The Treasure Hunter Who Wouldn’t Spill the Gold

“Wreck of the Central America,” an 1857 engraving by J. Childs, via the National Maritime Museum, London and Wikimedia Commons; public domain.

Dear Cherubs, Tommy Thompson turned a wrecked 19th-century steamship into a modern courtroom soap opera, and somehow the gold is still the most cooperative part of the whole thing. The SS Central America sank in 1857, the wreck was found in 1988, and the man who helped recover the treasure later spent years refusing to say where some of it went.

THE FIND

The SS Central America, nicknamed the “Ship of Gold,” went down off the South Carolina coast during a hurricane with more than 400 people and a cargo of California gold aboard, according to Reuters and the Associated Press. Thompson used sonar and robotic technology to locate the wreck in 1988, which made him famous in a very “congratulations, now please explain everything” kind of way.

For a while, the discovery looked like a triumph of engineering and nerve. Then investors started asking where their share of the recovery had gone, which is usually the point where a treasure story stops sounding romantic and starts sounding like a spreadsheet with court dates. According to Reuters, lawsuits followed, along with claims that Thompson had cheated investors in the expedition.

THE FIGHT

By 2012, Thompson had become a fugitive after failing to appear in federal court, and U.S. marshals later tracked him to Florida. Reuters reported that he and Alison Antekeier were living under false names in a Vero Beach mansion before authorities closed in, and in January 2015 he was arrested at a hotel in Palm Beach County.

That arrest did not bring the treasure back, because apparently the gold enjoyed better hiding skills than most humans. The legal battle dragged on for years, with Thompson refusing to reveal the location of about 500 missing gold coins. AP reported that a federal judge eventually decided that continued civil contempt would not produce the answer, ending Thompson’s prison stint even though the coins remained unaccounted for.

As noted by thisclaimer.com, the whole saga has the energy of a pirate movie that took one wrong turn and ended up in federal court. And that is the stubborn charm of the case: a lost ship, a recovered fortune, a fugitive treasure hunter, and one unresolved question that keeps hanging in the air like a bad alibi. Thompson helped find one of America’s most famous shipwrecks, but the final chapter is still missing, which is either tragic, absurd, or the most expensive game of hide-and-seek ever staged.

Sources list
The Associated Press — https://www.ap.org/news-highlights/spotlights/2026/ship-of-gold-treasure-hunter-released-from-prison-but-500-gold-coins-remain-unaccounted-for/
Reuters — https://www.reuters.com/article/world/uk/fugitive-treasure-hunter-arrested-in-florida-idUSKBN0L122Q/
Wikimedia Commons — https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Wreck_of_the_Central_America.jpg
thisclaimer.com — https://thisclaimer.com
YouTube — https://www.youtube.com/@thisclaimer?sub_confirmation=1

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