Hiding the Elephant: Fort Knox’s Vanishing Act
by Kal Kotecha
321 Gold
In one of Harry
Houdinis finest moments as a magician, he made a 6,000-pound,
Asian elephant disappear into thin air. Billed as the worlds
most incredible conjuring illusion, Houdini swept onto the
stage at the New York Hippodrome in 1918 and proclaimed allow
me to introduce Jennie, the world's only vanishing elephant.
The elephant
was then escorted into a large colored cabinet. The doors were closed.
The stage was set and the drum roll began. Moments later, with a
flourish, Houdini flung open the doors of the box. Six thousand
pounds of elephantine flesh had vanished into thin air. The crowd
went wild.
In the years
that followed, Houdini presented that trick to wide-eyed audiences
of a million and more. Magic historian, Jim Steinmeyer, exactingly
chronicled this and other - conjuring tricks in Hiding
the Elephant, an exposé of stage illusions.
In 1933, with
America five-years deep into The Depression, the stage was set for
a magic act of unprecedented proportions. History shows a wicked
warlock at work.
On March 6,
1933, Executive Order (EO) 6073 was passed by Franklin Delano Roosevelt
(FDR), the 32nd President of the United States in an attempt to
solve the dire banking crisis. Executive orders have been around
since 1789, allowing Presidents to issue legally binding orders
unilaterally, without the consent of Congress. During his Presidential
tenure, from 1933 to 1945, Roosevelt would issue 3,728 Executive
Orders. This was his third and it was a doozy.
Just two days
after Roosevelt was inaugurated as President, he proclaimed a banking
holiday. From and including Monday, March 6, 1933 to Thursday,
March 9, 1933 no bank would pay out, export, earmark, or permit
the withdrawal or transfer in any manner or by any device whatsoever
of any gold or silver coin or bullion or take any other action which
might facilitate the hoarding thereof
Sold to the American
people as an attempt to control speculation and regulate interest
rates, he closed Americas banks, thwarting customers from
withdrawing their paper money holdings or converting their holdings
to gold.
With a swish
of his magic wand, Roosevelt mastered complete control over
America's banking system, expanding his Presidential powers
exponentially in the process.
In his first
Fireside Speech (which burned the backside of many Americans)
on March 12, 1933 Roosevelt declared Let me make it clear
to you that the banks will take care of all needs, except, of course,
the hysterical demands of hoarders, and it is my belief that hoarding
during the past week has become an exceedingly unfashionable pastime
in every part of our nation. It needs no prophet to tell you that
when the people find that they can get their money that they
can get it when they want it for all legitimate purposes
the phantom of fear will soon be laid. People will again be glad
to have their money where it will be safely taken care of and where
they can use it conveniently at any time. I can assure you, my friends,
that it is safer to keep your money in a reopened bank than it is
to keep it under the mattress.
On June 16,
1933, EO 6073 passed into legislation as the Emergency Banking
Act (EBA). After only 40 minutes debate in the House
of Representatives, with an unknown author and no printed copies
available for members of the House, the Bill was passed swiftly
and without due process. The wand was waved again.
At the time,
Congressman Lundeen, appalled at the reckless lack of due process
involved in the passing of this Bill said I want to put
myself on record against procedure of this kind and against the
use of such methods in passing legislation affecting millions of
lives and billions of dollars. It seems to me that under this bill
thousands of small banks will be crushed and wiped out of existence,
and that money and credit control will be still further concentrated
in the hands of those who now hold the power
. I am suspicious
of this railroading of bills through our House of Representatives,
and I refuse to vote for a measure unseen and unknown.
Meanwhile,
Executive Order 6073 paved the way for Executive Order 6102 on April
5, 1933.
This Executive
Order (EO) made it a criminal act to possess gold coins, gold bullion
and gold certificates within the continental United States and ordered
that the hoarded gold be delivered to the Government on or before
May 1, 1933. The official price of gold was raised from $20.67 to
$35/ounce.
Although it
is unknown just how much gold was confiscated by means of Executive
Order 6102, numbers suggest that by January 1934, there were 195.1
million ounces and 227.9 million ounces by August 1934.
The Government
had to have some place to hoard the confiscated gold. So,
Executive Order 6102 paved the way to Fort Knox. The U.S. Treasury
Department began construction of the United States Bullion Depository
(USBD) in 1936. Completed in December of that year, at a cost of
US$560,000, the Gold Vault sits in a 109,000-acre Army enclave in
Fort Knox, Kentucky.
The U.S. Mint
states that 147.3 million ounces of gold are now tucked into Fort
Knox. Guarded by Apache helicopter gunships and tucked into a bunker
with a bomb-proof roof and thick granite walls, youd think
that 147.3 million ounces of gold would be safe in the vault. While
Treasury officials insist that the gold is all there,
why the resistance to a public audit? Congress begs off, saying
it will cost US$60 million to test the gold. Other figures bandied
about suggest US$15 million. Other so-called experts contest both
figures, stating that an independent audit and assay could be conducted
for as little as US$15,000.
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the rest of the article
February
22, 2012
Copyright
© 2012 321 Gold
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