idea for the hunt decades ago, after he learned he had kidney cancer. When he recovered from the disease, he buried the box to give families a reason to “get off their couches”.
In a self-published 2010 memoir, “The Thrill of the Chase,” he provided clues to the location in 24 cryptic verses of a poem. He announced that the treasure was hidden in the Rocky Mountains, somewhere between Santa Fe and the Canadian border at 1,500 meters above sea level.
Begin it where warm waters halt
And take it in the canyon down,
Not far, but too far to walk.
Put in below the home of Brown.
Mr. Fenn specified. "The treasure is not hidden in a dangerous place. I hid it in 2010 when I was about 80 years old."
But at least two people have died trying to follow his clues, and some have accused Mr. Fenn of endangering people’s lives by offering up a quixotic adventure, or even a hoax.
In 2017, Chief Pete Kassetas of the New Mexico State Police urged Mr. Fenn to stop the hunt, saying that people were putting their lives at risk. “People are coming from other states and other parts of the world to find this treasure that may or may not exist, with very few clues. They’re underestimating New Mexico geography ”, Chief Kassetas said at the time.
However, Mr. Fenn disagreed and he told The New York Times that year  “If someone drowns in the swimming pool we shouldn’t drain the pool. We should teach people to swim.”
Officer Dusty Francisco, a spokesman for the New Mexico State Police, said that the department was “very pleased to learn that Mr. Forrest Fenn’s alleged treasure has been found. Two lives were lost and many others were put at risk as a result of this pursuit and we are glad it has come to an end.” 
Though the person who found the chest may remain anonymous, the discovery may still come with some strings attached. Anyone who finds and keeps lost or abandoned property will also find it “taxable at its fair market value in the first year of its undisputed possession,” according to the I.R.S.




From The New York Times (edited)
Photo credit Nite Cote