3 Min Read
(Reuters) - A ‘Three Treasures’ sale of rare stamps and a gold coin from the personal collection of shoe designer Stuart Weitzman is set to fetch millions of dollars at an auction at Sotheby’s in New York City in June.
The 1933 Double Eagle Coin was originally cast as a $20 coin, but it was never issued for use. After U.S. President Franklin Roosevelt took the country off the gold standard, all of the Double Eagles were ordered destroyed. However, a handful were released and all but one of them deemed stolen.
Now, the only 1933 Double Eagle Coin ever allowed to be privately owned is up for sale at Sotheby’s, with the auction house estimating the coin will sell for between $10 million and $15 million.
Occupancy at San Antonio s shopping centers dips thetelegraph.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from thetelegraph.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
the lie detector. and back with our panel, rick and mike, i want to ask you about what you know about the status of bob mueller s investigation and his effort to recruit some of the top legal minds in the country. he has put together some of the dream team for someone who needs to prosecute the most sensitive and criminal and counterintelligence case in american history. he has on his team not only individuals who can go to substantive issues like money laundering, but the appellate issues, as to whether or not a president in the situation engaged in obstruction of justice. so i think he has the right team. there is reason for the president, his lawyers and his staff to be worried. a former law enforcement official flagged the hiring of i think mr. weitzman, who i believe prosecuted enron, he said that is significant not