Post
Topic
Board Bitcoin Discussion
Re: i doned it i buried my private keys in concrete underground no one will know
by
Gleb Gamow
on 24/03/2015, 01:36:42 UTC
i got a jar from asda with non metallic lid and i put all my laminated offline wallets from doge to btc in it and buried it 12 ft deep reinforcede concrete box in my garden with a digger and cemont mixer i hired

me money is now safe i can rest in piece from house fires to burgorlers i will be a millionaire in the future oll i hath to do is just wait for the idiot brainwishwash sheeple to catch on.



Yep, I think you nailed it with the exception of one thing...

After his death, it was discovered by Nye County sheriff's deputies[4] that Ted had had a 12-foot-deep vault built on the desert floor on a piece of property he owned in Pahrump, 60 miles (97 km) west of Las Vegas. The concrete bunker contained six tons of silver bullion, Horseshoe Casino chips, paper currency, and more than 100,000 rare coins, including Carson City silver dollars—many in mint condition—estimated to be worth between $7 million and $14 million—that were once housed in the Horseshoe vault. The Pahrump underground vault would play a major role in the investigation into Binion's death.

After Ted Binion was banned from the casino, he contracted construction of the underground vault with MRT Transport, a trucking company owned by Rick Tabish. MRT trucks were used to transport the silver to the vault, and the only two people who had the combination to the vault were Binion and Tabish.

The vault was discovered two days after Binion died, whereupon Nye County sheriff's deputies arrested Binion's associate Rick Tabish and two other men unearthing the silver.

Binion hid millions in and around his Las Vegas home, all of which went missing after his death. It is rumored to be buried on the property under odd mounds in the front and back yards. After the trial much of the silver was given to his daughter, but a large portion still remains unclaimed at the courthouse.