Forrest Fenn
- Forrest Fenn says his 10-year-old treasure has finally been found.
- At least five people have died in pursuit of the treasure. There have been many lawsuits.
- Fenn hasn’t said where the treasure was found or shared any proof.
Octogenarian art dealer and controversial raconteur Forrest Fenn says someone has finally found his infamous treasure. Maybe.
For 10 years, people have been searching for Fenn’s purported treasure of precious metals and jewels, estimated to be $1 million, hidden in the mountains somewhere in the southwestern United States. Because of the remote locations in which people hunt for the bounty, several searchers have ended up drowning, falling, or perishing after being snowed in.
After doctors told Fenn he’d likely die of cancer 10 years ago, the millionaire sold his art gallery and made preparations for both the treasure and the clues to find it. In his self-published 2010 book The Thrill of the Chase, Fenn included all the clues someone would need to find the treasure—especially in one specific, 20-line poem.
Now, the search appears to be over, although with previous coverage, the news of the discovery is self-supplied and not independently verifiable. Fenn told the Santa Fe New Mexican that he has photos, but chose not to share them, claiming the person who found the treasure doesn’t wish to be public.
“It was under a canopy of stars in the lush, forested vegetation of the Rocky Mountains and had not moved since I hid it more than [10] years ago,” Fenn writes on his website. “Look for more information and photos in the coming days.”
But the plot thickens. The New Mexican reports that Chicago-area real estate attorney Barbara Andersen is filing an injunction in federal court “alleging she solved the puzzle but was hacked by someone she doesn’t know.” Meanwhile, another treasure hunter with a current court case against Fenn believes the timing of the discovery is too coincidental.