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Width is 10", height is 15" and length is 11".
Amount: 1 cubic foot (cu ft - ft3) of gold volume
Equals: 1,203.74 pounds (lb) in gold mass
http://www.traditionaloven.com/meta...ubic-foot-cu-ft-gold-to-pound-lb-of-gold.html
Messing around with their calculator (and assuming that it is correct - math not double checked / verified), 86 lbs of gold dust would have an approximate volume of 0.072 cubic feet. 0.072 cubic feet is 124.416 cubic inches. That's roughly 5x5x5 inches. I assume they probably have the dust packaged in some heavy mylar and possibly some packaging filler (popcorn/styrofoam), so the actual container might be a bit larger, but they definitely don't need a "5 gallon drum" (that's roughly 1 cubic foot) to store/transport 86 lbs of gold dust.
Thief steals $1.5 of gold out of truck.
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In the two months since the theft, the police and the armored-car company have gone to great lengths to find the thief and the contents of the bucket: misshapen bars of melted, scrap gold worth $1.6 million. The buckets were first described as containing gold flakes, but actually, they held rough-edged bars, a mixture of scrap gold and impurities, from several locations. The bars, about the size of an ice-cube tray with identifying numbers scrawled across them with a Sharpie, are easier to transport than loose flakes.
Interviews with investigators last week brought new information. The police believe the man has entered the country illegally from Ecuador several times, said Kevin P. Harrington, a former deputy chief in the New York Police Department who represents a security company working on the case with detectives and Loomis.
Detective Martin Pastor with the department’s Major Case Squad said the man was believed to have been casing the diamond district area looking for a truck to steal from, and had not simply happened upon a momentarily empty truck. “He was observing the vehicle, pacing back and forth,” Detective Pastor said.
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A suspected thief accused of stealing a bucket filled with $1.6 million in gold flakes off an armored truck in New York City has been apprehended in Ecuador.
After a search that spanned thousands of miles across two continents over the course of months, authorities arrested Julio Nivelo Thursday.
After surveillance video allegedly first captured Nivelo walking away with an 86-pound bucket of gold flakes in September, authorities followed a trail from the Big Apple to Orlando then California until they finally made their way to Nivelo's native country.
It is not clear what happened to his bucket of gold.
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Celtic gold coins worth millions stolen from German museum
Story by Deutsche Welle • Yesterday 3:28 PM
Staff at the museum in Manching, a town in Bavaria, discovered a broken display case. Authorities said a daring heist occurred in the early hours Tuesday.Employees at the Roman-Celtic museum in the Bavarian town of Manching discovered a broken display case with 450 Celtic coins valued at several million euros looted in the early hours Tuesday.
Read the rest here:
The shock Toronto airport heist of $20 million in gold bars — weighing 400.19 kilograms — along with US$2 million in cash was as easy as walking into Air Canada’s cargo facility, showing a false waybill, and leaving with the enormous haul, according to a lawsuit filed in court.
It was gone 42 minutes after it was unloaded from a plane arriving from Switzerland and transferred to a supposedly secure warehouse on the periphery of Toronto’s Pearson airport, according to the statement of claim.
The theft, one of the largest in Canadian history, remains unsolved by police. Brink’s, a secure transport company, is now suing Air Canada over the lost loads.
The lawsuit paints the clearest picture yet of how April’s airport gold heist was allegedly pulled off after months of institutional silence from police, the airline, and others involved in the theft that made headlines around the world.
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More:
New details about $20M Toronto airport gold heist revealed in Brink's suit against Air Canada
The lawsuit paints the clearest picture yet of how April’s Pearson Airport gold heist was allegedly pulled off after months of silencenationalpost.com
More:
New details about $20M Toronto airport gold heist revealed in Brink's suit against Air Canada
The lawsuit paints the clearest picture yet of how April’s Pearson Airport gold heist was allegedly pulled off after months of silencenationalpost.com
Montreal and Toronto-area police are investigating whether the surprise seizure of hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of gold during a firearms raid in the east-end of the city Tuesday is connected to last April’s daring $20-million gold heist at Toronto’s Pearson Airport, the Montreal Gazette has learned.
“The investigative team assigned to this case is aware of the seizures in Montreal and is working with the lead investigators from the SPVM and respective policing partners in Quebec to determine if there is any connection with our investigation,” Tyler Bell-Morena, a spokesperson for the Peel Regional Police, said in an email Friday afternoon.
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On Tuesday, Montreal police stumbled upon a huge cache of gold while carrying out what was intended to be a raid to seize illegal firearms. Police arrested seven people and grabbed nine firearms, a kilogram of cocaine, and a kilo and a half of methamphetamine. They also confiscated $500,000 in cash and “a large quantity of gold.”
“The exact value of the precious metal seized has yet to be determined, but is estimated to be in the hundreds of thousands of dollars,” the SPVM declared in a statement.
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