Texarkana Gazette

FBI: Lost Civil War gold investigat­ion is ‘ongoing,’

- By Jason Nark

BENEZETTE TOWNSHIP, Pa.—Decades ago, when a tale of lost Civil War gold turned Dennis Parada from a furniture salesman into a treasure hunter, he pointed a 1969 Corvette toward a steep mining road and drove up into the wild.

“That’s how gung-ho he was to find this treasure,” Parada’s son, Kem, said Monday morning on that densely forested mountainsi­de.

On a frigid day this past March, after days of digging, the FBI seemed to dash the Paradas’ lifelong dream, saying teams of investigat­ors found nothing at the rural Dents Run site off Route 555 in Elk County, approximat­ely 260 miles northwest of Philadelph­ia. The agency stands firm on that “nothing” today, even as the Paradas question what exactly happened up there during the dig.

“FBI investigat­ors must follow the facts,” spokespers­on Carrie Adamowski said in a statement Tuesday. “The fact here, as previously stated, is that nothing was found in the excavation.”

But the FBI also says the Dents Run case is an “ongoing investigat­ion,” which makes Bill Cluck, the Paradas’ lawyer, scratch his head.

If the site was empty, “then that’s it, it’s over, right, if they found nothing?” Cluck said. “Or are they investigat­ing something I’m not sure we’re allowed to talk about.”

The legend dates back to the summer of 1863, when a special Union detachment was tasked with transporti­ng 26 gold bars, each weighing 50 pounds, from West Virginia to the U.S. Mint in Philadelph­ia. That detachment, as the story goes, was ambushed, the gold lost and supposedly buried.

Dennis Parada, 66, founder of the treasure-hunting business Finders Keepers, has long told reporters he’s focused on that boulder-strewn hillside thanks to a map given to him by an old man at a furniture store where he worked.

All of the Paradas’ detection equipment told them gold was down there, too.

“You name the treasure-hunting equipment, we had it, and it all pointed to gold, gold, gold,” Kem Parada, 33, said at the site.

The Dents Run area is state land, however, and Pennsylvan­ia’s Department of Conservati­on and Natural Resources has told Finders Keepers not to dig there. DCNR has said it was never able to confirm the Civil Warera story.

If the Union gold was there, and the legend true, the gold would still belong to the federal government.

Based on today’s value of an ounce of gold, the lost load of 26 bars would be worth $27,381,120. Dennis Parada, for some reason, believes there were 52 bars of gold, but once the FBI got involved and hired a contractor to scan the ground, the amount skyrockete­d, he claims, the value even greater.

The FBI moved quickly, obtaining a warrant from a federal judge in Pittsburgh that remains sealed.

Finders Keepers claims Enviroscan, a Lancaster-based firm the FBI hired to conduct the metal detection, actually found a mind-boggling seven to nine tons of gold and silver at Dents Run, which could jack the value up to hundreds of millions of dollars.

When the FBI converged on Dents Run on the week of March 12, the Paradas and Getler were mostly kept at a distance the entire time, waiting in a car at the bottom of the old mining road for hours at a time.

“I was promised we could be on site when they started digging,” Dennis Parada said outside his home in Clearfield County on Monday afternoon.

Eventually, Dennis Parada said, he was led up the site and asked to look into a hole the FBI had dug. It held nothing but dirt and rock.

An agent asked him what he saw in there. Dennis Parada thinks the moment was meant to embarrass him.

“I said, ‘Nothing,’ and he said, ‘That’s it, there’s nothing here, let’s all go home,’” Dennis recalled. “I said, ‘You’re the one who told me there was nine tons here. You. Not me.’”

Cluck estimates the government spent at least six figures to fund the operation, but he has been unable to obtain any of the reports because the investigat­ion is ongoing.

“You have 50 agents in a hotel. You’ve got agents flying all over the country. They rented backhoes and porta potties,” he said.

 ?? Jason Nark/Philadelph­ia Inquirer/TNS ?? ■ Kem Parada of Finders Keepers points Monday to a rock where he and his father had dug in Elk County, believing a lost shipment of Civil War gold is buried in the area.
Jason Nark/Philadelph­ia Inquirer/TNS ■ Kem Parada of Finders Keepers points Monday to a rock where he and his father had dug in Elk County, believing a lost shipment of Civil War gold is buried in the area.

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