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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:01,585 --> 00:00:03,877 Narrator: Tonight on beyond oak island... 2 00:00:03,963 --> 00:00:06,255 There are treasure stories on every island in lake michigan. 3 00:00:06,340 --> 00:00:08,007 They were the freeways of the time. 4 00:00:08,092 --> 00:00:11,135 Brian: The gangs ran prohibition from canada. 5 00:00:11,220 --> 00:00:13,303 You've got a huge smuggling operation going on. 6 00:00:13,389 --> 00:00:15,139 Marty: There's a story of big treasure 7 00:00:15,224 --> 00:00:17,016 somewhere near poverty island. 8 00:00:17,101 --> 00:00:18,809 They were carrying gold. 9 00:00:18,894 --> 00:00:20,477 Feldman: Nobody's gonna go looking for it 10 00:00:20,521 --> 00:00:22,688 'cause officially, it never existed. 11 00:00:22,732 --> 00:00:24,815 Marty: The treasure had to be thrown overboard. 12 00:00:24,900 --> 00:00:27,234 -How much? -$400 million. 13 00:00:27,319 --> 00:00:28,652 Bob: That's poverty. 14 00:00:28,696 --> 00:00:29,862 Brian: The sonar's scanning the bottom. 15 00:00:29,905 --> 00:00:31,530 -This is the spot? -Right here. 16 00:00:31,574 --> 00:00:33,949 -This is a really good target. -There we go. 17 00:00:35,911 --> 00:00:37,578 All the while we were growing up, 18 00:00:37,663 --> 00:00:39,455 my brother and I were fascinated 19 00:00:39,540 --> 00:00:40,998 with finding treasure. 20 00:00:42,084 --> 00:00:43,042 Rick: Pirate treasure, 21 00:00:43,127 --> 00:00:44,668 cursed treasure. 22 00:00:44,754 --> 00:00:46,545 Civil war gold. 23 00:00:46,589 --> 00:00:49,423 - -since then, our work on oak island 24 00:00:49,508 --> 00:00:51,717 has shown us there's a world of mysteries... 25 00:00:51,761 --> 00:00:54,553 -Whoa. -...Waiting to be explored. 26 00:00:54,638 --> 00:00:57,556 Rick: So, we like to reach out to other treasure hunters. 27 00:00:57,641 --> 00:00:59,850 X marks the spot, right there. Brilliant. 28 00:00:59,935 --> 00:01:02,144 -Marty: We want to hear their stories... -That's right. 29 00:01:02,229 --> 00:01:04,605 -...And share our insights. -"ill-gotten gains." 30 00:01:04,690 --> 00:01:06,106 -rick: And who knows... -Gary: I got it. 31 00:01:06,192 --> 00:01:07,900 ...Maybe we can help them with their search. 32 00:01:07,985 --> 00:01:09,568 Marty: Not only in america. 33 00:01:09,612 --> 00:01:11,361 Wow. That is gold. 34 00:01:11,447 --> 00:01:13,197 -Rick: But all over the world. -Yeah! 35 00:01:13,282 --> 00:01:15,032 Marty: Beyond oak island. 36 00:01:25,086 --> 00:01:26,752 Matty: You know, every time I'm in here, 37 00:01:26,796 --> 00:01:29,088 I'm just blown away by the history. 38 00:01:29,173 --> 00:01:30,756 Rick: Absolutely. 39 00:01:33,677 --> 00:01:35,552 There it is. 40 00:01:38,265 --> 00:01:39,932 Man, that reader's digest article 41 00:01:39,975 --> 00:01:44,311 brought so many people here, it's... It's unbelievable. 42 00:01:44,396 --> 00:01:47,564 Then I remember, I-I just was enthralled with it. 43 00:01:47,650 --> 00:01:49,399 And told marty, of course, 44 00:01:49,485 --> 00:01:51,860 because you're-you're in eighth grade. 45 00:01:51,946 --> 00:01:53,987 A treasure story? I mean, come on. 46 00:01:54,073 --> 00:01:55,906 Who's not gonna gravitate towards that? 47 00:01:55,950 --> 00:01:57,533 Marty: I-I remember him 48 00:01:57,618 --> 00:01:59,409 explaining it to me, saying, "look at this, 49 00:01:59,495 --> 00:02:02,121 look at this, look at this: There are logs every ten feet." 50 00:02:02,206 --> 00:02:04,414 I go, "wow, there's got to be something there." 51 00:02:04,500 --> 00:02:08,085 rick: It's about unknowns and-and looking for answers 52 00:02:08,170 --> 00:02:11,296 and the quest, if you will, for knowledge. 53 00:02:11,382 --> 00:02:12,756 Did you guys already have the-the passion 54 00:02:12,842 --> 00:02:14,133 for treasure hunting stories and stuff at that point, 55 00:02:14,176 --> 00:02:15,676 or do you think that launched it? 56 00:02:15,761 --> 00:02:17,594 Well, you know we had the indian rock thing. 57 00:02:17,680 --> 00:02:19,263 - - We called it the indian rock. -Yeah. 58 00:02:19,348 --> 00:02:21,682 I-I think we-we knew of the indian rock before this. 59 00:02:21,767 --> 00:02:23,767 Before this. Yeah, well, I'm sure of it, rick. 60 00:02:23,853 --> 00:02:25,435 I was very, very young when you and greg daniels 61 00:02:25,521 --> 00:02:27,146 were trying to move that thing. 62 00:02:27,189 --> 00:02:28,730 Rick: We were treasure hunting when we were 63 00:02:28,816 --> 00:02:30,732 knee-high to a grasshopper. 64 00:02:30,818 --> 00:02:32,734 There was a great big giant stone up on the hill 65 00:02:32,820 --> 00:02:35,821 where we used to play ball, and we called it the indian rock. 66 00:02:35,906 --> 00:02:38,991 Marty: It had a piece of quartz that went all the way around it, 67 00:02:39,076 --> 00:02:41,326 but it looked to us like it was... 68 00:02:41,412 --> 00:02:42,369 Special. 69 00:02:42,454 --> 00:02:44,121 The whole community of boys 70 00:02:44,206 --> 00:02:46,957 were sure there was indian treasure underneath it, 71 00:02:47,042 --> 00:02:48,584 if we could only move that rock. 72 00:02:48,669 --> 00:02:51,628 -Matty: -We had no tools. 73 00:02:51,714 --> 00:02:53,881 We would have to sneak dad's s-single shovel 74 00:02:53,966 --> 00:02:55,507 -out of the garage. -Yeah, that's right. 75 00:02:55,551 --> 00:02:57,885 -Matty: See, now, that... -And hope we didn't break it. 76 00:02:57,970 --> 00:02:59,636 -Marty: Right. -Right. That indicates to me maybe you guys 77 00:02:59,722 --> 00:03:03,015 had read some treasure stories, because to have that instinct, 78 00:03:03,058 --> 00:03:04,808 -"underneath this might lie treasure..." -we had... 79 00:03:04,894 --> 00:03:07,186 -We had certainly read treasure island. -Rick: Of course. 80 00:03:07,229 --> 00:03:09,521 -Matty: Right. -Rick: But when I read a story, 81 00:03:09,565 --> 00:03:12,316 I could see it in my mind, with the colors 82 00:03:12,401 --> 00:03:13,859 and the-- like treasure island, 83 00:03:13,944 --> 00:03:16,361 I'd walked the paths, I'd see the stones. 84 00:03:16,447 --> 00:03:18,572 I'd w-- look at the markers. 85 00:03:18,657 --> 00:03:20,741 -You could literally lock it in your mind. -Yes. 86 00:03:20,826 --> 00:03:22,993 And that's kind of what that article did. 87 00:03:23,078 --> 00:03:25,037 I think that's what separates the people 88 00:03:25,122 --> 00:03:28,999 who, it's sufficient just to read about it 89 00:03:29,084 --> 00:03:30,751 and say, "yes, that's very interesting," 90 00:03:30,836 --> 00:03:35,339 and then the others who kind of immerse themselves in the story 91 00:03:35,424 --> 00:03:37,507 -and want to become a part of it. -Right. 92 00:03:37,593 --> 00:03:40,886 Do you remember-- y-you're growing up, 93 00:03:40,930 --> 00:03:42,721 you're loving these tales 94 00:03:42,765 --> 00:03:44,056 and you're getting more interested in it, 95 00:03:44,099 --> 00:03:46,350 do you remember hearing anything, 96 00:03:46,435 --> 00:03:48,518 I don't know, even locally, that might have captured 97 00:03:48,604 --> 00:03:52,064 your imagination in terms of treasure or anything like that? 98 00:03:52,107 --> 00:03:54,524 Well, michigan has a lot of treasure stories. 99 00:03:54,610 --> 00:03:57,653 Particularly involving islands, and-and honestly, 100 00:03:57,738 --> 00:03:59,738 quite a few on the mainland, too. 101 00:03:59,823 --> 00:04:01,698 Absolutely. 102 00:04:01,784 --> 00:04:03,492 Narrator: The state of michigan, 103 00:04:03,577 --> 00:04:06,161 also known as "the great lakes state," 104 00:04:06,247 --> 00:04:09,373 is home to more than 400 lost treasure mysteries, 105 00:04:09,458 --> 00:04:13,794 both on land and deep under the vast waters surrounding it. 106 00:04:13,879 --> 00:04:16,880 One of the most infamous revolves around 107 00:04:16,966 --> 00:04:19,258 a 17th-century french trading ship 108 00:04:19,343 --> 00:04:23,762 that was the largest of its time, the griffon. 109 00:04:23,806 --> 00:04:27,641 On September 18, 1679, 110 00:04:27,726 --> 00:04:29,977 the griffon vanished without a trace 111 00:04:30,062 --> 00:04:32,271 in the northern region of lake michigan, 112 00:04:32,314 --> 00:04:35,899 along with six crewmen and a fortune in goods. 113 00:04:35,985 --> 00:04:39,236 To this day, it is considered the holy grail 114 00:04:39,321 --> 00:04:42,281 of michigan shipwrecks because of how elusive 115 00:04:42,324 --> 00:04:44,449 it has remained to determined searchers 116 00:04:44,493 --> 00:04:47,744 and treasure hunters for more than three centuries. 117 00:04:48,789 --> 00:04:50,455 Another notorious legend 118 00:04:50,541 --> 00:04:55,043 about missing midwest treasure began in 1874, 119 00:04:55,129 --> 00:04:58,213 when $74,000 in gold coins-- 120 00:04:58,299 --> 00:05:00,882 worth $20 million in today's dollars-- 121 00:05:00,968 --> 00:05:04,761 was reportedly buried along the shores of scenic benton lake, 122 00:05:04,847 --> 00:05:08,932 some 50 miles north of the city of muskegon. 123 00:05:09,018 --> 00:05:12,436 Branton: A stagecoach was delivering the payload 124 00:05:12,521 --> 00:05:14,146 to a lumbermen's camp up there, 125 00:05:14,189 --> 00:05:15,939 and they got robbed along the way. 126 00:05:16,025 --> 00:05:19,276 -Hands up! Give me that thing! -Hands up! Do it! 127 00:05:19,361 --> 00:05:22,821 The robbers had taken so much in gold coins 128 00:05:22,865 --> 00:05:25,824 off the stagecoach, and they buried them 129 00:05:25,909 --> 00:05:27,451 in a potbelly stove in benton lake... 130 00:05:29,288 --> 00:05:31,830 ...And it's never been discovered to this day. 131 00:05:34,209 --> 00:05:36,501 Narrator: But one of michigan's most valuable 132 00:05:36,545 --> 00:05:38,754 and legendary treasure mysteries 133 00:05:38,839 --> 00:05:42,299 is set deep in the wilderness on the keweenaw peninsula. 134 00:05:42,384 --> 00:05:46,511 It is known simply as the wall of silver. 135 00:05:48,265 --> 00:05:51,058 In 1927, jake stockard, 136 00:05:51,143 --> 00:05:53,852 a geologist conducting a field study, 137 00:05:53,937 --> 00:05:55,812 discovered what he claimed to be the entrance 138 00:05:55,898 --> 00:05:57,314 to an abandoned mine. 139 00:05:57,399 --> 00:06:00,067 Upon entering, stockard reported 140 00:06:00,152 --> 00:06:03,195 that as he made his way past booby traps 141 00:06:03,238 --> 00:06:06,490 and human skeletons, he found himself standing 142 00:06:06,575 --> 00:06:09,993 before an enormous wall of pure silver. 143 00:06:11,580 --> 00:06:14,498 Feldman: Stockard finds this mine 144 00:06:14,583 --> 00:06:17,667 that has this rich wall of silver in it. 145 00:06:17,753 --> 00:06:20,379 The area that this wall of silver 146 00:06:20,464 --> 00:06:24,049 is supposed to be located in is in an area 147 00:06:24,134 --> 00:06:29,137 that absolutely could contain a giant deposit of silver. 148 00:06:30,307 --> 00:06:31,723 Narrator: For four decades, 149 00:06:31,809 --> 00:06:35,227 jake stockard kept the wall of silver a secret. 150 00:06:35,312 --> 00:06:38,647 That is, until he met richard kellogg, 151 00:06:38,732 --> 00:06:42,526 the owner of a struggling bar in the town of kearsarge. 152 00:06:42,569 --> 00:06:46,154 The two became fast friends, and jake broke his silence 153 00:06:46,240 --> 00:06:50,033 to help save kellogg's ailing business. 154 00:06:50,077 --> 00:06:53,703 Carter: They were selling the silver samples at the bar, 155 00:06:53,789 --> 00:06:57,040 and the bar ended up becoming a roadside attraction. 156 00:06:57,126 --> 00:06:59,209 So it helped generate 157 00:06:59,253 --> 00:07:01,378 an adequate enough amount of traffic 158 00:07:01,463 --> 00:07:04,923 for the bar to become financially viable again. 159 00:07:04,967 --> 00:07:09,219 Narrator: Unfortunately, in 1973, 160 00:07:09,304 --> 00:07:12,222 jake stockard passed away, taking with him 161 00:07:12,307 --> 00:07:13,890 the location of the mine, 162 00:07:13,934 --> 00:07:16,685 and the legendary wall of silver. 163 00:07:16,770 --> 00:07:20,981 Branton: Over the years, richard tried to find the location, 164 00:07:21,066 --> 00:07:23,608 and he couldn't. 165 00:07:23,652 --> 00:07:26,153 And to this day, they still haven't found 166 00:07:26,238 --> 00:07:29,072 the, wall of silver. 167 00:07:29,158 --> 00:07:31,783 Yeah, so there are treasure stories, all over michigan, 168 00:07:31,869 --> 00:07:36,580 and certainly stories associated with virtually every island 169 00:07:36,623 --> 00:07:38,582 in lake michigan and lake huron. 170 00:07:38,667 --> 00:07:39,666 Rick: You know, the seas were the freeways 171 00:07:39,710 --> 00:07:42,919 of the time, so any treasure story 172 00:07:43,005 --> 00:07:47,299 associated with the high seas, what's the first stop, 173 00:07:47,384 --> 00:07:48,508 if you will? Islands. 174 00:07:48,594 --> 00:07:50,343 Matty: It's so funny because, you know, 175 00:07:50,429 --> 00:07:53,138 again, the cliché belief when you're talking about treasure 176 00:07:53,223 --> 00:07:54,931 is caribbean or maybe american west-- 177 00:07:55,017 --> 00:07:56,516 we've talked about before-- 178 00:07:56,602 --> 00:07:59,269 but you don't usually think of michigan. 179 00:08:00,314 --> 00:08:01,897 Think again. 180 00:08:01,982 --> 00:08:04,274 -wow. -Not only is stuff buried on the islands 181 00:08:04,359 --> 00:08:06,443 but buried in those lakes. 182 00:08:06,528 --> 00:08:08,904 I mean, those are big lakes, matty. You've seen them. 183 00:08:08,989 --> 00:08:11,448 And they took a lot of ships down. 184 00:08:11,533 --> 00:08:13,950 In fact, it's amazing you went this way, matty, 185 00:08:13,994 --> 00:08:16,912 because I just got off the phone a little while ago 186 00:08:16,997 --> 00:08:19,122 with a guy named bob kreipke. 187 00:08:19,208 --> 00:08:21,666 Really interesting fellow, because he was literally 188 00:08:21,752 --> 00:08:24,294 the historian for ford motor company. 189 00:08:24,379 --> 00:08:25,795 That was his career. 190 00:08:25,881 --> 00:08:27,172 I didn't know big companies had such people, but... 191 00:08:27,257 --> 00:08:29,508 It's a treasured michigan company, ford itself. 192 00:08:29,593 --> 00:08:31,676 Yeah, big-time michigan company, yeah. 193 00:08:31,762 --> 00:08:33,929 And, um, he contacted me and alan kostrzewa... 194 00:08:34,014 --> 00:08:35,472 -Yeah. -...Who is our partner in this, 195 00:08:35,557 --> 00:08:38,225 with a story of a big treasure in lake michigan 196 00:08:38,310 --> 00:08:40,602 somewhere near an island called poverty island. 197 00:08:40,687 --> 00:08:44,022 -Yeah, a great name, right? -That's a great name. Poverty island. 198 00:08:44,107 --> 00:08:47,025 - Money pit, poverty island. -Yeah. 199 00:08:47,110 --> 00:08:50,654 Marty: The story is there was a ship that came through lake michigan 200 00:08:50,739 --> 00:08:52,989 that the french were trying to supply 201 00:08:53,075 --> 00:08:55,200 the american confederacy, so here we go 202 00:08:55,244 --> 00:08:57,869 -with confederate gold again. -Wow. 203 00:08:57,913 --> 00:08:59,871 Um, it's not even a shipwreck we're looking for. 204 00:08:59,957 --> 00:09:03,208 The legend is that the treasure had to be thrown overboard... 205 00:09:04,586 --> 00:09:06,211 ...Because they were being pursued 206 00:09:06,255 --> 00:09:08,255 and they knew they were gonna get caught by the opposition. 207 00:09:08,340 --> 00:09:10,382 But are we talking chests of gold, silver...? 208 00:09:10,425 --> 00:09:12,342 Chests of payroll. It's a-- it's payroll. 209 00:09:12,427 --> 00:09:14,636 Or capital, for the south. 210 00:09:14,721 --> 00:09:16,263 -Love it. -Yeah, so, 211 00:09:16,348 --> 00:09:18,765 they supposedly chained the boxes together, 212 00:09:18,850 --> 00:09:20,392 threw them overboard so they could come back 213 00:09:20,435 --> 00:09:21,726 and drag the bottom. 214 00:09:21,812 --> 00:09:23,853 Potentially how much? 215 00:09:23,897 --> 00:09:25,564 $400 million. 216 00:09:25,649 --> 00:09:28,483 Matty: Wow. That's unbelievable. 217 00:09:32,948 --> 00:09:34,823 Marty: So, this fellow bob kreipke 218 00:09:34,908 --> 00:09:37,367 is-is so enthusiastic and so credible 219 00:09:37,452 --> 00:09:39,619 because-- rick, rick knows this-- we get, we get 220 00:09:39,705 --> 00:09:42,372 input from erstwhile treasure hunters all the time. 221 00:09:42,416 --> 00:09:44,749 -Right. -You have to kind of weed them out, you know? 222 00:09:44,835 --> 00:09:47,752 But this guy was credible and interesting, 223 00:09:47,796 --> 00:09:49,421 and we're gonna go have a go at it. 224 00:09:49,506 --> 00:09:52,090 I love it. So whatever bob said to you 225 00:09:52,134 --> 00:09:53,967 prompted you to, "let's go do this," 226 00:09:54,052 --> 00:09:55,260 and you're kind of going home, in a way. 227 00:09:55,345 --> 00:09:57,429 Yeah, look, I love the upper peninsula. 228 00:09:57,514 --> 00:09:59,097 Yeah, the-the garden peninsula 229 00:09:59,141 --> 00:10:01,266 is where my company is building a wind farm. 230 00:10:01,310 --> 00:10:04,102 So I've sort of been up there a lot, anyway. 231 00:10:04,187 --> 00:10:05,895 I do know some of the people. 232 00:10:05,981 --> 00:10:07,439 Yeah, I mean, 233 00:10:07,482 --> 00:10:09,524 you know when all the buttons all get pressed, 234 00:10:09,610 --> 00:10:10,734 you know, when everything clicks? 235 00:10:10,819 --> 00:10:12,193 So if you don't mind, I'm gonna take 236 00:10:12,279 --> 00:10:14,571 a little leave of absence, rick, and go have some fun. 237 00:10:14,656 --> 00:10:17,282 -Absolutely. -So alan has-has 238 00:10:17,326 --> 00:10:20,619 arranged a-a boat, because it's a big fishing area 239 00:10:20,662 --> 00:10:23,121 up there by poverty island. 240 00:10:23,165 --> 00:10:25,415 And we're gonna get bob and we're gonna get, 241 00:10:25,500 --> 00:10:26,958 of course, you know brian abbott. 242 00:10:27,044 --> 00:10:28,793 - He scanned 10-x... -Yes. 243 00:10:28,837 --> 00:10:30,795 ...For you guys, and-and his images, 244 00:10:30,881 --> 00:10:32,088 he believed he saw some stuff down there. 245 00:10:32,132 --> 00:10:33,256 -That's right. -Absolutely. 246 00:10:33,300 --> 00:10:34,633 So we're gonna go have a look. 247 00:10:36,345 --> 00:10:39,804 Narrator: Located some six miles off the garden peninsula, 248 00:10:39,890 --> 00:10:43,808 poverty island is a small, 200-acre land mass 249 00:10:43,894 --> 00:10:45,685 in lake michigan. 250 00:10:45,771 --> 00:10:47,312 Clyburn: The garden peninsula is at the top 251 00:10:47,397 --> 00:10:48,772 of lake michigan. 252 00:10:48,815 --> 00:10:50,815 It was a rural area, 253 00:10:50,859 --> 00:10:53,652 but yet some of the earliest communities in michigan 254 00:10:53,737 --> 00:10:56,655 were up in that area because of the, 255 00:10:56,698 --> 00:10:59,783 trading, because of the lumber. 256 00:10:59,868 --> 00:11:01,993 It is remote. 257 00:11:02,079 --> 00:11:06,247 Bob: Poverty island always was quite isolated. 258 00:11:06,333 --> 00:11:08,500 I mean, it's isolated enough 259 00:11:08,585 --> 00:11:11,586 being out on the peninsula, but in this day and age, 260 00:11:11,672 --> 00:11:15,423 when you get out on the water and go to poverty island, 261 00:11:15,509 --> 00:11:18,009 you're really getting out there, you know, 262 00:11:18,095 --> 00:11:20,970 in no-man's-land, and there's a lot of currents. 263 00:11:21,056 --> 00:11:24,349 And back in the early days, there was a lot 264 00:11:24,434 --> 00:11:28,353 of shipping through that area and it's treacherous. 265 00:11:29,731 --> 00:11:32,982 There's a lot of shoals and a lot of reefs. 266 00:11:33,068 --> 00:11:35,318 Storms, when they came up, 267 00:11:35,404 --> 00:11:37,987 everybody with their schooners 268 00:11:38,073 --> 00:11:40,865 and that kind of headed to try to get in the lee 269 00:11:40,909 --> 00:11:43,284 of some of these islands, 270 00:11:43,370 --> 00:11:45,370 and a lot of them met their doom. 271 00:11:46,915 --> 00:11:48,665 Narrator: Because the great lakes 272 00:11:48,750 --> 00:11:52,085 provided indigenous people, explorers and sea merchants 273 00:11:52,170 --> 00:11:54,295 with a natural waterway dating back 274 00:11:54,381 --> 00:11:56,840 more than two centuries, 275 00:11:56,925 --> 00:11:59,884 poverty island became a popular destination 276 00:11:59,928 --> 00:12:03,388 for mineral prospectors, hunters and even pirates 277 00:12:03,473 --> 00:12:05,557 to not only explore, 278 00:12:05,642 --> 00:12:08,977 but also seek refuge from harsh storms 279 00:12:09,062 --> 00:12:11,813 and in some cases, the law. 280 00:12:15,777 --> 00:12:19,946 During the civil war, the waters around poverty island 281 00:12:20,031 --> 00:12:22,407 were used by some european governments, 282 00:12:22,451 --> 00:12:25,034 who are believed to have been secretly aiding 283 00:12:25,120 --> 00:12:27,579 and abetting the confederate government. 284 00:12:29,124 --> 00:12:31,583 Union forces had established a blockade 285 00:12:31,668 --> 00:12:34,210 of the eastern seaboard to keep the south 286 00:12:34,296 --> 00:12:36,880 from being supplied by these foreign sympathizers. 287 00:12:36,965 --> 00:12:39,758 However, the st. Lawrence seaway 288 00:12:39,843 --> 00:12:42,719 could still be accessed by ships north of the blockade 289 00:12:42,763 --> 00:12:45,555 and then easily and secretly 290 00:12:45,640 --> 00:12:48,183 navigate through the great lakes. 291 00:12:49,269 --> 00:12:52,020 But exactly which nations or nation 292 00:12:52,105 --> 00:12:55,732 was supplying gold to support the southern cause? 293 00:12:55,817 --> 00:12:59,736 Bob: When something is secretive and nobody 294 00:12:59,821 --> 00:13:01,613 wanted to trace it back to their country 295 00:13:01,698 --> 00:13:03,448 that was supporting the confederates, 296 00:13:03,492 --> 00:13:06,618 there's no records to follow in that. 297 00:13:06,703 --> 00:13:10,997 Britain, France, Spain, portugal. 298 00:13:11,082 --> 00:13:13,291 Any of those four countries could have been 299 00:13:13,376 --> 00:13:16,127 involved in shipping this gold over to the great lakes. 300 00:13:16,213 --> 00:13:19,422 Narrator: Of all the european powers who could have been aiding 301 00:13:19,508 --> 00:13:24,093 the confederacy, perhaps France had the most to gain. 302 00:13:25,263 --> 00:13:27,138 In 1862, 303 00:13:27,224 --> 00:13:30,475 napoleon iii, France's first president 304 00:13:30,519 --> 00:13:32,811 and the nephew of napoleon bonaparte, 305 00:13:32,854 --> 00:13:36,481 sent troops to mexico with the intent of creating 306 00:13:36,566 --> 00:13:39,234 a competing empire to curb the growth 307 00:13:39,319 --> 00:13:41,444 of the united states. 308 00:13:41,530 --> 00:13:43,613 Two years later, he appointed 309 00:13:43,698 --> 00:13:46,449 archduke ferdinand maximilian I of austria 310 00:13:46,535 --> 00:13:50,119 as emperor of the so-called second mexican empire. 311 00:13:50,205 --> 00:13:53,289 Is it possible that napoleon iii 312 00:13:53,375 --> 00:13:55,834 was secretly supporting the confederacy 313 00:13:55,877 --> 00:13:58,628 as part of a grand scheme to shift the balance 314 00:13:58,713 --> 00:14:01,339 of world power in France's favor? 315 00:14:01,424 --> 00:14:03,466 If we look at the history though, 316 00:14:03,552 --> 00:14:06,594 the french never officially supported the south. 317 00:14:07,722 --> 00:14:09,347 Because the north said that that would be 318 00:14:09,432 --> 00:14:10,849 a declaration of war against the united states. 319 00:14:10,892 --> 00:14:12,350 France did not want to go 320 00:14:12,394 --> 00:14:13,935 to war with the united states. 321 00:14:15,730 --> 00:14:17,689 But is it possible that the french 322 00:14:17,774 --> 00:14:20,692 secretly sent chests full of gold 323 00:14:20,735 --> 00:14:22,151 down lake michigan into chicago 324 00:14:22,237 --> 00:14:24,404 to get into the south's hands? 325 00:14:24,489 --> 00:14:27,657 It's possible, and it'd have to be very secret 326 00:14:27,742 --> 00:14:30,702 and nobody would have had to ever talk about it again. 327 00:14:30,787 --> 00:14:34,080 If it sinks, nobody is gonna go looking for it, 328 00:14:34,165 --> 00:14:37,876 because officially, it never existed. 329 00:14:37,919 --> 00:14:41,880 The french did have an area, a territory that they controlled 330 00:14:41,923 --> 00:14:43,673 where they could have possibly sent 331 00:14:43,758 --> 00:14:45,592 a large shipment of gold from. 332 00:14:45,677 --> 00:14:47,677 It's possible. 333 00:14:47,721 --> 00:14:51,514 Narrator: But if the french were, in fact, secretly shipping gold 334 00:14:51,600 --> 00:14:55,560 to support the south, where did the plan go wrong? 335 00:14:55,604 --> 00:14:58,271 Based on his extensive research, 336 00:14:58,356 --> 00:15:00,648 bob kreipke has a theory that he believes 337 00:15:00,734 --> 00:15:03,359 may provide the answer. 338 00:15:03,403 --> 00:15:06,404 One of these ships carrying gold 339 00:15:06,448 --> 00:15:10,283 to supply the confederates was up in this area, 340 00:15:10,368 --> 00:15:12,869 getting ready to go down to chicago 341 00:15:12,954 --> 00:15:15,204 when, all of a sudden, 342 00:15:15,290 --> 00:15:19,208 a canadian pirate ship started to chase them. 343 00:15:20,629 --> 00:15:22,545 Pirates were, very much a part of the great lakes. 344 00:15:22,631 --> 00:15:24,172 In years gone by, 345 00:15:24,257 --> 00:15:27,216 a lot of commodities were shipped on the great lakes. 346 00:15:27,260 --> 00:15:31,554 Stories of vessels being sunk purposely on the lakes. 347 00:15:31,640 --> 00:15:34,182 Even up in the, the poverty island area. 348 00:15:35,268 --> 00:15:36,601 Brian: So you had a lot of pirates here 349 00:15:36,645 --> 00:15:38,102 that would knock out lighthouses, 350 00:15:38,146 --> 00:15:40,063 make ships run aground, 351 00:15:40,106 --> 00:15:41,773 they would steal the contraband, 352 00:15:41,858 --> 00:15:43,608 throw people in the water with everything. 353 00:15:43,693 --> 00:15:47,028 So there's a lot of history of pirates during that time period. 354 00:15:48,239 --> 00:15:50,573 Narrator: As the pirates were rapidly closing in 355 00:15:50,617 --> 00:15:53,785 on the smugglers' ship, the desperate sailors 356 00:15:53,828 --> 00:15:55,453 are believed to have dumped their gold 357 00:15:55,497 --> 00:15:57,622 into the lake in order to make 358 00:15:57,666 --> 00:15:59,290 a quicker escape. 359 00:15:59,376 --> 00:16:01,292 According to legend, 360 00:16:01,336 --> 00:16:04,545 it was just off the shores of poverty island. 361 00:16:05,632 --> 00:16:07,090 Bob: They dumped the treasure in thinking 362 00:16:07,175 --> 00:16:08,800 they might come back to get it. 363 00:16:08,843 --> 00:16:11,594 They chained the boxes of gold together. 364 00:16:12,806 --> 00:16:14,973 And threw it overboard. 365 00:16:15,016 --> 00:16:19,060 But they were never able to find it again. 366 00:16:21,189 --> 00:16:24,107 Rick: You know, as we talk about treasure stories, 367 00:16:24,192 --> 00:16:25,650 it's not just seeking the treasure. 368 00:16:25,735 --> 00:16:27,443 There's a wonderful story behind 369 00:16:27,529 --> 00:16:30,071 -that episode, you know? -Yeah, absolutely. 370 00:16:30,156 --> 00:16:31,948 And-and it connects real history. 371 00:16:32,033 --> 00:16:34,158 The confederacy, the struggles. 372 00:16:34,202 --> 00:16:35,785 Will the union survive? 373 00:16:35,870 --> 00:16:37,829 You mentioned the blockade. 374 00:16:37,914 --> 00:16:39,622 I mean, if you were to follow that story, 375 00:16:39,708 --> 00:16:41,457 you could go down any number of rabbit holes 376 00:16:41,543 --> 00:16:43,334 and find a very interesting 377 00:16:43,378 --> 00:16:46,337 story connected to a real treasure hunt. 378 00:16:46,423 --> 00:16:49,424 -And that's what I find fascinating about treasures. -I know you do, yeah. 379 00:16:49,509 --> 00:16:51,259 I'd like to pull up those chests. 380 00:16:51,344 --> 00:16:52,927 -Well, I was gonna say... -I wouldn't mind it. 381 00:16:53,013 --> 00:16:54,512 And I'm not gonna say no to that. 382 00:16:54,556 --> 00:16:56,264 But here's the thing, we all love the story, 383 00:16:56,349 --> 00:16:58,016 we all love history, but if he gets hits... 384 00:16:58,059 --> 00:17:00,351 You and I are packing our bags. 385 00:17:00,437 --> 00:17:02,311 -Boom. -Yeah, that would be fun, you know, 386 00:17:02,397 --> 00:17:04,647 -and you'd get to see our old stomping ground. -I love it. 387 00:17:04,691 --> 00:17:05,982 Well, I can't wait to find out 388 00:17:06,067 --> 00:17:08,109 what you come up with, back home. 389 00:17:08,194 --> 00:17:09,819 Good deal. I'll do it. I'll do it! 390 00:17:09,904 --> 00:17:11,154 Rick: All right, stay safe. 391 00:17:11,239 --> 00:17:12,530 Marty: I will, rick. 392 00:17:17,912 --> 00:17:20,705 Narrator: One week after his meeting in the oak island war room, 393 00:17:20,749 --> 00:17:23,708 - -marty lagina is on the road to fairport, michigan... 394 00:17:23,793 --> 00:17:25,334 -Bob: Hello? -Hello, bob! 395 00:17:25,420 --> 00:17:27,503 Yeah, marty, how are you doing? 396 00:17:27,547 --> 00:17:29,672 Narrator: ...Where he's arranged to meet up with bob kreipke, 397 00:17:29,716 --> 00:17:32,050 and set out on lake michigan 398 00:17:32,135 --> 00:17:35,136 in search of the long-lost poverty island treasure. 399 00:17:35,221 --> 00:17:38,056 Marty: I really appreciate you coming on up here 400 00:17:38,141 --> 00:17:40,725 to the wilds of northern michigan. 401 00:17:40,769 --> 00:17:43,186 Bob: Well, I'm glad. Well, it's an interesting subject, marty. 402 00:17:43,271 --> 00:17:46,022 It's got some credibility to it. 403 00:17:46,066 --> 00:17:47,648 The pieces are kind of there. 404 00:17:47,734 --> 00:17:49,484 Marty: That's what makes it all exciting. 405 00:17:49,569 --> 00:17:52,236 Narrator: Bob kreipke has harbored 406 00:17:52,280 --> 00:17:55,907 a lifelong fascination with shipwrecks and sunken treasure. 407 00:17:57,410 --> 00:17:59,786 He first heard about the poverty island treasure 408 00:17:59,871 --> 00:18:03,039 from a commercial fisherman when he was just a teenager 409 00:18:03,124 --> 00:18:05,500 and was instantly hooked. 410 00:18:07,170 --> 00:18:09,253 Over the next several years, 411 00:18:09,339 --> 00:18:11,881 bob visited the island on numerous occasions, 412 00:18:11,966 --> 00:18:15,843 filming the bleak, uninhabited surroundings. 413 00:18:17,138 --> 00:18:20,348 I've been out to the island I-I think a total of four times. 414 00:18:20,433 --> 00:18:24,560 And back then, it was so isolated that 415 00:18:24,646 --> 00:18:27,605 it was kind of sinister. 416 00:18:27,690 --> 00:18:30,775 In my dealings and research, I'm thinking, 417 00:18:30,819 --> 00:18:33,778 looking for this poverty island treasure 418 00:18:33,822 --> 00:18:37,406 starts with the few clues that we have. 419 00:18:37,492 --> 00:18:42,120 There was a story that a ship came across that treasure 420 00:18:42,205 --> 00:18:44,413 in the early 1930s. 421 00:18:46,042 --> 00:18:48,126 Narrator: In 1932, 422 00:18:48,211 --> 00:18:51,003 while passing by poverty island during a storm, 423 00:18:51,089 --> 00:18:53,756 a ship reportedly snagged its anchor line 424 00:18:53,842 --> 00:18:56,467 on something lying at the bottom of the lake. 425 00:18:56,553 --> 00:18:59,303 As the crew began to hoist the anchor, 426 00:18:59,389 --> 00:19:01,639 they saw that it was carrying with it 427 00:19:01,683 --> 00:19:03,808 what looked to be a chest. 428 00:19:03,852 --> 00:19:06,477 Possibly one of the five treasure chests 429 00:19:06,521 --> 00:19:10,231 abandoned by french smugglers during the civil war. 430 00:19:10,316 --> 00:19:13,901 But just as they were about to heave it aboard the ship, 431 00:19:13,987 --> 00:19:15,820 the chest slipped free 432 00:19:15,864 --> 00:19:18,489 and plunged back into the watery depths. 433 00:19:18,533 --> 00:19:20,491 Bob: Word kind of spread 434 00:19:20,535 --> 00:19:22,618 that they did pull up something 435 00:19:22,704 --> 00:19:25,454 and maybe that was worth looking for, maybe that was gold, 436 00:19:25,498 --> 00:19:27,707 maybe that was some civil war gold. 437 00:19:27,792 --> 00:19:31,669 And a gentleman, wilfred behrens, 438 00:19:31,713 --> 00:19:33,337 bought himself a ship, 439 00:19:33,423 --> 00:19:36,507 teamed up with some other people that were interested 440 00:19:36,551 --> 00:19:38,676 in this and they got some financing. 441 00:19:38,720 --> 00:19:41,512 And they went up looking for what became known 442 00:19:41,556 --> 00:19:43,264 as the poverty island treasure. 443 00:19:44,809 --> 00:19:48,644 Narrator: Over the next three years, a team of treasure hunters 444 00:19:48,730 --> 00:19:51,314 conducted a salvage operation to find the chests 445 00:19:51,399 --> 00:19:53,608 and raise them from the bottom of the lake. 446 00:19:53,693 --> 00:19:56,194 Their efforts were observed 447 00:19:56,237 --> 00:19:58,946 by a group of children who lived on the island. 448 00:19:59,032 --> 00:20:01,532 Among them was carly jessen, 449 00:20:01,576 --> 00:20:03,826 whose father served as the lighthouse keeper. 450 00:20:03,912 --> 00:20:05,536 Bob: I had an opportunity 451 00:20:05,622 --> 00:20:08,164 to talk to carly jessen, 452 00:20:08,249 --> 00:20:11,584 and he was an eyewitness to this thing. 453 00:20:11,669 --> 00:20:15,504 The lighthouse keeper's kids used to watch them offshore 454 00:20:15,590 --> 00:20:17,465 looking for that treasure. 455 00:20:17,550 --> 00:20:18,841 Well, one night, 456 00:20:18,927 --> 00:20:20,885 it was supposedly getting dark, 457 00:20:20,929 --> 00:20:24,222 they pulled up the diving bell and the guys crawled out, 458 00:20:24,265 --> 00:20:26,641 and they were jumping around, they were happy 459 00:20:26,726 --> 00:20:28,684 they had found something. 460 00:20:28,728 --> 00:20:31,520 Presumably what they were looking for. 461 00:20:31,606 --> 00:20:34,690 And they were going to go out and retrieve it the next day, 462 00:20:34,776 --> 00:20:37,985 but that night a big storm came up, 463 00:20:38,071 --> 00:20:39,695 blew their ship ashore, 464 00:20:39,739 --> 00:20:42,198 the diving bell fell in the water, 465 00:20:42,283 --> 00:20:45,243 and the ship was completely destroyed. 466 00:20:45,286 --> 00:20:48,829 And, that was the end of that expedition. 467 00:20:50,500 --> 00:20:52,208 Marty: All right, here's what I've got arranged. 468 00:20:52,252 --> 00:20:54,043 Because this was intriguing 469 00:20:54,128 --> 00:20:56,545 enough for me and... I am totally with you. 470 00:20:56,589 --> 00:21:00,591 I've got sort of a big old iron fishing boat barge-like thing 471 00:21:00,635 --> 00:21:03,427 that my partner alan kostrzewa, 472 00:21:03,513 --> 00:21:05,888 -he's arranged it all. -Excellent. 473 00:21:05,974 --> 00:21:07,765 Well, that's very exciting. 474 00:21:07,809 --> 00:21:09,600 You know, the older you get, 475 00:21:09,686 --> 00:21:11,227 the more it matters, I think, that you have 476 00:21:11,312 --> 00:21:12,937 some kind of an adventure. 477 00:21:13,022 --> 00:21:15,314 So we're gonna go on one today, partner. 478 00:21:15,400 --> 00:21:18,150 -That's the deal. - Hey, I'm looking forward to it. 479 00:21:18,236 --> 00:21:20,569 Marty: All right, bob. Cheers. 480 00:21:27,495 --> 00:21:31,289 Narrator: In fairport, michigan, marty lagina has just arrived 481 00:21:31,374 --> 00:21:32,957 -at the local marina... -Hey, guys. 482 00:21:33,001 --> 00:21:35,418 ...Where he is joining his business partner 483 00:21:35,461 --> 00:21:38,546 alan kostrzewa, alan's son aaron, 484 00:21:38,631 --> 00:21:39,964 along with treasure hunter bob kreipke... 485 00:21:40,049 --> 00:21:42,300 -You ready? -I'm ready. 486 00:21:42,343 --> 00:21:44,677 ...And underwater imaging expert brian abbott 487 00:21:44,762 --> 00:21:49,807 to begin a search for $400 million in sunken gold. 488 00:21:49,851 --> 00:21:54,020 According to local legend, five chests filled with 489 00:21:54,105 --> 00:21:56,689 civil war-era gold lie approximately 490 00:21:56,774 --> 00:22:00,401 six and a half miles out at the bottom of lake michigan 491 00:22:00,486 --> 00:22:04,488 near a 200-acre land mass known as poverty island. 492 00:22:05,950 --> 00:22:07,616 Brian, are you ready? 493 00:22:07,702 --> 00:22:10,494 I'm set up pretty much on the boat, ready to operate. 494 00:22:10,580 --> 00:22:12,747 So I'm ready to get moving. 495 00:22:12,832 --> 00:22:14,498 We're off to poverty island, then. 496 00:22:14,542 --> 00:22:17,001 - Let's just hope that's not what happens to us. 497 00:22:18,504 --> 00:22:21,213 okay, we're ready. You guys are all set? 498 00:22:21,299 --> 00:22:22,465 -Marty: Yeah. -Bob: Excellent. 499 00:22:22,550 --> 00:22:24,508 Crewman: All right, captain, we're clear. 500 00:22:24,552 --> 00:22:28,387 Narrator: Along with his crew, captain larry barbeau 501 00:22:28,473 --> 00:22:30,056 will navigate the treacherous waters 502 00:22:30,141 --> 00:22:32,683 south of fairport, en route to the team's destination. 503 00:22:32,769 --> 00:22:34,518 It's refreshing to do this. 504 00:22:34,604 --> 00:22:37,521 To see what other treasure hunters are doing, 505 00:22:37,565 --> 00:22:39,023 see what other treasure stories are out there. 506 00:22:39,108 --> 00:22:41,359 Some of these are gonna hit, too. 507 00:22:41,444 --> 00:22:43,861 You watch. Some of these are gonna come up with treasure. 508 00:22:43,946 --> 00:22:46,864 Hey, captain, what do you do mainly, you fish? 509 00:22:46,908 --> 00:22:49,283 I'm a commercial fisherman here, in fairport. 510 00:22:49,369 --> 00:22:52,036 You guys ever talk about any of these treasure stories? 511 00:22:52,121 --> 00:22:53,287 We talk about 'em. 512 00:22:53,373 --> 00:22:54,497 What if we catch one with an anchor someday 513 00:22:54,582 --> 00:22:56,415 and pull up a big treasure chest? 514 00:22:56,501 --> 00:22:58,125 It'd be a lot better than a fish, wouldn't it? 515 00:22:58,211 --> 00:23:00,378 -Yeah, we definitely talk about that all the time. -Yeah. 516 00:23:00,463 --> 00:23:02,129 It'll be interesting to see what we can find. 517 00:23:02,215 --> 00:23:04,548 Since we've been kids, it's been a mystery, 518 00:23:04,592 --> 00:23:06,842 -so we'll see. -All right, okay, good. 519 00:23:06,928 --> 00:23:09,387 -Well, stay away from the rocks. -You got it. 520 00:23:12,016 --> 00:23:13,808 Marty: So I tell you guys, I knew 521 00:23:13,893 --> 00:23:16,727 that michigan had a lot of various 522 00:23:16,771 --> 00:23:18,729 potential treasure stories. 523 00:23:18,815 --> 00:23:22,066 You can't believe how many there are. 524 00:23:22,151 --> 00:23:24,026 -I mean hundreds. -You said-- you said 525 00:23:24,070 --> 00:23:25,569 over 400 or something... 526 00:23:25,613 --> 00:23:27,905 -I believe it was on one site. -Bob: It's true. Yeah. 527 00:23:27,990 --> 00:23:32,034 You know, michigan has always been a real hot spot. 528 00:23:32,078 --> 00:23:33,994 -Yeah. -People made fortunes here. 529 00:23:34,080 --> 00:23:35,496 Mining, 530 00:23:35,581 --> 00:23:39,417 lumbering and, of course, wherever there's big money, 531 00:23:39,502 --> 00:23:43,963 there's always gonna be that faction of criminal involvement. 532 00:23:44,048 --> 00:23:46,424 Brian: The gangs ran prohibition 533 00:23:46,467 --> 00:23:48,676 from canada-- they're running booze and liquor. 534 00:23:48,761 --> 00:23:51,303 So you've got the whole great lakes here. 535 00:23:51,389 --> 00:23:52,721 It's an open waterway system, 536 00:23:52,807 --> 00:23:54,807 and if it's not patrolled or taken care of, 537 00:23:54,892 --> 00:23:58,352 -you've got a huge smuggling operation going on. -Yeah. 538 00:23:58,438 --> 00:24:02,940 Narrator: Although most of the midwest's great treasure mysteries 539 00:24:03,025 --> 00:24:06,777 revolve around gold bullion, silver and coins, 540 00:24:06,821 --> 00:24:09,613 there have also been numerous caches of another sort 541 00:24:09,657 --> 00:24:13,909 of so-called treasure associated with the great lakes, 542 00:24:13,995 --> 00:24:17,413 what some refer to as "liquid gold." 543 00:24:18,541 --> 00:24:21,834 January 17, 1920. 544 00:24:21,919 --> 00:24:25,713 The 18th amendment to the constitution became law. 545 00:24:25,798 --> 00:24:28,424 Production, importation, 546 00:24:28,509 --> 00:24:29,967 transportation and sale of liquor 547 00:24:30,052 --> 00:24:34,472 became illegal in the united states of america. 548 00:24:34,515 --> 00:24:40,227 However, with prohibition, a new criminal enterprise soon began: 549 00:24:40,313 --> 00:24:42,188 Bootlegging. 550 00:24:42,273 --> 00:24:44,190 Practically overnight, 551 00:24:44,275 --> 00:24:46,525 the midwest erupted into a hot spot 552 00:24:46,611 --> 00:24:48,986 of gangland activity. 553 00:24:49,030 --> 00:24:52,948 Big midwestern cities-- chicago, detroit, milwaukee-- 554 00:24:53,034 --> 00:24:57,495 they were center points of gang violence and bootlegging. 555 00:24:57,580 --> 00:24:59,955 The great lakes offered logistical routes 556 00:24:59,999 --> 00:25:02,124 for coming into the cities. 557 00:25:02,210 --> 00:25:04,752 There was a lot of money in the area. 558 00:25:04,837 --> 00:25:06,879 Narrator: Much of the money and liquor 559 00:25:06,964 --> 00:25:09,340 that was being ferried across the great lakes 560 00:25:09,383 --> 00:25:13,344 belonged to the most notorious mobsters of the 1920s. 561 00:25:13,429 --> 00:25:16,222 carter: Al capone, dillinger, 562 00:25:16,307 --> 00:25:20,809 baby face nelson were all very active in the area. 563 00:25:20,853 --> 00:25:22,978 Nelson: We think about those gangsters 564 00:25:23,064 --> 00:25:25,147 being associated with the big cities in the east, 565 00:25:25,191 --> 00:25:27,149 whereas a lot of these figures 566 00:25:27,235 --> 00:25:29,485 actually had success in the midwest. 567 00:25:29,570 --> 00:25:34,114 Narrator: These gangsters became fixtures in the public imagination, 568 00:25:34,200 --> 00:25:36,075 and the great lakes played a major role 569 00:25:36,160 --> 00:25:39,245 in their criminal enterprise. 570 00:25:39,330 --> 00:25:41,205 Brian: Al capone's companies, 571 00:25:41,290 --> 00:25:44,708 they would actually hire divers to go out into the great lakes. 572 00:25:44,794 --> 00:25:46,544 The ships might go down in a storm, 573 00:25:46,587 --> 00:25:49,046 but they might have, you know, 200 gallons of whiskey on 'em, 574 00:25:49,090 --> 00:25:50,589 and that's a lot of money. 575 00:25:50,675 --> 00:25:52,591 So they would hire divers to go out, 576 00:25:52,677 --> 00:25:56,595 and they would salvage the wears on board and pretty much... 577 00:25:56,681 --> 00:25:57,680 I had no idea of that. 578 00:25:57,723 --> 00:25:58,847 -Yeah, absolutely. -You keep talking 579 00:25:58,891 --> 00:26:01,559 about these bootleggers and stuff, 580 00:26:01,644 --> 00:26:03,227 and I happen to have 581 00:26:03,312 --> 00:26:06,188 family members who were part of that whole thing. 582 00:26:06,232 --> 00:26:08,607 My grandmother... My grandmother was 583 00:26:08,693 --> 00:26:11,068 a very small-level bootlegger, 584 00:26:11,153 --> 00:26:12,987 and to make ends meet, she ran a little hooch, 585 00:26:13,072 --> 00:26:14,780 - you know? -Sure. 586 00:26:14,865 --> 00:26:16,282 Marty: So... 587 00:26:16,367 --> 00:26:17,992 Hey, we're coming up to poverty right now. 588 00:26:19,120 --> 00:26:20,536 marty: Look at that. 589 00:26:22,290 --> 00:26:24,582 -Is that poverty? -Bob: That's poverty. 590 00:26:24,667 --> 00:26:29,253 Narrator: Today, poverty island stands barren and desolate. 591 00:26:29,297 --> 00:26:32,381 It has been abandoned since 1957, 592 00:26:32,466 --> 00:26:35,342 when the lighthouse was fully automated, 593 00:26:35,428 --> 00:26:37,970 and local restrictions now prevent anyone 594 00:26:38,055 --> 00:26:40,598 from stepping foot on the island. 595 00:26:40,683 --> 00:26:43,767 This will keep marty and the team offshore, 596 00:26:43,853 --> 00:26:47,938 at a distance from the island's natural residents. 597 00:26:48,024 --> 00:26:51,775 Bob: When I was out to the island one time with the coast guard, 598 00:26:51,819 --> 00:26:54,236 poverty island was covered with snakes. 599 00:26:54,322 --> 00:26:57,197 Big snakes. That round. 600 00:26:57,283 --> 00:26:58,949 Unbelievable. 601 00:26:58,993 --> 00:27:02,119 I saw the largest snake I ever saw in my life up here. 602 00:27:03,914 --> 00:27:07,124 Variety. They were all different types. 603 00:27:07,168 --> 00:27:10,628 And some of them were eating seagulls. 604 00:27:12,381 --> 00:27:13,839 But there were thousands of them. 605 00:27:13,924 --> 00:27:15,299 Marty: Holy smokes. 606 00:27:16,886 --> 00:27:18,677 You ever see anything that looks 607 00:27:18,763 --> 00:27:21,096 so quintessentially haunted in your whole life? 608 00:27:22,266 --> 00:27:24,475 Looks like that lighthouse is looking right at us. 609 00:27:24,560 --> 00:27:25,976 Bob: Yeah. 610 00:27:33,069 --> 00:27:35,110 Larry: Where would you like me to get you set up at? 611 00:27:35,196 --> 00:27:37,863 -I mean, right over here...? -Yeah. We want to go a little bit past 612 00:27:37,948 --> 00:27:39,323 the lighthouse. 613 00:27:39,367 --> 00:27:40,991 Narrator: On lake michigan, 614 00:27:41,077 --> 00:27:44,662 some six and a half miles south of the town of fairport, 615 00:27:44,747 --> 00:27:47,831 marty lagina, treasure hunter bob kreipke, 616 00:27:47,917 --> 00:27:50,959 underwater imaging expert brian abbott 617 00:27:51,045 --> 00:27:54,004 and their team have just arrived at poverty island 618 00:27:54,090 --> 00:27:58,676 to conduct a sonar scanning operation of the deep waters. 619 00:27:58,761 --> 00:28:02,096 This deserted outpost is believed to be the location 620 00:28:02,181 --> 00:28:06,642 of a vast treasure lost during the civil war. 621 00:28:06,727 --> 00:28:10,479 Make sure, though, we're in about 40 to 60 feet of water. 622 00:28:10,523 --> 00:28:13,023 The legend was that they 623 00:28:13,067 --> 00:28:15,401 had raised their anchor from a shoal, 624 00:28:15,486 --> 00:28:17,695 and it fell down in that deep water. 625 00:28:17,738 --> 00:28:19,863 -Okay. All right. I'll get you there. -So, see what we can. 626 00:28:19,949 --> 00:28:22,241 Bob: Okay. Thank you. 627 00:28:22,326 --> 00:28:25,661 You got to do your research and try to figure out, 628 00:28:25,746 --> 00:28:27,871 hey, what was the weather back then, 629 00:28:27,957 --> 00:28:29,957 what were the lake levels? 630 00:28:30,042 --> 00:28:33,210 We already know there's terrible currents out there. 631 00:28:33,254 --> 00:28:36,171 It's not a very pleasant place. 632 00:28:36,257 --> 00:28:39,550 It's not a place you'd want to vacation. 633 00:28:39,593 --> 00:28:41,051 It's really nice to talk to somebody 634 00:28:41,095 --> 00:28:42,302 who knows what they're talking about. 635 00:28:42,388 --> 00:28:43,762 That might be a clue, too. 636 00:28:43,848 --> 00:28:44,888 Marty: Bob's a huge resource. 637 00:28:44,974 --> 00:28:46,056 I mean, he's great. 638 00:28:46,100 --> 00:28:47,474 An absolute wealth of knowledge. 639 00:28:47,560 --> 00:28:48,934 Historian to the core. 640 00:28:49,019 --> 00:28:50,728 You know, that's what he did his entire life, 641 00:28:50,813 --> 00:28:53,856 and he's got this passion for these unsolved things. 642 00:28:53,941 --> 00:28:56,900 And, um, you know, that's infectious. 643 00:28:58,237 --> 00:29:00,070 Narrator: Could marty, bob and the team 644 00:29:00,156 --> 00:29:03,991 be within reach of five chests of missing gold, 645 00:29:04,076 --> 00:29:06,034 as reported to bob nearly 40 years ago 646 00:29:06,120 --> 00:29:09,413 by former resident karly jessen? 647 00:29:09,498 --> 00:29:11,874 In a matter of moments, and with the help 648 00:29:11,959 --> 00:29:13,959 of brian abbott's sonar equipment, 649 00:29:14,044 --> 00:29:16,003 they will find out. 650 00:29:16,088 --> 00:29:18,046 Larry: We're in 60 feet of water, so if you guys 651 00:29:18,132 --> 00:29:20,340 -want to start the sonar... -Bob: Let's start here. 652 00:29:20,426 --> 00:29:23,260 -All right, brian, find us something. -All right. 653 00:29:23,345 --> 00:29:25,888 - Marty: I've seen that gizmo before. -Brian: You have. 654 00:29:25,931 --> 00:29:28,265 -marty: 10-x. -Brian: Around the island, too. 655 00:29:28,350 --> 00:29:31,518 Narrator: To visualize today's target areas, 656 00:29:31,604 --> 00:29:34,772 brian abbott will be using a sector-scanning sonar device 657 00:29:34,815 --> 00:29:37,274 called the ms1000. 658 00:29:37,318 --> 00:29:39,443 Mounted on a steel tripod, 659 00:29:39,528 --> 00:29:43,071 the ms1000 will be able to stand on the lake bottom 660 00:29:43,157 --> 00:29:45,324 and generate a three-dimensional map 661 00:29:45,409 --> 00:29:47,284 of the surrounding environment, 662 00:29:47,369 --> 00:29:49,578 along with any near surface-buried objects 663 00:29:49,663 --> 00:29:53,290 not visible to the naked eye. 664 00:29:53,375 --> 00:29:55,709 So, the deal is, we want to set this on bottom. 665 00:29:55,795 --> 00:29:58,754 This spins all the way around as it takes the sonar, 666 00:29:58,798 --> 00:30:01,131 and through the magic of zeroes and ones, 667 00:30:01,217 --> 00:30:02,800 we get a pretty picture on the computer screen. 668 00:30:02,885 --> 00:30:05,260 If by some miracle we found something interesting, 669 00:30:05,346 --> 00:30:07,846 we got gps coordinates? 670 00:30:07,932 --> 00:30:09,056 Okay. 671 00:30:09,141 --> 00:30:11,016 We'll walk it up towards that way. 672 00:30:11,101 --> 00:30:12,643 -Marty: I'll get out of the way. -All right. 673 00:30:12,728 --> 00:30:14,686 Yeah, watch your feet, now. Just nice and slow. 674 00:30:14,772 --> 00:30:16,188 -Yep. -Okay. 675 00:30:16,273 --> 00:30:20,192 Bob: People have looked for this poverty island treasure 676 00:30:20,277 --> 00:30:24,196 for years and years, but it's eluded everybody. 677 00:30:24,281 --> 00:30:26,323 If it is still there, I believe 678 00:30:26,408 --> 00:30:30,118 that, literally, electronics will help us. 679 00:30:30,204 --> 00:30:31,662 -Everybody clear? -We combine 680 00:30:31,705 --> 00:30:34,665 these new electronics with some research that we did, 681 00:30:34,750 --> 00:30:37,334 and, you know, we'll see what we can find. 682 00:30:40,005 --> 00:30:41,922 Brian: Okay, on bottom. 683 00:30:42,007 --> 00:30:43,966 So, we're scanning the bottom now. 684 00:30:44,009 --> 00:30:46,260 What I've got is 150-foot range, 685 00:30:46,345 --> 00:30:50,013 so from circle to circle is 300 feet across. 686 00:30:51,517 --> 00:30:53,684 The sonar is like a flashlight. 687 00:30:53,727 --> 00:30:55,352 If I stick a flashlight in front of a tree, 688 00:30:55,396 --> 00:30:57,187 it's gonna cast a shadow. 689 00:30:57,273 --> 00:30:58,856 Aaron: So we're primarily looking for shadows from this. 690 00:30:58,899 --> 00:31:00,941 -Is that more or less right? -Possibly shadows. 691 00:31:01,026 --> 00:31:02,484 We'd be looking for lines, 692 00:31:02,570 --> 00:31:04,695 and we're just trying to look for something 693 00:31:04,780 --> 00:31:06,738 that's, you know, man-made. 694 00:31:06,824 --> 00:31:09,867 The story goes that five boxes are linked together 695 00:31:09,952 --> 00:31:11,827 with a chain, so I would look for a line or... 696 00:31:11,912 --> 00:31:13,495 Aaron: Was that a common thing they did back then, 697 00:31:13,539 --> 00:31:15,038 like chain together chests, or...? 698 00:31:15,124 --> 00:31:18,667 No, that was just so they could find them themselves. 699 00:31:18,711 --> 00:31:22,129 - Drag an anchor or something to catch the chain? - Yeah, catch the chain. 700 00:31:22,214 --> 00:31:23,881 Well, what's that like? 701 00:31:23,924 --> 00:31:26,258 -Brian: It's a big rock. -Alan: A big rock right there? 702 00:31:26,343 --> 00:31:29,553 Brian: Yeah. What you see on poverty island is what you get. 703 00:31:29,597 --> 00:31:31,096 Out here is, it's a rock field. 704 00:31:32,600 --> 00:31:34,766 Aaron: So, if they're buried under sediment or rocks or whatever, 705 00:31:34,852 --> 00:31:37,227 this is no good then, it's not gonna help us out. 706 00:31:37,313 --> 00:31:39,396 It might-- you know, I doubt it's buried, 707 00:31:39,481 --> 00:31:40,814 just because of the currents out here 708 00:31:40,900 --> 00:31:42,232 -and all the rocks. -And it's rocky, yeah. 709 00:31:42,318 --> 00:31:44,484 There's no sand or anything out here? 710 00:31:44,570 --> 00:31:46,612 Brian: But you see all sorts of stuff, 711 00:31:46,697 --> 00:31:48,906 and this one is interesting here. 712 00:31:48,949 --> 00:31:52,534 It's got a nice acoustic shadow behind it, it's kind of square. 713 00:31:54,955 --> 00:31:57,873 So what we'll do is I'll use a shorter range now. 714 00:32:01,337 --> 00:32:04,171 You start to see some really good definition of targets. 715 00:32:04,256 --> 00:32:06,673 -That's really neat. -I can measure the height 716 00:32:06,759 --> 00:32:08,634 -of how tall it is. -Based on the shadow? 717 00:32:08,719 --> 00:32:10,677 Based on the shadow. 718 00:32:10,763 --> 00:32:14,431 This is where the shadow begins. Six feet tall. 719 00:32:14,516 --> 00:32:16,808 It's interesting in the sense of "what the hell is it?" 720 00:32:16,894 --> 00:32:18,268 -yeah. -But it's too big for what we're looking for. 721 00:32:18,354 --> 00:32:19,770 Yeah, it's six feet. 722 00:32:21,482 --> 00:32:24,566 Narrator: Unfortunately, at least so far, 723 00:32:24,652 --> 00:32:28,570 the ms1000 sonar scanning device has not yet detected 724 00:32:28,656 --> 00:32:32,991 any signs of man-made structures or objects in this location. 725 00:32:33,077 --> 00:32:34,993 So, here's the thing. Here's what we know. 726 00:32:35,079 --> 00:32:36,620 We know there's a big mystery out here. 727 00:32:36,705 --> 00:32:38,497 -Correct. -We know your equipment works, 728 00:32:38,582 --> 00:32:39,957 but this is targeted equipment. 729 00:32:40,042 --> 00:32:42,209 We're kind of like a needle in a haystack here. 730 00:32:42,294 --> 00:32:45,045 -Right. -But this gentleman has a hunch about it all. 731 00:32:45,130 --> 00:32:46,672 And so I think what we should do, bob-- 732 00:32:46,757 --> 00:32:48,340 I want you to do this-- I want you to pick 733 00:32:48,425 --> 00:32:51,134 the exact spot, right where your hunch would be. 734 00:32:51,178 --> 00:32:53,095 Now, you steer this boat right where you want it. 735 00:32:53,180 --> 00:32:54,471 We'll put that thing back in, brian, 736 00:32:54,556 --> 00:32:55,764 and we'll just see if-if... 737 00:32:55,849 --> 00:32:57,182 -Take a shot. -Take a shot. 738 00:32:57,267 --> 00:32:58,642 -Yeah. Okay. -Bob: Sounds great. 739 00:32:58,727 --> 00:33:02,312 -Pick the spot, shooter. -Okay. I'll go up with larry. 740 00:33:04,692 --> 00:33:06,775 Brian: Okay, watch yourself. You're gonna get real wet. 741 00:33:06,819 --> 00:33:08,110 Bob: We want to go out 742 00:33:08,195 --> 00:33:09,778 -in a little deeper water. -Okay. 743 00:33:09,863 --> 00:33:12,239 And just a hair back here towards the north. 744 00:33:12,324 --> 00:33:13,907 Okay. 745 00:33:13,993 --> 00:33:16,827 Bob: Getting close. Getting real close. 746 00:33:16,912 --> 00:33:19,037 Marty: We'd have to get really lucky, 747 00:33:19,123 --> 00:33:21,498 in one day, to find these treasure chests 748 00:33:21,583 --> 00:33:23,291 that were thrown overboard. 749 00:33:23,377 --> 00:33:24,793 But you know what? Maybe. 750 00:33:24,837 --> 00:33:26,545 Maybe. Maybe we hit the jackpot. 751 00:33:26,630 --> 00:33:28,672 Brian: Sometimes you'd rather be lucky than good. 752 00:33:28,716 --> 00:33:30,966 - No, no, always. Always. 753 00:33:37,224 --> 00:33:39,516 narrator: Just off the shores of poverty island in lake michigan, 754 00:33:39,601 --> 00:33:42,519 marty lagina, along with historian 755 00:33:42,563 --> 00:33:44,604 and treasure hunter bob kreipke, 756 00:33:44,690 --> 00:33:46,690 are leading a sonar scanning operation 757 00:33:46,734 --> 00:33:51,153 in search of some $400 million in civil war gold 758 00:33:51,196 --> 00:33:54,698 believed to have been dumped in the area back in 1864. 759 00:33:54,783 --> 00:33:58,452 -You just tell me when, and we'll throw her in. -Good. Yeah. Yeah. 760 00:33:58,537 --> 00:34:01,288 Bob: Getting close, getting real close. 761 00:34:01,373 --> 00:34:03,582 Narrator: Having performed numerous scans 762 00:34:03,667 --> 00:34:05,751 and receiving no promising data, 763 00:34:05,836 --> 00:34:08,128 they are now about to search an area 764 00:34:08,213 --> 00:34:11,465 that bob kreipke believes to be nearest 765 00:34:11,550 --> 00:34:14,051 to where an eyewitness saw five chests 766 00:34:14,136 --> 00:34:16,636 connected with a chain dumped into the lake. 767 00:34:16,722 --> 00:34:19,973 Bob: Yeah, this should be good. This should be good. 768 00:34:20,059 --> 00:34:22,476 We'll do that, okay. Okay, go ahead, throw it! 769 00:34:22,561 --> 00:34:24,978 -This is the spot? -Right here. 770 00:34:25,064 --> 00:34:30,859 Bob: My research suggested that they were passing poverty island. 771 00:34:30,903 --> 00:34:32,778 And I believe that this is where 772 00:34:32,863 --> 00:34:34,404 they would've scuttled the stuff. 773 00:34:34,448 --> 00:34:36,031 And it made sense. 774 00:34:36,075 --> 00:34:38,158 This is the big clue: 775 00:34:38,243 --> 00:34:41,953 Those kids that lived in that lighthouse said to me, 776 00:34:42,039 --> 00:34:45,916 "bob, we stood on the shore and could hear them talking." 777 00:34:45,959 --> 00:34:47,292 so they've got to be 778 00:34:47,377 --> 00:34:48,835 -right out in here. -Marty: Wow. 779 00:34:48,921 --> 00:34:51,588 Slowly let it go. 780 00:34:51,673 --> 00:34:53,256 Aaron: Slowly let it in the water. 781 00:34:53,300 --> 00:34:55,759 Okay, here we go. 782 00:34:56,845 --> 00:34:58,845 Brian: Okay, in the water. 783 00:34:58,931 --> 00:35:01,098 Narrator: After successfully lowering 784 00:35:01,183 --> 00:35:04,559 the ms1000 sonar device to the bottom of the lake, 785 00:35:04,645 --> 00:35:06,978 brian abbott will now begin scanning 786 00:35:07,064 --> 00:35:09,397 in a 360-degree pattern. 787 00:35:09,483 --> 00:35:11,942 -That's it. -Brian: Yep. On bottom. 788 00:35:12,027 --> 00:35:15,570 Narrator: If the treasure is anywhere in the vicinity, 789 00:35:15,656 --> 00:35:19,241 the team could be on the verge of making a historic find. 790 00:35:19,284 --> 00:35:22,160 Brian: This is a pretty barren bottom. 791 00:35:22,246 --> 00:35:24,621 We're kind of out of the rocks and stuff. 792 00:35:24,706 --> 00:35:26,456 What's your radius of investigation right now? 793 00:35:26,500 --> 00:35:29,459 The radius is 120 feet. 794 00:35:29,545 --> 00:35:32,504 And we're just trying to look for something that's a line 795 00:35:32,589 --> 00:35:35,549 or a chain or boxes in a row or anything. 796 00:35:35,634 --> 00:35:38,885 Like this is a really good target right here. See this? 797 00:35:38,971 --> 00:35:40,804 That's interesting to me. 798 00:35:43,725 --> 00:35:45,267 Marty: What is that? 799 00:35:45,352 --> 00:35:47,561 Brian: I don't know. It's square. 800 00:35:47,646 --> 00:35:50,480 We'll walk it in closer, we'll get better detail on it. 801 00:35:58,699 --> 00:36:00,157 Alan: That's cool. 802 00:36:00,242 --> 00:36:02,576 Brian: That's-- I find that unique. 803 00:36:02,661 --> 00:36:04,536 Alan: So that's intriguing you, brian? 804 00:36:04,621 --> 00:36:07,706 Yeah, it's got a nice acoustic shadow behind it. 805 00:36:07,791 --> 00:36:09,040 It's a square. 806 00:36:09,126 --> 00:36:11,334 I would definitely mark that as a target. 807 00:36:11,420 --> 00:36:14,212 Nature doesn't make things that are square, 808 00:36:14,298 --> 00:36:16,006 rectangular and round. 809 00:36:16,049 --> 00:36:17,549 Nature has different angles 810 00:36:17,634 --> 00:36:19,676 and perspectives on things. 811 00:36:19,720 --> 00:36:23,346 I'm gonna drop it down in range so we get better resolution. 812 00:36:23,390 --> 00:36:26,683 So we're able to go in there and look for targets on bottom 813 00:36:26,727 --> 00:36:28,518 and see that it's out of characteristic 814 00:36:28,604 --> 00:36:30,187 at the natural bottom. 815 00:36:30,272 --> 00:36:33,440 So we're able to look at things and possibly identify them. 816 00:36:33,525 --> 00:36:39,070 So that thing is three feet tall, down there. 817 00:36:39,156 --> 00:36:41,031 How big are these boxes, supposedly, 818 00:36:41,074 --> 00:36:43,158 -that were thrown over? -They couldn't have been too big. 819 00:36:43,202 --> 00:36:45,076 -They couldn't have lifted them. -Yeah. 820 00:36:45,162 --> 00:36:47,537 So we're gonna mark it on here, and then-then what? 821 00:36:47,581 --> 00:36:49,456 Marty: Well, we come back here with divers. 822 00:36:49,541 --> 00:36:51,708 And then if we find something really interesting, 823 00:36:51,793 --> 00:36:53,376 we're gonna call the state of michigan. 824 00:36:53,420 --> 00:36:56,171 At what point do you decide to send the divers down? 825 00:36:56,215 --> 00:36:57,839 To me, diving is the last resort, 826 00:36:57,925 --> 00:36:59,549 and I don't mean that in a bad way. 827 00:36:59,635 --> 00:37:03,011 Let's get all our, data, our position points, 828 00:37:03,055 --> 00:37:04,512 put the divers over position, 829 00:37:04,598 --> 00:37:06,264 put the scanning sonar in the water, 830 00:37:06,350 --> 00:37:07,849 watch the divers go down, 831 00:37:07,935 --> 00:37:10,727 then I can put them right on the target. 832 00:37:10,771 --> 00:37:13,188 Martty: So I think we're intrigued enough to keep after this. 833 00:37:13,273 --> 00:37:15,482 So what-what would we do next, brian? 834 00:37:15,567 --> 00:37:18,485 -I mean, how would you do this? -How would I do it? I would get a side scan. 835 00:37:18,570 --> 00:37:21,112 I would also think about maybe doing multibeam out here. 836 00:37:21,198 --> 00:37:22,739 You know, you can get some of that better detail 837 00:37:22,824 --> 00:37:24,282 with the multibeam and so forth. 838 00:37:24,368 --> 00:37:27,077 But you're looking at a lot more money, a lot more time. 839 00:37:27,162 --> 00:37:29,412 - Has that ever been done out here? -Not to my knowledge. 840 00:37:29,498 --> 00:37:32,082 -There we go. So we'll multibeam it. -So... 841 00:37:32,167 --> 00:37:34,084 -There you go. Perfect. -There you go. 842 00:37:34,127 --> 00:37:35,627 Marty: Well, bob, you know what? 843 00:37:35,712 --> 00:37:37,212 It's an intriguing story. 844 00:37:37,297 --> 00:37:38,838 We had a little, poke and hope here. 845 00:37:38,924 --> 00:37:40,882 -Bob: Sure. -And you're gonna mark this, right? 846 00:37:40,926 --> 00:37:43,009 Brian: Absolutely. 847 00:37:43,095 --> 00:37:46,054 Bob: It is like looking for a needle in a haystack. 848 00:37:46,139 --> 00:37:48,431 But we took a chance, and you know what? 849 00:37:48,517 --> 00:37:51,017 We still know more than we knew before. 850 00:37:51,103 --> 00:37:53,645 I think that this poverty island treasure, 851 00:37:53,730 --> 00:37:57,941 if it is still there and nobody has gotten to it yet, 852 00:37:58,026 --> 00:38:01,027 I believe we're gonna find something. 853 00:38:01,113 --> 00:38:03,655 All right, well, it gets to keep its secrets for right now. 854 00:38:03,740 --> 00:38:05,740 -I think we're done for this mission. -Larry: All right. 855 00:38:05,826 --> 00:38:08,660 Marty: Yeah, well, what does my brother always say? 856 00:38:08,745 --> 00:38:10,954 "eyes and boots on the ground," right? I mean... 857 00:38:11,039 --> 00:38:13,623 Until you get a sense of it, like we did today, 858 00:38:13,709 --> 00:38:15,292 you don't know what you're up against, you don't know 859 00:38:15,377 --> 00:38:17,335 whether it's worth adding resources. 860 00:38:17,421 --> 00:38:20,297 I mean, is there a chance there's a treasure out there 861 00:38:20,382 --> 00:38:22,340 big enough to be worth the effort? 862 00:38:22,426 --> 00:38:24,467 Sure sounds like it. 863 00:38:31,184 --> 00:38:33,310 Marty: Hey, rick, I'm back. 864 00:38:33,353 --> 00:38:34,352 Rick: Welcome back. 865 00:38:34,438 --> 00:38:36,771 - What are you working on? -You know, 866 00:38:36,815 --> 00:38:39,107 the frustrating part of oak island. 867 00:38:39,192 --> 00:38:41,109 - All this data... -Which one? 868 00:38:41,194 --> 00:38:43,653 --things just don't line up, 869 00:38:43,739 --> 00:38:45,947 from map to document to-to res-- 870 00:38:45,991 --> 00:38:48,325 -I mean, it's just inconsistent. -Yeah. 871 00:38:48,410 --> 00:38:52,871 Well, speaking of reports, I've got mine. 872 00:38:52,956 --> 00:38:54,164 And I'd love to hear it. 873 00:38:54,249 --> 00:38:57,417 I got some good news and some bad news. 874 00:38:57,502 --> 00:38:59,669 What would you like first? 875 00:38:59,755 --> 00:39:02,630 - Bad news first. -It's not that bad. 876 00:39:02,716 --> 00:39:04,424 The bad news is we didn't get lucky. 877 00:39:04,509 --> 00:39:06,551 We didn't put the sonar right down 878 00:39:06,636 --> 00:39:08,136 on the, on the chests chained together. 879 00:39:08,221 --> 00:39:10,764 -Yeah, but that would have been... -I know, I know. 880 00:39:10,849 --> 00:39:13,308 That would have been beyond the pale, yeah. 881 00:39:13,393 --> 00:39:15,018 But-but to some extent, 882 00:39:15,062 --> 00:39:17,062 we kind of got the cart before the horse a little bit. 883 00:39:17,147 --> 00:39:19,481 What we did is we used the technique you would use 884 00:39:19,566 --> 00:39:23,360 after you've done broad side-scan sonar. 885 00:39:23,445 --> 00:39:26,696 We did the zero in and look. 886 00:39:26,782 --> 00:39:29,324 We'd probably been better off, in 20/20 hindsight, 887 00:39:29,368 --> 00:39:31,701 to side-scan sonar the whole thing, 888 00:39:31,745 --> 00:39:35,038 pick the ten or 15 good targets, then drop that sonar 889 00:39:35,082 --> 00:39:36,456 right down on them. 890 00:39:36,541 --> 00:39:39,542 If-if we go maybe a little bit earlier in the season, 891 00:39:39,586 --> 00:39:41,544 you know, you could probably dive it, for one thing. 892 00:39:41,630 --> 00:39:43,380 -How deep is it? -It's, like, 60 feet. 893 00:39:43,465 --> 00:39:46,633 -Or he thinks it is. -But nothing on the scanner? 894 00:39:46,718 --> 00:39:49,761 All kinds of problems. It's rocky as could be. 895 00:39:49,846 --> 00:39:52,222 - - But the good news is, it was a great adventure. 896 00:39:52,265 --> 00:39:56,017 This bob kreipke guy reminded me of the enthusiasm, 897 00:39:56,061 --> 00:39:57,685 you know, I mean he's just... 898 00:39:57,729 --> 00:39:59,312 -He's all in. -Yeah, he's all in. 899 00:39:59,398 --> 00:40:02,399 And poverty island is scary-looking. 900 00:40:02,484 --> 00:40:05,944 There's an old abandoned lighthouse falling all apart, 901 00:40:06,029 --> 00:40:07,612 and the island itself 902 00:40:07,697 --> 00:40:10,073 is sitting on blocks of limestone 903 00:40:10,117 --> 00:40:11,783 that aren't really connected. 904 00:40:11,868 --> 00:40:13,535 I mean, it is creepy. 905 00:40:13,620 --> 00:40:16,871 Creepy in a real kind of spine-tingly sense. 906 00:40:16,957 --> 00:40:18,623 It's also full of snakes. 907 00:40:18,708 --> 00:40:22,085 - Ooh. Ooh. 908 00:40:22,170 --> 00:40:24,879 the thing about going to actually look, which you know, 909 00:40:24,965 --> 00:40:26,714 going to actually look at a site, 910 00:40:26,758 --> 00:40:28,591 you know, you can picture it, right? 911 00:40:28,677 --> 00:40:30,218 - Yeah. -You can see the ship coming. 912 00:40:30,303 --> 00:40:31,636 The guys are terrified 913 00:40:31,721 --> 00:40:33,012 because they're being pursued by the enemy. 914 00:40:33,098 --> 00:40:35,098 They know they're gonna get captured, 915 00:40:35,142 --> 00:40:36,391 they're in a slower boat, 916 00:40:36,476 --> 00:40:38,893 so they do what desperate people do. 917 00:40:41,064 --> 00:40:42,981 There's five boxes of treasure, 918 00:40:43,066 --> 00:40:46,234 supposedly containing gold and silver, as always, 919 00:40:46,319 --> 00:40:48,736 -which would be the currency of the day. -Sure. 920 00:40:48,780 --> 00:40:50,280 - Multimillions, for sure. -Really? 921 00:40:50,365 --> 00:40:53,074 Perhaps-perhaps hundreds of millions. Big numbers. 922 00:40:53,160 --> 00:40:55,243 Well, so the question then is, 923 00:40:55,328 --> 00:40:58,538 because it's such a strange island, 924 00:40:58,623 --> 00:41:00,415 do you think they set sail for that 925 00:41:00,500 --> 00:41:03,626 or-or went towards that, because then they would know 926 00:41:03,712 --> 00:41:06,087 where to look for the treasure, or once that was... 927 00:41:06,173 --> 00:41:07,422 Yeah, that-that could very well be, 928 00:41:07,507 --> 00:41:09,299 that-that when they were being pursued... 929 00:41:09,342 --> 00:41:11,092 In-in those days, pursuits weren't, you know, 930 00:41:11,178 --> 00:41:13,303 they didn't take five minutes, they might have taken all day. 931 00:41:13,388 --> 00:41:15,638 -Sure. -And that's a treacherous area. 932 00:41:15,682 --> 00:41:16,973 There's a series of islands. 933 00:41:17,058 --> 00:41:18,475 So they might have been trying to get in there 934 00:41:18,560 --> 00:41:19,976 and get out of sight. 935 00:41:20,061 --> 00:41:21,478 They would have headed for somewhere-- "let's get 936 00:41:21,563 --> 00:41:23,146 to somewhere where we might be able to find this. Okay." 937 00:41:23,231 --> 00:41:24,898 they chained these chests together, 938 00:41:24,983 --> 00:41:26,524 they threw them overboard so they'd come back 939 00:41:26,610 --> 00:41:28,985 -and drag the bottom and-and pick them back up. -Sure. 940 00:41:29,070 --> 00:41:32,113 And here's the thing: Maybe they did. 941 00:41:32,199 --> 00:41:33,990 Although, probably not. 942 00:41:34,075 --> 00:41:35,533 I think they're still there. 943 00:41:35,619 --> 00:41:37,744 He does-- obviously, he thinks so, too. 944 00:41:37,829 --> 00:41:39,662 Yeah. Yeah, he does. 945 00:41:39,748 --> 00:41:42,332 It's this very spirit, the very essence 946 00:41:42,375 --> 00:41:43,374 of treasure hunting, right? 947 00:41:43,460 --> 00:41:45,001 -You don't give up. -No. 948 00:41:45,086 --> 00:41:47,837 You-- it's still there, you just haven't found it. 949 00:41:47,923 --> 00:41:49,506 -Well. -You come next time. 950 00:41:49,591 --> 00:41:51,090 -I-I will. -We'll find it. We'll find those boxes. 951 00:41:52,719 --> 00:41:54,344 well, speaking of that, don't you think we better 952 00:41:54,429 --> 00:41:55,512 -go find those boxes... -Yeah, I think that we've got 953 00:41:55,597 --> 00:41:56,513 some boxes of our own to find here. 954 00:41:56,598 --> 00:41:58,515 So anyway, let's go. 955 00:42:01,228 --> 00:42:04,020 Captioning provided by a+e networks 89068

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