![]() ![]() His case was thrown out in February over a procedural issue. ![]() The Santa Fe New Mexican also reports that a Colorado man had sued Fenn for $1.5 million, saying Fenn provided misleading clues to to would-be hunters. “He followed and cheated me to get the chest.” Her injunction aims to block the man from selling the chest’s contents. “He stole my solve,” she said of the unnamed man. Meanwhile, Chicago attorney Barbara Andersen told the Santa Fe New Mexican she found the treasure first, but her computer was then hacked. “I think 2019 is the year he said was his last to do any interviews about the treasure, which I interpret as he lost interest because the hunt was no longer.” Forrest Fenn, a successful art dealer whose self-published memoir hinting at a buried treasure sent thousands of hunters out to scour the New Mexico wilderness, at home in Santa Fe, June 17, 2016. I believe this was over much earlier than today.Īlternatively, Wallack suggested Fenn may have already given the haul away. “I think his announcement is at least a few years, and a few lives, too late,” Wallack said. ![]() He said Fenn “doesn’t reveal any details so his narrative can’t be questioned.” He feels the treasure chest - the pursuit of which has financially ruined many and killed others - may not even be real. Treasure hunter Seth Wallack told the Santa Fe New Mexican that Fenn had been irresponsible. However, Fenn wouldn’t give the Santa Fe New Mexican the image that he said the man sent him, and not everyone believes Fenn’s version of events. Photo by Nick Cote/The New York Timesįenn has not revealed where the treasure was found, but said the person who collected it sent him an image to prove it was indeed discovered. I don’t know, I feel halfway kind of glad, halfway kind of sad because the chase is over.” Artifacts kept by Forrest Fenn, an art dealer whose self-published memoir hinting at a buried treasure sent thousands of hunters out to scour the New Mexico wilderness, in Santa Fe, June 17, 2016. “The guy who found it does not want his name mentioned. “It’s true,” Fenn told The Santa Fe New Mexican on Sunday, saying the haul was found “a few days ago.” The 10-kilogram haul is reported to hold diamonds, emeralds, gold coins, ancient animal figures and more, all stored in a chest weighing nine kilograms. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. ![]()
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