The FBI hired geophysical consulting firm Enviroscan to survey the hilltop site using gravimeter, which indicated a large metallic mass with the density of gold.
An FBI agent told them the location of the mass was "one or two feet off Denny's sweet spot," recalled Getler. "Then I went to ask how big it is. And he said, 'seven to nine tons.' And I literally said, 'You've got to be kidding!'" That much gold would have been worth hundreds of millions. Enviroscan co-founder Timothy Bechtel declined to comment about what his instruments detected, citing client confidentiality. He told the Associated Press that the FBI asked him to keep quiet about his findings. John Louie, a geophysics professor at the University of Nevada, Reno, said the gravimeter is a powerful tool that can yield important clues about what's underground. "But it doesn't prove it," he said. "It doesn't make any elemental analysis. It's indicative, it's suggestive, but it can't prove it." There's only one way to prove it. On March 13, 2018, the FBI went digging in Dents Run, about 135 miles northeast of Pittsburgh. The bureau has concocted a story that agents only went there for a court-authorized excavation of "what evidence suggested may have been a cultural heritage site." In any event, the FBI said, the dig came up empty. "The FBI unequivocally rejects any claims or speculation to the contrary," the bureau's Public Affairs Specialist Carrie Adamowski said in a statement Tuesday, March 9. But the Paradas were not convinced and let their lawyer, Bill Cluck, dig up evidence to prove that the FBI uncovered something during the dig.Three years later, the Dents Run story is not likely to go away. Residents in the area claimed that they've heard a backhoe and jackhammer overnight – when the excavation was supposed to have been paused — and saw a convoy of FBI vehicles, including large armored trucks.
"The question now is how much they found and where did it go to," Dennis Parada said, insisting that the FBI's assertion of an empty hole is "insulting all the credible people who did this kind of work."
"It was a slap in the face, really, to think all these people could make that kind of mistake," he said. Meanwhile, Cluck is still pursuing government material on the case. The FBI promised to turnover nearly 2,400 pages of documents, as well as video files, in response to his Freedom of Information Act request. But the lawyer didn't really have a golden touch. A state appeals judge recently declined Cluck's petition to order the DCNR to give him the federal writ of entry and seizure warrant that the FBI agents relied on to gain access to the site. However, in rejecting Cluck's petition, Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania Judge Kevin Brobson revealed for the first time – in a footnote of his Jan. 28 opinion – the name of the sealed federal case: "In the Matter of: Seizure of One or More Tons of United States Gold." Follow FBICorruption.news for more news and information related to the corrupt practices of the FBI. Sources include: HotAir.com APNews.com Inquirer.comShould Coca-Cola be “canceled” for supporting Nazis?
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