Court: Recover Shipwreck's Treasure First
Colombia's Highest Court Says It Can't Resolve Dispute Until 300-Year-Old Fortune Is Brought Up
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Play CBS Video Video Sunken Treasure Worth Millions Harry Smith speaks to Greg Stemm from Odyssey Marine Exploration about a newly discovered shipwreck with a treasure trove that could fetch up to $500 million on the open market.
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Jack Harbeston, the managing director of the salvage firm Sea Search Armada, shows the location of the Spanish galleon San Jose on a 26-year-old map of the Cartagena Harbour, as he poses for a portrait Thursday, May 24, 2007, at his house in Bellevue, Wash. (AP Photo)
The shipwreck of the San Jose is thought to contain $2 billion worth of gold, silver and emeralds in what may be the world's largest sunken treasure.
The Supreme Court ruled that once the San Jose is lifted from the sea, experts can classify its artifacts, following Colombian law.
Pieces declared "treasure" will be split evenly between the Colombian government and Sea Search Armada, the Seattle-based company that claims to have discovered the shipwreck. Items classified as part of Colombia's cultural patrimony will be awarded solely to the government.
Laden with treasures extracted from the Americas, the San Jose sank off Colombia's Caribbean coast in June 1708 while trying to outrun British warships on its way to Spain.
In 1979, Sea Search Armada, along with 100 U.S. investors, signed a deal with the Colombian government for exclusive rights to search for the San Jose and 50 percent of whatever was found. In 1982, Sea Search announced it had discovered the shipwreck.
Two years later, former Colombian President Belisario Betancur overturned well-established maritime law that gives 50 percent to whoever locates a shipwreck, signing a decree that slashed Sea Search's take down to a 5 percent "finder's fee."
Sea Search, which claims to have invested $12 million since beginning its search nearly three decades ago, took the government to court. Messages left with Sea Search's managing director were not immediately returned.
There is still some doubt as to whether the ship has even been found.
A treasure hunter hired by the government to verify the coordinates turned up nothing. An underwater video taken of the alleged wreck in 1982 shows what looks like a coral reef-covered woodpile.
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- "Two years later, former Colombian President Belisario Betancur overturned well-established maritime law that gives 50 percent to whoever locates a shipwreck, signing a decree that slashed Sea Search's take down to a 5 percent "finder's fee."
It would serve the greedy Colombians right if Sea Search manages to haul off all the booty for themselves. Slashing a more-than-fair 50-50 split to a 95-5 swindle is piracy, plain and simple. For its gross avarice, the Colombian government should end up getting nada. - Reply to this comment


