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Mystery Surrounds Sunken Trawler - $15MM in GOLD missing?

Thread Status: Hello , There was no answer in this thread for more than 60 days.
It can take a long time to get an up-to-date response or contact with relevant users.

azapa

51% freediver 49% spearo
Jan 31, 2007
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Mystery Surrounds Sunken Trawler
By JEANNETTE NEUMANN AP

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (April 8) - The storm set in suddenly, darkening the midmorning sky. Winds reached 60 miles an hour. Waves towered over the refitted fishing trawler, with swells as high as 26 feet.

The eight people aboard the Polar Mist radioed for help, then donned survival wet suits and flung themselves into the frigid waters. In a daring operation, rescuers dangling from a helicopter harnessed the survivors and pulled them to safety.

Two days later, a Chilean tugboat caught up with the abandoned trawler. But as it was being tugged to dry land, the Polar Mist unexpectedly sank 25 miles off the Argentine coast, near the mouth of the Straits of Magellan, on Jan. 18.
The owners of its cargo say nearly $22 million in unrefined gold and silver went down with it, and they're asking insurer Lloyd's of London to foot the bill for the costly recovery operation.

But Argentine news media and maritime experts are asking whether the precious metals were aboard at all. They ask why the crew members ditched the craft when it would have been safer to stay aboard, why they left the engine on full so the ship was left spinning in circles, and why a trawler built in 1979 was being used to transport gold and silver in the first place.

"It's all very funny, very suspicious," said Carlos Mey, a maritime history expert who lives on the outskirts of Buenos Aires. "The ship kept floating, it wasn't in danger of sinking."

Navy prosecutor Pedro Vargas in Punta Arenas, Chile, is investigating the sinking of the Chilean-flagged Polar Mist, and so is a federal court in Rio Gallegos, Argentina. Both declined to comment because the investigation is ongoing.

Cerro Vanguardia S.A., the Patagonian mine that claims $16.5 million of the submerged freight, said the case is clear-cut.
"There's nothing mysterious here," said company President Jorge Palmes. "A boat sank."

The truth could come out this week, as recovery crews dive 250 feet below the sea to examine the Polar Mist's hold.

A judge in Rio Gallegos last week authorized the recovery of the cargo and the operation will be carried out by Netherlands-based Mammoet, which helped raise the wreck of the Russian nuclear submarine Kursk from the bottom of the icy Barents Sea in 2001.

The operation should take about a week — if the 20,500 pounds of metal, 90 percent silver and 10 percent gold, are there. If not, Palmes said, Lloyd's will have to reimburse his company.

Officials at Minera Triton Argentina SA, which says it had an additional $5 million worth of gold and silver aboard the Polar Mist, did not respond to phone calls.

Gustavo Maria Giugale, the lawyer representing the underwriters in Argentina of Lloyd's, said official port records at Punta Quilla, Argentina, show the cargo was loaded. It was destined for Punta Arenas, from which it was to be flown to Switzerland for refining.
That path took it through the Straits of Magellan, at the furthest reaches of South America. Named for the famed 16th-century circumnavigator, the straits have been feared for centuries by seafarers for their violent winds, tumultuous waves and fickle weather.
In the past decades, more than a few cunning seamen have taken advantage of the lore surrounding the Straits to carry out scams, often ridding their companies of unwanted boats to claim the insurance money, Mey said.

The vessel is lying within miles of the remnants of nearly 350 shipwrecks, Mey said — perhaps even an undiscovered vessel from Magellan's fleet.

more here:
Recovery of gold-laden ship delayed
 
Doesn't everybody use 40 year old trawlers to move their gold and silver around?:D Does sound very suspicious, I can't see Lloyds paying up on that one -- but we'll see (please let us know if you see any updates).
 
so little adds up it's incredible, but hey, thats south america!

the crew of the Polar Mist apparently left the engines running and the wheel locked hard to one side to keep it going in circles, citing that this is common practice to consume the all the fuel and therefore prevent leakages when/if she goes down. Add up? How did they all jump into the ocean in survival suits with a trawler belting around?

I love it, should make a film.
 
Sounds like Keystone Kops. Who behaves that way with that much money in precious metals at stake?
 
Don't know--that's pretty frigid and unforgiving water there. Would YOU go overboard, even in a survival suit, for a cut of (X)$$$$$? Not me.

I'd rather send some Somali pirates over to grab it. :martial
 
i ve seen loads of dodgy insurance claims like this
im from liverpool

yes mate i had a bang and olufsen sound system in my 1981 skoda
 
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I'm not so sure its that far fetched given some of the seemingly unorthodox methods used to sustain shadow economics these days. Anything destined for Switzerland under such circumstances would need to stay below the radar, so why not use a ropey trawler if needs must? Could be total bull about the cargo, but stranger things have happened. Maybe Lloyds will foot the bill, after all I'm sure they have friends in the know (wink, wink).
 
... Anything destined for Switzerland under such circumstances would need to stay below the radar, so why not use a ropey trawler if needs must?...
Cheaper than a submarine I supposed. Some colleagues were telling me that the Tamil Tigers have mini-subs - perhaps from their friends in Norway? I recall a story some years ago in the USA about Columbian drug smugglers trying to buy an old soviet submarine.
 
e USA about Columbian drug smugglers trying to buy an old soviet submarine.

the submarine thing, although it defies all conventional thinking, is completely true. they have found and decommissioned several drug smuggling subs, just think how many others are out there.
 
Yep, the subs are real. They've captured a fair few coke subs (and LTTE hardware) over the years. Almost makes me wonder if they are not a diversionary tactic in a wider strategic game. I cannot imagine such rudimentary hardware becoming a dominant strategy of any cartel. I've heard that jets are routinely impounded full of coke in South America that were purchased privately in the US, yet the companies that sold the jets in the first place are never investigated. The stench of lies eh....
 
Right-o on the "subs" for drugs. They're not true submersables- they still have a very slim and low profile conning tower above water with little or no radar footprint. The rest IS below water to evade said radar. Word is several have been "sunk" and several captured intact. Some of the "sunk" are scuttled by drug running crew who bail out inot the sea and then by law get picked by the authorities, who are obligated to pick them up as "survivors". Poor babies...should just let'em swim. :martial
 
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