It's become a golden rule to get it on Saturdays:
"FBI offers reward for information on gold theft from Boston-bound truck" by Aneri Pattani, Globe Correspondent March 27, 2015
The FBI is offering a $25,000 reward to anyone who can provide information on armed robbers who stole nearly $5 million worth of gold bars in North Carolina on March 1 from a truck headed to Boston, officials said.
That's all for a reward? It's almost as if they don't want to catch them.
The reward is for information leading to the arrest and indictment of the men responsible for the robbery, and the recovery of the gold, the FBI said in a statement.
Two armed security guards were transporting barrels of silver and gold in a truck that left Miami on March 1 and was scheduled to arrive in Boston on March 2, the FBI said. The guards pulled over on Interstate 95 in Wilson County, N.C., about 6:30 p.m. The cause of the stop is under investigation, the agency said.
The guards were approached by at least two armed men in a white van, who announced themselves as “policia” and placed traffic cones around the truck. The men spoke in Spanish and ordered the guards out of the truck. They tied the guards’ hands behind their backs and made them walk into the woods, the FBI said.
So that's the cover story, huh, a suspected drug gang hit?
Pfffft!
The thieves stole several barrels of gold, worth about $4.9 million, and fled in their van while the guards were still in the woods, the agency said.
Since the shipment left from South Florida, investigators believe the robbers may have a connection to that area, the FBI said.
The security guards were employed by TransValue Inc., a Miami-based company that is “dedicated to the international transportation of valuables between financial institutions,” according to its website.
Oh, it was bank gold, huh? Are they sure it was real and not tungsten, or is this a way for the Fed to say sorry, we lost your gold when people want it back -- begging the question of what did they do with a all of it.
The company is offering $50,000 in addition to the FBI reward to anyone with information, an employee at the Miami office said.
Doesn't seem like much of a finder's fee to be helping to find $5 million in lost gold.
The FBI asked anyone with information to call....
Yeah, FBI doesn't know a thing, huh?
--more--"
I'm getting the feeling the FBI knows who did it and doesn't really want to catch them. Too many patsies to frame with pathetic false flag patsy plots.
At least they did manage to find some treasure before it was buried again.