拒绝披露沉船500枚金币位置的寻宝者十年后刑满释放


2026年3月10日 / 美国东部时间下午2:35 / CBS/美联社

联邦记录显示,一位曾在美国历史上最重大的沉船发现之一中做出贡献的前深海寻宝者,因拒绝披露其部分失踪金币的下落而在监狱中度过了十年后,现已重获自由。

据《美联社》查阅的联邦监狱管理局记录显示,1988年在南卡罗来纳州海岸附近发现了被称为”黄金之船”的汤米·汤普森(Tommy Thompson)已于上周三获释。

这位出生于俄亥俄州的研究科学家,在发现了SS中美洲号(S.S. Central America)及其数千磅沉入大西洋海底超过150年的沉船宝藏后被誉为英雄。

这艘船于1857年9月沉没,当时船上载有425名乘客和船员,以及来自新旧金山铸币厂的30,000磅联邦黄金,为美国东部的银行储备。汤普森和他的团队在海面下7,000多英尺处找到了这艘船。

但在随后的几十年里,他与投资者发生了争执,这些投资者指控他欺诈他们数百万美元。之后,他在被指控无视法院命令并声称不知道500枚由船载黄金铸造的金币下落时,曾逃亡多年,最终被送入监狱。

图片

这张1989年11月的档案照片中,汤米·汤普森手持一枚1859年的50美元金币,该金币是他在1989年早些时候从黄金船SS中美洲号残骸中打捞上来的。美联社照片/哥伦布 Dispatch报,Lon Horwedel

中美洲号在1857年的飓风中沉没时,满载着加州淘金热的大量财富。425人溺水身亡,数千磅黄金失踪,引发了经济恐慌。

支持汤普森探险的投资者于2005年起诉他,称他们尚未从超过500根金条和数千枚硬币的5000万美元销售额中获得任何收益——这些只是船上战利品的一部分。

当时居住在佛罗里达州的汤普森开始隐居,后来在2012年,俄亥俄州联邦法官因他未出庭而签发了逮捕令,他成为了一名 fugitive(逃犯)。

三年后,当局追踪到汤普森在佛罗里达州一家酒店,他当时使用假身份居住。法官随后以藐视法庭罪将其拘留,并于2015年底将汤普森送入监狱,因其拒绝回答有关失踪金币位置的问题。

现年73岁的汤普森坚持称,这些当时价值250万美元的硬币已转交给伯利兹的一家信托机构,并表示第一批黄金销售所得的5000万美元主要用于法律费用和银行贷款。

尽管联邦法律通常将藐视法庭罪的监禁时间限制在18个月,但他仍然被关押。2019年,联邦上诉法院驳回了汤普森关于该法律适用的论点,称其拒绝回答违反了认罪协议的条款。

次年,汤普森通过视频参加了另一场听证会,美国地区法官阿尔金农·马布尔里(Algenon Marbley)再次询问他是否准备好说明黄金的下落。

“法官大人,我不知道我们是否以前走过这条路,但我确实不知道黄金的下落,”汤普森回应道。”我觉得我没有获得自由的钥匙。”

一年多前,马布尔里法官同意结束汤普森的民事藐视法庭罪判决,称他不再确信将其继续监禁会得到答案。法官随后命令汤普森立即开始执行因2012年未出庭而被判处的两年刑期。

“人们杀人却只需坐一半时间的牢”

加利福尼亚州钱币经销商德怀特·曼利(Dwight Manley)购买并出售了几乎全部的宝藏,他周一表示,汤普森为他所说的商业纠纷付出了沉重代价。

“因为商业纠纷而入狱10年,这不是美国的做法,”曼利说。”人们杀人却只需坐一半时间的牢。”

佛罗里达大学研究藐视法庭法并曾致力于确保汤普森获释的法学教授瑞安·斯科特(Ryan Scott)表示,民事藐视法庭案件的判决在某种程度上是不确定的,但不应持续这么久。

“持续10年服刑非常不寻常,”斯科特说。

他表示,汤普森本应在数年前——至少2018年,在法院驳回基本案件后——就已获释,称”这种情况持续这么久是对正义的歪曲”。

SS中美洲号的宝藏多年来已拍出数百万美元。

2022年,在达拉斯的 Heritage Auctions拍卖会上,一块866.19盎司的SS中美洲号金条(被称为Justh & Hunter ingot)以216万美元售出。

2019年,沉船打捞的多件遗物在拍卖会上拍出超过1100万美元。2001年,一块80磅重的金条被一位私人收藏家以创纪录的800万美元购得。

Treasure hunter who refused to disclose location of shipwreck’s 500 gold coins is released from prison after a decade

March 10, 2026 / 2:35 PM EDT / CBS/AP

A former deep-sea treasure hunter who made one of the greatest shipwreck discoveries in American history and spent the past decade in prison after refusing to disclose the whereabouts of some of its missing gold coins is now free, federal records show.

Tommy Thompson, who in 1988 located what was known as the “Ship of Gold” off the coast of South Carolina, was released last Wednesday, according to Federal Bureau of Prisons records reviewed by The Associated Press.

Thompson, an Ohio-born research scientist, was hailed as a hero after finding the S.S. Central America and its thousands of pounds of sunken treasure that sat at the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean for more than 150 years.

The ship sank in September 1857, along with 425 passengers and crewmembers and 30,000 pounds of federal gold from the new San Francisco Mint to create a reserve for banks in the eastern U.S. The ship was located by Thompson and his team more than 7,000 feet below the surface.

But in the decades that followed, he battled with investors who accused him of cheating them out of millions and then spent years on the run as a fugitive before being sent to prison over rebuffing court orders while contending he didn’t know what happened to 500 coins minted from the ship’s gold.

In this November 1989 file photo, Tommy Thompson holds a $50 pioneer gold piece retrieved earlier in 1989 from the wreck of the gold ship SS Central America. AP Photo/The Columbus Dispatch, Lon Horwedel

The Central America was filled with a big haul from the California Gold Rush when it sank in a hurricane in 1857. Four hundred and twenty-five people drowned, and thousands of pounds of gold were lost, contributing to an economic panic.

Investors who backed Thompson’s venture sued him in 2005, saying they had yet to receive any money from the $50 million sale of more than 500 gold bars and thousands of coins — just part of the ship’s booty.

Thompson, who was living in Florida, went into seclusion and then later became a fugitive when an Ohio federal judge issued a warrant for his arrest in 2012 after he failed to show up in court.

Three years later, authorities tracked Thompson to a Florida hotel where he was living under a fake name. The judge then held him in contempt and sent Thompson to prison at the end of 2015 for refusing to answer questions about the location of missing coins.

Thompson, now 73, maintained that the coins — valued then at $2.5 million — were turned over to a trust in Belize and said the $50 million from the sale of the first batch of gold mostly went toward legal fees and bank loans.

He remained locked up even though federal law generally limits jail time for contempt of court to 18 months. A federal appeals court in 2019 rejected Thompson’s argument that the law applied to him, saying his refusal violated conditions of a plea agreement.

The following year, Thompson appeared by video for another hearing where U.S. District Judge Algenon Marbley again asked whether he was ready to address the whereabouts of the gold.

“Your honor, I don’t know if we’ve gone over this road before or not, but I don’t know the whereabouts of the gold,” Thompson responded. “I feel like I don’t have the keys to my freedom.”

Just over a year ago, Marbley agreed to end Thompson’s sentence on the civil contempt charge, saying he was no longer convinced that keeping him in prison would produce an answer. The judge then ordered Thompson to immediately start serving a two-year sentence for skipping the 2012 court hearing.

“People kill people and get out in half the time”


Dwight Manley, a California coin dealer who bought and sold nearly the entire fortune, said Monday that Thompson paid a heavy price over what he described as a business dispute.

“Going to prison for 10 years over a business dispute is not America,” Manley said. “People kill people and get out in half the time.”

Sentences in civil contempt cases are somewhat indefinite, but they shouldn’t go on forever, said Ryan Scott, a University of Florida law professor who researches contempt law and worked to secure Thompson’s release.

“It’s very unusual to go on 10 years,” Scott said.

Tommy Thompson, a former deep-sea treasure hunter, is seen in an undated photo provided by the Delaware County Sheriff’s Office. Delaware County Sheriff’s Office via AP

He said Thompson should have been freed years ago – since at least 2018, after the court dismissed the underlying case – calling it a “miscarriage of justice for this to have gone on this long.”

Treasure from the S.S. Central America has fetched millions of dollars over the years.

In 2022, one of the largest S.S. Central America ingots ever offered at auction, an 866.19-ounce find known as a Justh & Hunter ingot, sold for $2.16 million through Dallas-based Heritage Auctions.

In 2019, multiple relics from the shipwreck hauled in more than $11 million at auction. In 2001, an 80-pound ingot was bought by a private collector for a record $8 million.

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