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Whisper

#byefelicia
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In this May 28, 2014 photo, U.S. Marshal Brad Fleming displays a wanted poster for fugitive Tommy Thompson in Columbus, Ohio. Thompson led a group that recovered millions of dollars worth of sunken treasure only to end up involved in court cases brought by dozens of insurance companies laying claim to the treasure. Thompson has been a fugitive since missing a court date two years ago

[...]
last times anyone ever saw Tommy Thompson, he was walking on the pool deck of a Florida mansion wearing nothing but eye glasses, leather shoes, socks and underwear, his brown hair growing wild.
It was a far cry from the conquering hero who, almost two decades before, docked a ship in Norfolk, Virginia, loaded with what's been described as the greatest lost treasure in American history — thousands of pounds of gold that sat in the ocean for 131 years after the ship carrying it sank during a hurricane.
[...]
that day in 1989, Thompson couldn't contain a grin as hundreds cheered his achievement. But his victory was short-lived.
[...]
the past two years, the U.S. Marshals Service has hunted Thompson as a fugitive — wanted for skipping a court date to explain to investors what happened to the riches. The rise and fall of the intrepid explorer is the stuff of storybooks, a tale receiving renewed attention amid a new expedition begun this year to the sunken ship.

"I think he had calculated it, whatever you want to call it, an escape plan," Marshals agent Brad Fleming said.
[....]
Around 1983, Thompson grew obsessed with tracking down the SS Central America. When the ship went down off the South Carolina coast in 1857, 425 people drowned and gold worth millions was lost.

Thompson, an oceanic engineer at Battelle Memorial Institute in Columbus, convinced 161 people to invest in his quest, raising $12.7 million. On Oct. 1, 1988, he finally found the treasure, which he would later describe as "otherworldly in its splendor."
[...]
joy faded fast. Thirty-nine insurance companies sued Thompson, claiming they had insured the gold in 1857 and that it belonged to them. In 1996, Thompson's company was awarded 92 percent of the treasure, and the rest was divided among some of the insurers. Four years later, Thompson's company netted $50 million after selling 532 gold bars and thousands of coins to a gold marketing group.
[...]
By 2005, Thompson's investors still hadn't been paid, and two sued — a now-deceased investment firm president who put in some $250,000 and the Dispatch Printing Company, which publishes The Columbus Dispatch newspaper and invested about $1 million.
[...]
nine members of Thompson's crew also sued, saying they, too, were promised some proceeds.

Thompson went into seclusion, moving into a mansion in Vero Beach, Florida. After that, his behavior turned bizarre.
[...]
refused to use his real name on his utility bills, telling realtor Vance Brinkerhoff that his life had been threatened and asking him, "How would you like to live like that?" Brinkerhoff recounted the exchange in a court deposition.
[....]
maintenance worker James Kennedy recalled once going to the house and seeing Thompson on the pool deck wearing only socks, shoes and dirty underwear. "His hair was all crazy," Kennedy said. "After that, me and (a friend) referred to him as the crazy professor."

It's not clear exactly when Thompson disappeared. On Aug. 13, 2012, he failed to appear at a hearing in the court battles, and a federal judge found him in contempt and issued an arrest warrant.
[...]
Kennedy went inside the Florida mansion and found pre-paid disposable cellphones and bank wraps for $10,000 bills, along with a book called "How to Live Your Life Invisible."
[....]
Marshals Service has splashed Thompson's face on electronic billboards and run down hundreds of tips — from the guy who thought he might have shared an elevator with Thompson to a report that the name "Tommy" was signed on a memorial website for a dead friend of the treasure hunter. Nothing has panned out. A "Wanted" poster even hangs in the barge making a new voyage to the Central America in a new expedition to recover more treasure from the "Ship of Gold."
[....]
Florida-based Odyssey Marine Exploration has brought up millions of dollars in gold and silver bars and coins. That work will continue indefinitely, an Odyssey spokeswoman said, and Thompson's original investors are expected to receive part of the recovered riches.
[...]
attorney for the investors who sued did not respond to requests for comment, nor did a number of the investors.
[....]
where Thompson, now 62, might be, theories abound. The crew members' attorney, Mike Szolosi, asserts that he's seen records indicating Thompson took 500 gold coins worth $2 million and took potentially millions from his own company on top of his approved compensation.

"Presumably all of that is still somewhere with Tommy,"
[...]
Attorney Rick Roble, who defended Thompson's company until he withdrew from the case last month, said there's no proof Thompson stole anything.

Author Gary Kinder, who chronicled the treasure hunt in "Ship of Gold in the Deep Blue Sea," said nothing in his time with Thompson gives him any insight into his whereabouts. "I don't know what it would entail to hide like that. Get your teeth fixed? Buy a blond wig?"
[....]
Fleming believes Thompson is likely still stateside, although "we definitely never rule out ... that he may be abroad or at sea."

If caught, Thompson would be asked to account for the missing coins and explain where proceeds from the treasure's sale went. He could face jail time and hefty fines
[...]
Gil Kirk, a former director of one of Thompson's companies, said he put $1.8 million into the treasure hunt. Though he hasn't gotten any of that back, Kirk still supports Thompson and insists he never bilked anyone.

To Kirk, Thompson remains an American hero, "like the Wright brothers." The tragedy, he said, is that Thompson's dream became his doom.

"Tommy used the word, what's the word?" Kirk said. "Plague of the gold."
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/09/14/tommy-thompson-treasure-h_n_5818130.html?utm_hp_ref=crime
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In this September 2013 photo provided by Donn Pearlman, a Gold Rush-era $20 gold coin recovered from the SS Central America, still with some Atlantic Ocean residue on it, is shown at a coin expo in Long Beach, Calif. The gold was unearthed from the SS Central America after treasure hunter Tommy Thompson found the ship in 1988​
 
I think the 1857 insurers should go pound sand. Very disappointed he stiffed his small investors though.
 
It's not clear exactly when Thompson disappeared. On Aug. 13, 2012, he failed to appear at a hearing in the court battles, and a federal judge found him in contempt and issued an arrest warrant.
[...]
Kennedy went inside the Florida mansion and found pre-paid disposable cellphones and bank wraps for $10,000 bills, along with a book called "How to Live Your Life Invisible."

Either he went off to "live his life invisible" as the book suggests, or someone made a serious effort to give everybody else that impression!

If he did go of his own accord, I am confused as to why the book and the pre-paid cell phones were left behind. Surely he would need them? And even if he didn't, leaving them would tip everybody off to what he had done? This way he had tipped his hand, basically telling LE that there is someone to look for. If you really meant to disappear, it would make sense to try and get everybody to believe that there is no point in looking, because you are dead.......

If someone else left the suspicious items about his home, it could be to cover up the robbery and murder of Mr Thompson? Nobody is going to look for a murderer, while they think they are looking for a fugitive. :shrug:
 
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Tommy Thompson was arrested Tuesday by U.S. Federal Marshals following a global manhunt.

Thompson, who became famous in 1988 after pulling up the treasures of the shipwrecked S.S. Central America, was arrested on a federal civil warrant that was issued in 2012 after he failed to appear at hearings in a civil court case.

"Thompson was one of the most intelligent fugitives ever sought by the U.S. Marshals and he had vast financial resources at his disposal," said Peter Tobin of the U.S. Marshall Service.

Thompson and his companion Alison Antekeier were found and arrested at the Hilton Hotel in West Boca Raton, Florida, according to U.S. Marshal Senior Inspector Brian Babtist.
The couple had been living in the hotel for at least two years, said Babtist.

In criminal documents filed today described the state of Thompson's home after his disappearance.

According to a report filed by a U.S. Federal Marshall, a handy man hired by Thompson found a book in Thompson's home titled "How to Be Invisible" that detailed how people can evade law enforcement. The man said the house had fallen into disrepair and mold was growing throughout the premises.

To keep cash handy, the criminal complaint alleges that Thompson started putting $10,000 in cash in pipes that were then buried across the premises. Law enforcement officials allege Thompson has only used cash in financial and business transactions since 2005.

Antekeier was also arrested after she failed to appear at a court hearing, where she was going to reveal Thompson's whereabouts.
The couple had last been spotted at Vero Beach, Florida, according to a statement from the U.S. Marshals.
[...]
The ongoing legal cases lasted from 2005 to 2012, according to Robol, which is when Thompson disappeared. In the criminal complaint, a handy man said small notes were put on the wall detailing various lawsuits involving Thompson.

According to Babtist, Thompson and Antekeier will face an extradition hearing before they are moved to Ohio for further court proceedings.
https://gma.yahoo.com/fugitive-trea...owing-two-043100122--abc-news-topstories.html
 
TAMPA, Fla. (Reuters) - After years on the run, a treasure hunter wanted in Ohio over accusations of cheating investors after recovering a fortune in gold from a shipwreck told a federal court hearing on Thursday that he has health problems and should stay in Florida, the Palm Beach Post reported.

Authorities apprehended Tommy Thompson this week at a Hilton hotel in Palm Beach County, where he apparently had been living for two years with a woman, Alison Antekeier, who also was detained, according to the U.S. Marshals Service.

Thompson is now scheduled for a hearing on Wednesday, according to court records. The newspaper reported the delay would give him more time to find an attorney.

U.S. Magistrate Judge Dave Lee Brannon did not appear receptive to Thompson's desire to stay in Florida due to health concerns, the Post reported.

Thompson said he suffers from encephalitis symptoms and an overactive immune system and fears becoming sick if sent back to Ohio, according to the Post.
http://news.yahoo.com/fugitive-treasure-hunter-due-florida-court-143822634.html
 
Awww, he fears getting sick and stuff if sent back to Ohio. Those mean U.S. Marshals, capturing him and everything.

What the fuck is good about having all that money if you're always looking over your shoulder? Dumbass.
 
I'm from Ohio. The thought of going back makes me a little sick too.

You got Cedar Point up north and Kings Island down south, very decent state in the summer months for amusement park fans(aka anyone who's not morbidly obese or dumb).

He looks like Peter Jackson in that wanted photo.

Those insurance companies are total bullshit. So glad they lost out in court, damn refreshing seeing a good call like that being made. Would tbe a much better story if they're the ones that financed the whole thing and the ones he ended up cheating. As is, the guy is a greedy scumbag asswipe.
 
You got Cedar Point up north
Quite, I was born in Mansfield and grew up in Bucyrus (Home of the Bratwurst Festival), made many trips to Cedar Point. At one time, it boasted the worlds largest wooden roller-coaster.

On topic, if the insurers wanted to lay claim they should have joined forces to bring it up, not sat back for 120+ years 'til other folks risked their lives in the recovery. As to Thompson himself, I think he had a mental break, and really believed people were out to get him. Rightfully so, but I think the guilt and stress made him unbalanced.
 
made many trips to Cedar Point. At one time, it boasted the worlds largest wooden roller-coaster.

Thought that was Kings Island? Or did Kings Island take the crown from Cedar Point when they built The Beast. Haven't been hip to the amusement park world in well over a decade, last i knew Beast was still the record holder for biggest wood though, longest anyway.
 
overactive immune system
Seriously, I think he's become mental. Florida, especially Palm Beach County and south is in the tropics. If you're injured, you'll have a tetanus shot if you haven't had one in the last 6 months. Hookworm lives in the sand we called soil, endemic flying cockroaches and mosquitoes, and any disease organism fond of heat and high humidity.

Yeah, I've lived there too. In the 50's and '60's, Florida was the landing strip of choice for Buckeye women starting over. A divorcee' was socially dead in my place and time in Ohio.
 
Thought that was Kings Island? Or did Kings Island take the crown from Cedar Point when they built The Beast. Haven't been hip to the amusement park world in well over a decade, last i knew Beast was still the record holder for biggest wood though, longest anyway.
Well, that's why I said "at one time". I believe that was in the 60's-'70's. Mom and I split Ohio in 1968.
 
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