My grandfather was a B-17 pilot for 30 years, Colonel in the Army Air Corps, Japanese POW. He was featured in a lot of PBS and local military documentaries. He did a lot of speeches at colleges and universities....yeah, he was a hero and a true Patriot. The fact he survived the war, WOW! Unfortunately, my grandparents passed away in 03 and 04, but they lived in their 70's. So, they lived a good long life.
THE most amazing thing in this video is the sheer determination and dedication of the teams who are trying to resolve the historical mysteries with such tenacity from both former enemy countries.
I didn’t but my brother did. We went to Germany to visit our grandparents and my brother started digging holes in the yard. He dug up a bayonet that had USA stamped on it. It was dated 1944. He has it hung up in his garage now. After being under ground for all those years , he found it in the year 1967, it was in good shape.
Blimey, these are brilliant. That was amazing about the UK guy who bought the tank with the gold in it! I think the people who go out of their way to search for missing war time submarines and aircraft are absolutely phenomenal, it is a very precious and special thing that they do ❤️
As others have disclosed, I’m fascinated by these discoveries and appreciative of the effort in putting this great material together. There’s a huge amount of research, production, and patience in creating this content, so thank you for your contribution to our entertainment and knowledge, as well as the tribute this represents to people who were there and might be otherwise forgotten. Regarding the gold-truly a sad thing to see him lose his discovery, no matter it’s origin, the determining of which is so prone to error and graft that it’s pursuit is hard to assign value to. I think the greatest value of that snippet is helping your viewers recognize the benefit of discretion, should they ever find themselves in a similar circumstance.
A friend’s dad worked in one of those cement bunkers in Virginia back in the mid 60’s. He said that the radar was used to watch for incoming planes and rockets from the Atlantic Ocean. Inside were a bunch of computer screens with pen lite devices. You would point the lite on the blip on the screen and the radar would tell you how fast, direction, and altitude the thing was.
@@reynaldoandannieangnged6434 : I think everything was decommissioned. I tried Googling it and didn’t find much. I think the system was part of NORAD (North American Aerospace Defense)
When I worked for AT&T back in the 70's, I got to go into an abandoned missile bunker near Ft Collins, Colorado that the govt was signing over to a Native American inter-tribal firm that was planning to use it as a building trades training school. All it had was a little steel entrance door above ground and this massive structure beneath where they had control gear, crew sleeping quarters and a missile silo about 80ft tall.
@@billolsen4360 I have been all through the bunkers at Fort Story in Virginia. They were built during WWII to house soldiers who manned the coast artillery batteries. The guns they once housed are long gone but the bunkers are still there. One of them was big enough that they could park an ammo train underground inside it. If you drive by these things all you see is a little steel entrance doors and a few large roll up metal doors going into the side of a hill. I had worked there for years and had no idea they were there. One day this guy I worked with said: "Let me show you something cool" and opened this roll up metal door and this tunnel disappeared into the side of sand dune. That was the bunker where they parked the ammo train. Then he showed me the living quarters. This was about 20 years ago and they were obviously long abandoned and paint was peeling everywhere but the lights still worked. Apparently these bunkers were still in use up until the 1970s when the Nike Ajax missiles based there were decommissioned because the sleeping quarters in one of them still had orange shag carpet in it. lol
I have a sneaking suspicion that a soldier made off with at least 1 gold bar. It was reported that they discovered 999 gold bars... I'm fairly certain that nobody stores an odd number like that. It would have been at least 1000 gold bars 😂
The gold in the tank is a good example of why you never tell anyone, especially a government, that you found something valuable. In his case, he should have melted all the gold down into smaller ingets & slowly start selling them off to gold buyers throughout the country.
Clearly had no idea what gold was! A simple peasant transporting gold which could have been wood in his "simple peasant brain" and got a bonus for the gold wood
If you have 2.7 million dollars in gold, and you don't know where it went, then you don't deserve it. Just give the guy from tanks a-lot the gold already!
I live 15 minutes from camp hero, I can tell you that the book is not fictional. Camp hero is a hotspot for paranormal activity as well. Also, it was built before the cold war, but I appreciate the effort this guy put into the video.
As a police officer in Davenport, Ia. in the mid 1980's I got dispatched to a house where and elderly lady was in the process of moving-out. The fire department was leaving as I arrived. She told me her husband who was a WWI veteran had always told her not to let the kids play on the back porch because there was a live grenade in his foot locker. So carefully I dismantled a bed over the locker and after looking it over carefully, slowly opened it. Inside were his leggins, his uniform, campaign hat, medals. I got to the bottom and there it was a WWI German "Potato Masher Grenade. It looked like a tin can with a turned wooden handle attached and a star-shaped cap on the handle. So I called the local ATF Office and the agent told me to call the ATF Bomb Squad in Chicago. They came down, removed it, took it out to a remote area and detonated it. It was still live.
A 92 year old WWII vet's daughter was cleaning out his house in my town after he died and found a box of live 60mm mortar rounds. Fortunately one of the movers she hired was an Army veteran and he saw those things and knew exactly what they were. Local LE called Navy EOD from a nearby base and they came and removed them.
Great content. Thanks for sharing. The narrator's voice would be perfect for True Crime, Mystery, and Horror stories, but not so much this Documentary content.
The guy who found the gold bars in the tank that HE had purchased is a complete and total moron for telling ANYONE outside of his surrounding accomplices about the find!
VietNam, TayNinh Province, Hill 802 (FSB MACE), at the bottom of the hill is a Jap Zero, upside down, intact wings and fuselage, engine, instruments, guns missing. I visited and wondered sometime in late 1971. I was supposed to be on top of the hill and decided a little extra recon would be interesting. I didn't get caught. Good thing, twice.
Moral here is if you stumble upon gold when inspecting something you just bought, don't announce it. You know for a fact that gold did NOT go back to who it belonged to, Which is the buyer of the tank in my opinion.
@@oif3vetk9 yeah id never report it the gold would be sold off slowly over the next decade somehow if i had to sell my business to buy a mined out goldmine and slowly "find gold" i would
also, if melted down tomsmaller.pieces, the bullion dealer will still require the correct stamps to be in place otherwise, they won't touch it with a bargepole.
The closest thing to a military relic I've ever found is my mom and dad, but they're a text message away so "found" isn't quite the right word, plus I think they might be vaguely offended if I asked them to play hide-and-seek so they could qualify as "lost" military relics... tho maybe not. My mom might actually be up for it LOL
The only military related things I found stored in a big safe when cleaning out my grandfather's old house after he passed away was a ton of nazi items like coins,cash,flags and so much more. Even his entire schutzstaffel (SS) uniform. No one in our family knew he was a member of the SS as all he told us was he was in WWll and don't want to talk about his involvement and what he did. To this day,my wife still isn't thrilled and hates the fact that I kept everything and have zero plans on selling any of it.
The story of the submarine in an Italian street reminded me of a story told me by a friend when I asked him about a certificate he displays on the wall of his restaurant. The certificate is for my friend's service as a submariner at the time after World War 2 when the Italian navy could not have submarines. The submarine was towed out of port by a surface ship so it could not be detected and started its engines when well out to sea.
My grandfather found a hand grenade as a child(60s) and his father found it and threw it into a lake Apparently In the 90s he was with his wife(My grandmother) and my mother in law and he heard the grenade go off
This comment is for the first one on this video. I think it's fair that Nick since he paid for the take he should keep it. But I don't know how publicized his information is cuz this is probably the first time I've ever heard of this. Since there wasn't a lot spoken of it I wouldn't throw it past the police officers that he contacted even though he was doing the right thing did not do the right thing if you get my drift. For me since Gold bars were involved and that I'm a bit of a treasure hunter myself. I would keep my mouth shut or contact a museum official directly, cuz I guarantee that if you're not direct with the information the load can definitely be lost somewhere along the line. Something like this actually happened to my parents once. One time on vacation in four corners Arizona, we found that is my parents and me. A rare signed hockey stick that was all signed by different hockey players. And I also found on a similar trip a dinosaur egg in a gully washer. My parents help me with this but I mailed my dinosaur egg to me back up in Oregon. My parents tried to take their hockey stick on the plane. The dinosaur egg actually made its way to me in unmarked packaging. The hockey stick was "lost in the luggage"I sure hope it was a big seller at there auction. I love it how everybody has the term loose lips sink ships. But depending on the information, sometimes loose lips sink pirate ships.✌️
yeah, nah, it was given quite publically to the British police. It's a fairly old story...heard about it a few years back now He would've recieved a receipt for it and, if they can't locate the owner it'll go back to him...plain and simple. We're not the wild wild west over here
Camp hero was initiated for WW2 not the Cold War. I live 15 minutes from the base and have been going there since I was a kid. It was a defense with batteries set up incase of a German invasion. In fact, there were nazi spies that snuck onto Napeague beach by submarine just 10 minutes from the base who tried to make it to NYC, so it was a good idea to have a base here. As for the montauk project, it’s not completely fictional. There’s more than just the experiments on kids that were done there.
“Sir, I bought a *tank* off of E-Bay and found $2.7M worth of gold bars in my *tank,* can I keep it plz? I really want it and found it in *MY tank* yes or no?”
I found one thing kind of creepy kind of funny it was an unexplained mystery to my grandfather who had lived on the property for a little over 45 years it was a grenade and a Glock 9 fully loaded the grenade had it's pin already pulled and it was a miracle that it didn't explode by then. The irony of that is my grandfather is a military veteran. Does anyone else find this funny?
After watching this, I suddenly remembered that when I was seven, I found a torn jacket, I investigate it and found 15 dollars! Then, I buy myself a snack.
I actually had a chance to see swamp ghost up close and it looks amazing I had a relative who flow b-17and a I never thought I wold see one unfortunately I did not see a b-29 but it was so amazing I recommend going to Pearl Harbor.
During the gulf war a lot of captured weapons were brought back to "the Museum" at Nellis AFB. They were supposed to be checked before being loaded in a transport acft and brought back. Some were stored behind the "museum". I was looking at a few of them and opened a tank to smell what I thought was a decomposing body. Sure enough there was a dead soldier crammed in the back by the ammo tubes.
the "gold" they found in 2003 you can clearly see it isnt gold bars as one of the bars in the bottom right corner seems to have had the gold plate come off and shows a different metal underneath plush a little truck could not carry that much gold as it would have to be close to 5000 kilograms back in 2003.
Complete building on the gold tank. He purchased the tank, barring being able to verify with absolute certainty the origin of the gold then it belongs to the buyer same as the fuel in the other tank. Only exceptions would be items not lawful to own. If the story has any truth to it(doubtful), tank buyer would have handled it through a lawyer. Why would he feel it necessary to inform anyone if the bars were unmarked.
Time 13:02 said there were 7 soldiers on the plane that went down in the swamp. Time 13:45 said there were nine soldiers on the plane. So which was it were there seven or nine?
Screw that,, if I ever find big gold bars,,,, it will be melted down and made into some other thing,,,, jewelry, smaller bars,,, or even smaller and tumbled,, something ,,, I would never tell anyone I found gold bars,,,, I'd find some way to sell it in other forms
For military relics the most important thing is closure, that last one really hit right in the feels 😢
My grandfather was a B-17 pilot for 30 years, Colonel in the Army Air Corps, Japanese POW. He was featured in a lot of PBS and local military documentaries. He did a lot of speeches at colleges and universities....yeah, he was a hero and a true Patriot. The fact he survived the war, WOW! Unfortunately, my grandparents passed away in 03 and 04, but they lived in their 70's. So, they lived a good long life.
My grandad was in Vietnam.
@@elf1012 The
How can that be?
THE most amazing thing in this video is the sheer determination and dedication of the teams who are trying to resolve the historical mysteries with such tenacity from both former enemy countries.
I didn’t but my brother did. We went to Germany to visit our grandparents and my brother started digging holes in the yard. He dug up a bayonet that had USA stamped on it. It was dated 1944. He has it hung up in his garage now. After being under ground for all those years , he found it in the year 1967, it was in good shape.
Jesus loves you
@@kasen9487 the hell does that relate to this feckin comment? This comment is about a bayonet not a prayer. You must be in the wrong video
We know. Jesus loves everyone.
@@kasen9487 Satan loves you too.
@@jonathanyoung9369 no he doesn’t God loves you I will pray for you
Blimey, these are brilliant. That was amazing about the UK guy who bought the tank with the gold in it! I think the people who go out of their way to search for missing war time submarines and aircraft are absolutely phenomenal, it is a very precious and special thing that they do ❤️
Jesus loves you
As others have disclosed, I’m fascinated by these discoveries and appreciative of the effort in putting this great material together. There’s a huge amount of research, production, and patience in creating this content, so thank you for your contribution to our entertainment and knowledge, as well as the tribute this represents to people who were there and might be otherwise forgotten. Regarding the gold-truly a sad thing to see him lose his discovery, no matter it’s origin, the determining of which is so prone to error and graft that it’s pursuit is hard to assign value to. I think the greatest value of that snippet is helping your viewers recognize the benefit of discretion, should they ever find themselves in a similar circumstance.
A friend’s dad worked in one of those cement bunkers in Virginia back in the mid 60’s. He said that the radar was used to watch for incoming planes and rockets from the Atlantic Ocean. Inside were a bunch of computer screens with pen lite devices. You would point the lite on the blip on the screen and the radar would tell you how fast, direction, and altitude the thing was.
What a sophisticated equipment those computers are in that bunker; considering they're made back in mid 60s... Also are they still functioning???
@@reynaldoandannieangnged6434 : I think everything was decommissioned. I tried Googling it and didn’t find much. I think the system was part of NORAD (North American Aerospace Defense)
When I worked for AT&T back in the 70's, I got to go into an abandoned missile bunker near Ft Collins, Colorado that the govt was signing over to a Native American inter-tribal firm that was planning to use it as a building trades training school. All it had was a little steel entrance door above ground and this massive structure beneath where they had control gear, crew sleeping quarters and a missile silo about 80ft tall.
@@billolsen4360 I have been all through the bunkers at Fort Story in Virginia. They were built during WWII to house soldiers who manned the coast artillery batteries. The guns they once housed are long gone but the bunkers are still there. One of them was big enough that they could park an ammo train underground inside it. If you drive by these things all you see is a little steel entrance doors and a few large roll up metal doors going into the side of a hill. I had worked there for years and had no idea they were there. One day this guy I worked with said: "Let me show you something cool" and opened this roll up metal door and this tunnel disappeared into the side of sand dune. That was the bunker where they parked the ammo train. Then he showed me the living quarters. This was about 20 years ago and they were obviously long abandoned and paint was peeling everywhere but the lights still worked. Apparently these bunkers were still in use up until the 1970s when the Nike Ajax missiles based there were decommissioned because the sleeping quarters in one of them still had orange shag carpet in it. lol
@@trevorn9381 Cool!
I have a sneaking suspicion that a soldier made off with at least 1 gold bar. It was reported that they discovered 999 gold bars... I'm fairly certain that nobody stores an odd number like that. It would have been at least 1000 gold bars 😂
Exactly ...🤣
Basically most consistent youtube channel ever
The gold in the tank is a good example of why you never tell anyone, especially a government, that you found something valuable. In his case, he should have melted all the gold down into smaller ingets & slowly start selling them off to gold buyers throughout the country.
Guaranteed- the local authorities have already "lost" it.
Nope I would have kept my mouth shut, taken it straight to Switzerland and opened up a bank account.
Thinking the exact same thing!
I agree with you...
Clearly had no idea what gold was! A simple peasant transporting gold which could have been wood in his "simple peasant brain" and got a bonus for the gold wood
I'm amazed from this type of history and content thank you Be Amazed 👏
I'm still amazed that you are still posting content consistenly, thanks for that these videos is how I escape the choas that is the media.
If you have 2.7 million dollars in gold, and you don't know where it went, then you don't deserve it. Just give the guy from tanks a-lot the gold already!
Should've melted down the bars to smaller ingots and just sold them.
Do a compilation of Mind Blowing Easter Eggs found in movies, games, cartoon etc…. 👍🏽
If I buy a old battle tank that had gold in it, I'll be tap dancing like there is no tomorrow.
Imagine passing by a cheap truck not knowing it has 250m gold in it 😂
Lol
@@MitchMitch77-77
Because he's honest?
@@lovingmayberry307 or maybe because it was filmed already
@@MitchMitch77-77 that was tanks a lot this the truck with 999 gold bars in it
Most rusted tanks you found on the bottom of the ocean are Artificial Reef.
OH my gawd! some of these were CRAZY
I love the narrators voice ! So soothing lol
This whole planet is a giant GRAVEYARD!
I love this voice of the narrator.
I'd definitely try to get one of those bars
999? I think someone else had the same idea...
@@deadwingdomain lol seems so..... 999 is a weird number
I find the Montauk thing eerily similar to the SCP 001 proposal
which one? and isn't Montauk the name of a redacted procedure in the SCP foundation itself?
I live 15 minutes from camp hero, I can tell you that the book is not fictional. Camp hero is a hotspot for paranormal activity as well. Also, it was built before the cold war, but I appreciate the effort this guy put into the video.
As a police officer in Davenport, Ia. in the mid 1980's I got dispatched to a house where and elderly lady was in the process of moving-out. The fire department was leaving as I arrived. She told me her husband who was a WWI veteran had always told her not to let the kids play on the back porch because there was a live grenade in his foot locker. So carefully I dismantled a bed over the locker and after looking it over carefully, slowly opened it. Inside were his leggins, his uniform, campaign hat, medals. I got to the bottom and there it was a WWI German "Potato Masher Grenade. It looked like a tin can with a turned wooden handle attached and a star-shaped cap on the handle. So I called the local ATF Office and the agent told me to call the ATF Bomb Squad in Chicago. They came down, removed it, took it out to a remote area and detonated it. It was still live.
A 92 year old WWII vet's daughter was cleaning out his house in my town after he died and found a box of live 60mm mortar rounds. Fortunately one of the movers she hired was an Army veteran and he saw those things and knew exactly what they were. Local LE called Navy EOD from a nearby base and they came and removed them.
Thank you for your time. I appreciate you. You are the best content creater👌🏾 I'm forever amazed😊👌🏾
Great content. Thanks for sharing. The narrator's voice would be perfect for True Crime, Mystery, and Horror stories, but not so much this Documentary content.
The guy who found the gold bars in the tank that HE had purchased is a complete and total moron for telling ANYONE outside of his surrounding accomplices about the find!
Totally agree
That must have been one hell of a truck to be even able to move with 999 bars of gold in it. I don't think so.
VietNam, TayNinh Province, Hill 802 (FSB MACE), at the bottom of the hill is a Jap Zero, upside down, intact wings and fuselage, engine, instruments, guns missing. I visited and wondered sometime in late 1971. I was supposed to be on top of the hill and decided a little extra recon would be interesting. I didn't get caught. Good thing, twice.
Moral here is if you stumble upon gold when inspecting something you just bought, don't announce it. You know for a fact that gold did NOT go back to who it belonged to, Which is the buyer of the tank in my opinion.
999 Gold Bars? Alright... Who took one?
number 1, poverty
My dude BOUGHT that Tank “as Is”, if there’s Gold, I believe it’s his. He Paid for the tank signed ownership. His $$$,His Tank, HIS Gold.
that's why people that find themselves in certain situations should not report it. ;-)
@@oif3vetk9 yeah id never report it the gold would be sold off slowly over the next decade somehow if i had to sell my business to buy a mined out goldmine and slowly "find gold" i would
Always amaze by your amazing facts by your amazing voice..Thank you for your amazing video always amaze
4:45 It's probably difficult to sell gold bullion bars, even to Gold & Silver Pawn.
also, if melted down tomsmaller.pieces, the bullion dealer will still require the correct stamps to be in place otherwise, they won't touch it with a bargepole.
The closest thing to a military relic I've ever found is my mom and dad, but they're a text message away so "found" isn't quite the right word, plus I think they might be vaguely offended if I asked them to play hide-and-seek so they could qualify as "lost" military relics... tho maybe not. My mom might actually be up for it LOL
999 gold bars riiiiiiiiggggght where'd the 1000th one go?
I learn new stuff everyday
I'll never tell when I find something like that
Awesome content as always! 💯🔥
When I lived at a beach on the Atlantic coast bombs would wash up from time to time, especially after hurricanes and stuff.
Hey, sarge, we just found 1,004 bars of gold. Oh, wait a minute, private Jones says we miscounted. There are only 999 bars....
13:04 "Amazingly, Capt. Eaton and the SIX other soldiers..." So seven total?
13:45 "The NINE soldiers arrived..." So was it SEVEN or NINE??
Almost 11 million subscribers bro congrats
I found a cannon in the back if my garden and I still got it.
The only bars I find is candy 🍫 bars laughing 😂 🤣 😆
Bruh who ever stole the 1,000 bar is just horrible
999 gold bars... More like someone took one lol
The only military related things I found stored in a big safe when cleaning out my grandfather's old house after he passed away was a ton of nazi items like coins,cash,flags and so much more. Even his entire schutzstaffel (SS) uniform. No one in our family knew he was a member of the SS as all he told us was he was in WWll and don't want to talk about his involvement and what he did. To this day,my wife still isn't thrilled and hates the fact that I kept everything and have zero plans on selling any of it.
Wouldn’t that be 80 American sailors who went down with the USS Grayback, not soldiers?
He referred to the Airmen as soldiers, also.
The story of the submarine in an Italian street reminded me of a story told me by a friend when I asked him about a certificate he displays on the wall of his restaurant. The certificate is for my friend's service as a submariner at the time after World War 2 when the Italian navy could not have submarines. The submarine was towed out of port by a surface ship so it could not be detected and started its engines when well out to sea.
and sadly the guys who had all that gold in the back of their truck have mysteriously vanished and are probably laying face down in the desert
Imagine the submarine was in a covert operation behind enemy lines then ascends only to find they're in a middle of a road in Broad daylight 😂
My grandfather found a hand grenade as a child(60s) and his father found it and threw it into a lake
Apparently In the 90s he was with his wife(My grandmother) and my mother in law and he heard the grenade go off
Im from Bangladesh and I went to that air port many times, its just scary shi man
That WW2 Naval battle in the Pacific, wasn't it Truk lagoon not Chuuk?
B-17 crew = airmen. Submarine crews = sailors, not "soldiers," Heroes all, let us refer to them correctly.
I love your videos ❤❤❤❤❤
He's back!!!
"999" bars lol someone got a bar or more haha
I hope that the guy with the tank only documented finding 5 gold bars but really he found 6, finders tax if you like. 😜
This comment is for the first one on this video. I think it's fair that Nick since he paid for the take he should keep it. But I don't know how publicized his information is cuz this is probably the first time I've ever heard of this. Since there wasn't a lot spoken of it I wouldn't throw it past the police officers that he contacted even though he was doing the right thing did not do the right thing if you get my drift. For me since Gold bars were involved and that I'm a bit of a treasure hunter myself. I would keep my mouth shut or contact a museum official directly, cuz I guarantee that if you're not direct with the information the load can definitely be lost somewhere along the line. Something like this actually happened to my parents once. One time on vacation in four corners Arizona, we found that is my parents and me. A rare signed hockey stick that was all signed by different hockey players. And I also found on a similar trip a dinosaur egg in a gully washer. My parents help me with this but I mailed my dinosaur egg to me back up in Oregon. My parents tried to take their hockey stick on the plane. The dinosaur egg actually made its way to me in unmarked packaging. The hockey stick was "lost in the luggage"I sure hope it was a big seller at there auction. I love it how everybody has the term loose lips sink ships. But depending on the information, sometimes loose lips sink pirate ships.✌️
yeah, nah, it was given quite publically to the British police. It's a fairly old story...heard about it a few years back now
He would've recieved a receipt for it and, if they can't locate the owner it'll go back to him...plain and simple.
We're not the wild wild west over here
I don't know about finding any, but I've certainly been issued with a few!
What an absolute fool for giving that gold to the government.
Thanks for making my brain smarter.
Wow amazing 😍 awesome 💓😎😍 sharing 💗
oh hell no!! I would not be turning any gold bars over to any policeman. not happening. nope! guess he's a better human than I am.
this just proves how big the Ocean is
Conflict is the main subject of man kind
Camp hero was initiated for WW2 not the Cold War. I live 15 minutes from the base and have been going there since I was a kid. It was a defense with batteries set up incase of a German invasion. In fact, there were nazi spies that snuck onto Napeague beach by submarine just 10 minutes from the base who tried to make it to NYC, so it was a good idea to have a base here. As for the montauk project, it’s not completely fictional. There’s more than just the experiments on kids that were done there.
“Sir, I bought a *tank* off of E-Bay and found $2.7M worth of gold bars in my *tank,* can I keep it plz? I really want it and found it in *MY tank* yes or no?”
Amazing video👍👍👍👍
👇
Creepy and cool! I can’t think how mad that man would be if he can’t keep that gold.
Bro the last one was hilarious
I started watching after 46 min of this video got released
nice, he is very nice and makes us smart
I'm not in the military, but I found 11 grand in cash one year
My brother dug up a m 16 actully works surprisingly
Your videos are so quiet compared to others, n if I turn up the volume the adverts give me a heart attack 🤣
I found one thing kind of creepy kind of funny it was an unexplained mystery to my grandfather who had lived on the property for a little over 45 years it was a grenade and a Glock 9 fully loaded the grenade had it's pin already pulled and it was a miracle that it didn't explode by then. The irony of that is my grandfather is a military veteran. Does anyone else find this funny?
Not me!
After watching this, I suddenly remembered that when I was seven, I found a torn jacket, I investigate it and found 15 dollars! Then, I buy myself a snack.
Give Nick the gold🌟🦄
I actually had a chance to see swamp ghost up close and it looks amazing I had a relative who flow b-17and a I never thought I wold see one unfortunately I did not see a b-29 but it was so amazing I recommend going to Pearl Harbor.
I've been watching to this channel maybe 2016'2017
Yeah
So
For me it is 2020.
During the gulf war a lot of captured weapons were brought back to "the Museum" at Nellis AFB. They were supposed to be checked before being loaded in a transport acft and brought back. Some were stored behind the "museum". I was looking at a few of them and opened a tank to smell what I thought was a decomposing body. Sure enough there was a dead soldier crammed in the back by the ammo tubes.
Me from iraq and live in kirkuk:Why did you say "Karkuk" I'm angry now
Hi be a amazing keep up the great content
There needs to be a monster movie set in Micronesia. Maybe a giant reptile, like a snake.
the "gold" they found in 2003 you can clearly see it isnt gold bars as one of the bars in the bottom right corner seems to have had the gold plate come off and shows a different metal underneath plush a little truck could not carry that much gold as it would have to be close to 5000 kilograms back in 2003.
God the names in the Bangladesh clip are some tongue twisters
THAT'S WHAT I CALL WEIRD MILITARY INVESTMENT
I'd steal the gold 💀
Complete building on the gold tank. He purchased the tank, barring being able to verify with absolute certainty the origin of the gold then it belongs to the buyer same as the fuel in the other tank. Only exceptions would be items not lawful to own. If the story has any truth to it(doubtful), tank buyer would have handled it through a lawyer. Why would he feel it necessary to inform anyone if the bars were unmarked.
w-wait what? how? how in the world did a submarine end up there?
Montauk project sounds like something based on the Halo Spartan project.
Who would tell them they found gold
I often find bullet cases on a local field
Time 13:02 said there were 7 soldiers on the plane that went down in the swamp. Time 13:45 said there were nine soldiers on the plane. So which was it were there seven or nine?
This is an early upload.
Screw that,, if I ever find big gold bars,,,, it will be melted down and made into some other thing,,,, jewelry, smaller bars,,, or even smaller and tumbled,, something ,,, I would never tell anyone I found gold bars,,,, I'd find some way to sell it in other forms