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Re: DID THE LANGBORDS FILE AN APPEAL ABOUT THE 1933 DOUBLE EAGLES?
You explicitly do not have permission from me or my family to use our names, likenesses or story in any manner whatsoever particularly in a motion picture script. Hopefully, from the amount of time, … (View Post)4 -
Re: DID THE LANGBORDS FILE AN APPEAL ABOUT THE 1933 DOUBLE EAGLES?
Yes, Stephen Fenton was the dealer who sold the coin at auction in partnership with the US govrrnment. The purchaser has never been identified. The coin is on loan to the New York Historical Society.… (View Post)2 -
Re: DID THE LANGBORDS FILE AN APPEAL ABOUT THE 1933 DOUBLE EAGLES?
As to amicus briefs, the coin associations are interested in filing if cert is granted, not before. While letters are not formally part of the record when applying for cert, the fact that numbers of … (View Post)1 -
Re: DID THE LANGBORDS FILE AN APPEAL ABOUT THE 1933 DOUBLE EAGLES?
I know exactly where the Fenton coin currently resides--it is on the first floor of the museum of the New York Historical Soceity on West 77th Street in NYC, ironically the same street I live on. (View Post)1 -
Re: DID THE LANGBORDS FILE AN APPEAL ABOUT THE 1933 DOUBLE EAGLES?
Yes, the en banc court went further than even the Justice Department thought possible, effectively turning CAFRA from a statute designed to protect individuals from abusive government tactics to one … (View Post)2