Idaho's version of Fort Knox

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d_marsh

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Idaho now has a gold-and-silver depository. Its owner says it can hold more than Fort Knox.​


A gold and silver depository that its owner says can store more than Fort Knox just opened in downtown Eagle.

Precious metals dealer Money Metals Exchange, based in Eagle, built a $28 million, 37,000-square-foot “extremely secure location for individuals, businesses, family offices, governments, and financial institutions across the globe to store high value precious metals assets,” Money Metals said in an email Monday.

It doesn’t have machine-gun turrets on its corners as Fort Knox does. Fort Knox, built in 1936 about 30 miles southwest of Louisville, Kentucky, is considered the most secure bullion depository in the world, according to the U.S. Mint, which runs it.

But the Eagle depository does have North America’s largest Class 3 vault, the company said. That is the highest vault rating under Underwriters Laboratories standards. It would take two hours for someone using “common mechanical tools, electric tools, cutting torches, or any combination of these” to break in, according to International Vault Inc., a manufacturer.

The depository has advanced security measures, around-the-clock monitoring, secure access controls and a security team made up of armed former law enforcement and military personnel, the company said in a news release.

“The Western United States now has its very own Fort Knox, only substantially larger,” Money Metals said.

It is one of only about 10 private depositories in the U.S., said Stefan Gleason, CEO of Money Metals.

“As a business that began with a single employee based out of the historic Old Eagle Hotel back in 2010, we were pleased to be able to remain in Eagle with this latest expansion,” Gleason told the Idaho Statesman in an email.

The depository will bring more employment opportunities to the Treasure Valley, Gleason said. Money Metals says it now has 100 employees and delivers as many as 40,000 gold and silver orders per month.

The depository can store at least $100 billion in gold and silver and can be expanded to 60,000 square feet, the company said.
The construction project involved several local firms such as Wright Brothers Construction Co., Zions Bank, Erstad Architects, Integrated Security Resources, The Land Group and Musgrove Engineering, Gleason said.

Seven facts to know about Fort Knox​

According to the U.S. Mint website:
• Fort Knox was completed in 1936 and cost $560,000.
• The structure and content of the depository is known only by a few, and no one knows all the procedures to open the vault.
• No visitors are allowed inside. Franklin D. Roosevelt was the only president who has been inside the vault. A congressional delegation was also allowed to visit in 1974.
• It stores a large portion of the country’s gold bullion in the form of standard U.S. Mint bars of almost pure gold, or coin bars resulting from the melting of gold coins.
• It holds 147.3 million ounces of gold. About half of the Treasury’s stored gold is at Fort Knox.
• In 1942, Fort Knox stored the Declaration of Independence, Constitution and Bill of Rights during World War II to “protect them from danger.” These were returned to Washington, D.C. in 1944.
• The U.S. Bullion Depository has earned the title, “As secure as Fort Knox.”

Money Metals and Idaho law​

Gleason and his company made news in April when Gov. Brad Little vetoed a bill that would have allowed the state treasurer to invest in gold and silver. For several years, Gleason, an entrepreneur who lives in Charlotte, North Carolina, had urged the state of Idaho to invest in gold and silver as a safeguard against inflation.
He and Money Metals Exchange have donated to numerous Republican state and local candidates and the Republican party in Idaho.
Little said the fiscal note that legislators relied upon to determine the gold-and-silver bill’s impact on state finances failed to take into account “the many additional costs that will be borne by taxpayers for the storage, safeguard and purchase of commodities such as gold or silver.”
___

https://americanmilitarynews.com/20...s-owner-says-it-can-hold-more-than-fort-knox/
 
New York.

Ben
Ah yes that very imposing yet non-de script building on Liberty Street (there's some irony for you). I didn't think they still kept it there. Place always makes me think of that bank in Harry Potter movies complete with being staffed by those creatures
 
Anybody got a blueprint? Asking for a friend. ;) :D
1723920212676.png
 
Interesting...

I wonder how people plan of reclaiming their metals once it hits the fan.

I mean..if everyone knows where this is down in that area..
It hits the fan...
Suddenly alot if traffic is in n out if this place ..and Suddenly alot of carjacking, kidnapping, road blocks , beatings, home invasions start happening to anyone seen traveling in and out if this place..

Might need a private army n a tank to get in n out and at home..

Yikes...
 
Me neither...I dislike driving anything south of weiser..
I'll go to onterio but only if I have too..

I've been to boise area about 4 times in almost 10 years..
Crazy drivers, too many people, heavy congested traffic everywhere and it's ugly, dirty, weirdos, bad mojo ..just all bad..
Not worth going if I don't have too..
 
Me neither...I dislike driving anything south of weiser..
I'll go to onterio but only if I have too..

I've been to boise area about 4 times in almost 10 years..
Crazy drivers, too many people, heavy congested traffic everywhere and it's ugly, dirty, weirdos, bad mojo ..just all bad..
Not worth going if I don't have too..
When the wife was commuting to Alaska I had to go to the Boise airport every 3 weeks. Almost a 300 mile round trip. Fortunately we never had a reason to go downtown.
 
3 of the 4 times I've been to boise was to the airport..
3 seperate but very stressful days down n back.
The 4th time was to meridian for a weekend to visit friends who just moved to meridian. I didn't have to drive down that time so it made it alittle better.
I told my brother when/if he still moves here, if we go down that way..he has to drive.
But he was in the Navy 21 years stationed in San Diego ..so city drivers and the chaos doesn't bother him as much as it does me and I trust his lead in that environment.
But I doubt we'll have much need to go that way regardless.
 

Seven facts to know about Fort Knox​

According to the U.S. Mint website:

..they forgot:

• Starred in a cool Bond Flick

The-Fort-Knox-vault-in-Goldfinger.jpg
;)

Yeah, yah, I know, it was a 'clone' Set (but reportedly a Very Accurate one.. :cool:

PMs? Yah, we keep a bit.. Sliver more than Gold, but.. IMO, Copper and Lead will become the 'New Gold and Silver', whence the Not-so-Almighty-anymore Dollar is finally deep-sixed. o_O

jd
 
Over the years I have heard that it's likely that Fort Knox doesn't contain the gold that we are being told it has, just like the Federal Reserve they've not been audited for over 100 years. The question is, should we really trust what the PTB are telling us? There is a saying about having gold, silver or other precious metals, "If you don't have it in your possion, you really don't own it." OTC precious metals, a piece of paper saying you have such and such amount of precious metals, belies the fact that who knows just how many people own a piece of that same metal supposedly set aside for just you, not to mention, is that gold bar set aside all gold or does it have a large core of tungsten, which is very close to gold in atomic weight.
 
Over the years I have heard that it's likely that Fort Knox doesn't contain the gold that we are being told it has, just like the Federal Reserve they've not been audited for over 100 years. The question is, should we really trust what the PTB are telling us? There is a saying about having gold, silver or other precious metals, "If you don't have it in your possion, you really don't own it." OTC precious metals, a piece of paper saying you have such and such amount of precious metals, belies the fact that who knows just how many people own a piece of that same metal supposedly set aside for just you, not to mention, is that gold bar set aside all gold or does it have a large core of tungsten, which is very close to gold in atomic weight.
I keep some PM's in a pool account with Kitco. They are supposed to keep the PM's set aside in a vault. I can't say whether they do or not, but when I call a say I want to take delivery of X amount of gold or silver, it always arrives a few days later. Would it be lost in a true SHTF? Probably. We're still set pretty well in any event.
 

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