With
the death of Doc Noss, Ova Noss became the force behind the attempts to recover
the treasure. Others who believed the tale and who believed they had some sort
of a claim to it or part of it also came forward. One of those was Noss’ second
wife but Ova dismissed that claim, saying that her divorce from Noss was not valid
which made the marriage to Violet Noss invalid. But Violet Noss was inquiring
about the legality of the permits held by Ova Noss and was attempting to have
them switched to her. This was something of a minor distraction.
The
real problem was the U.S. Government and the U.S. Army were now standing in the
way. Not long after Doc Noss was killed, the Army entered into a lease
agreement with Roy Henderson for the land where Victorio Peak is located. In
other words, much of the disputed land didn’t belong to the Noss family but to
someone else.
A
search of the records in 1950 showed no existing mining claims. On November 14,
1951, Public Land Order No. 703 was issued, which withdrew all the White Sands
Proving Ground (later White Sands Missile Range) from prospecting, entry,
location, and purchase under the mining laws and reserved them for the
military.
The White Sands Missile Range with the San Andres Mountains in the background Photo copyright by Kevin Randle |
New
Mexico state officials claimed that they leased the surface of the land to the
military. The underground wealth, in whatever form it took, belonged to the
state, or to the holders of the various types of licenses. If there was a
treasure on the land, it didn’t belong to the Army. In fact, a good case could
be made that it belonged to the Noss family, if there was anything there.
Ova
Noss contacted the two New Mexico senators and enlisted their aid. In December
1952, Senator Dennis Chavez wrote to Brigadier General G. G. Eddy, about the
White Sands Proving Ground. Ova Noss also succeeded in convincing Senator
Clinton P. Anderson to write to Eddy as well. The general, however, ruled that
no further operations would be allowed on the Proving Ground because the
paperwork was being prepared to transfer all mineral rights to the government.
The
dispute was settled in a federal court that worked out a compromise of sorts.
The Army had the right to use the surface of the land, and no one would be
allowed on the Proving Ground without Army consent. But like so much else in
similar circumstances, that didn’t resolve the matter. Ova Noss refused to
leave Victorio Peak. All she wanted, according to various documents, was to recover
what her late husband had discovered inside the mountain.
It
all came to a temporary end during the summer of 1955, when federal marshals
escorted her from Victorio Peak. But that didn’t mean she was going to give up
the fight. For the rest of her life, she would engage in activities that would
enable her to return to the peak so that she could continue in her effort to
recover the treasure she believed belonged to the family.
Within
months, a group led by Gordon Bjornson petitioned the Land Office, suggesting
they had the financial backing to find the treasure. General Eddy, the White
Sands commander, agreed to let them on site for two inspections. Then, however,
the group couldn’t decide whether to dig out the shaft at the top of the peak
that had been found by Doc Noss or search for another entrance rumored to be hidden
at the base of the mountain.
Bjornson
did write to the Land Office expressing his faith in the story told by both Doc
and Ova Noss. He even mentioned that Noss removed eighty-six bars of gold, a
statue of pure gold and relics of Spanish origin. Of course, none of that has
been found.
Bjornson
obtained permission from the state to begin his operation. But the White Sands
commanding general issued a denial of permission. The general said that he was
afraid of allowing Bjornson onto the range would set a precedence that would
allow others to petition for entrance and make the similar claims. That would
hinder the Army’s mission, which was missile testing and not treasure hunting.
Captain
Leonard V. Fiege Finds a Treasure
All
that legal maneuvering in the civilian world didn’t stop military personnel
from exploring portions of the range. Victorio Peak, which is now on land
controlled by the Army, was a popular attraction. In 1958, four men, two on
active duty with the Air Force at Holloman Air Force Base in Alamogordo, which
it in close proximity of White Sands, found what they believed was an entrance
into the caverns that Noss had located about twenty years earlier. Captain
Leonard V. Fiege, in an affidavit signed later, claimed that he had entered the
cavern. He said that it was dark and dusty and hard to breathe. Fiege said he
sat down on a pile of rocks to catch his breath and noticed that they weren’t
rocks. According to him, they were bars of smelted gold about the size of
normal house bricks.
In
the flashlight beam, he saw other stacks of similar bricks. Some of them were
visible out in the open while others were lost in the dimness of the cave and
all the dust hanging in the air.
Fiege
returned to the opening to find his friends. He was sick and dirty, but once he
told them what he had found, they were all interested in returning for the
gold. Two of the men were too big to slip through the opening into the main
part of the cave but Fiege and Tom Berclett continued on until they came to the
stacks of gold. The other two, identified only by their last names, Prather and
Wessel, remained outside.
While
in the cave, Fiege and Berclett talked about what they should do. Neither was
familiar with the laws governing the discovery of treasure on a military
reservation, nor were they aware that the White Sands command did not hold the
mineral rights to anything found on the range. In any case, neither Fiege nor
Berclett carried any gold from the cave. Or, at least, Fiege later claimed that
they had not removed anything. This seems to be a little strange. No one who
claimed to have seen the gold bars ever brought out one or two of them… or
rather Noss did removed some of the gold bars, but he buried them elsewhere and
no one actually saw them.
Fiege
said that they did their best to seal off the passage that led to the gold
chamber. Fiege told several people that he had caved in the roof and walls to
make it look as if the tunnel came to a dead end.
Unlike
some of the others, Fiege did show a certain intelligence. He went to the JAG
Office and at Holloman and conferred with Colonel Sigmund I. Gasiewicz, who, in
turn, called the Land Office in Santa Fe. Gasiewicz told Oscar Jordan, a land
office attorney, that an officer at Holloman, an air force facility had found a
gold bar on the White Sands Missile Range which was an Army post. Jordan
suggested that the gold be sent to the Department of the Treasury or to the
Secret Service office in Albuquerque. It was Jordan’s belief that the gold had
been taken to the JAG office, which would have established a solid claim about
the treasure.
Both
Gasiewicz and Fiege denied this. Instead, they decided to form a corporation to
protect Fiege and what he had found. They would contact the various government
agencies to make sure that they violated no federal or state laws or violated
any military regulations. They would then make a formal application to enter
White Sands for a search and retrieval of the gold.
It
took them three years to work their way through the maze of red tape in both
the state governments and Washington, D.C. In May 1961, Fiege and his group
began to seriously petition for permission to enter the missile range to search
for and claim the treasure. Fiege met with Major General John Shinkle, then the
commanding officer at the missile range. Fiege explained that they merely
wanted the opportunity to recover a few bars of gold. Shinkle denied the
request.
Of
course, that wasn’t the end of it. Fiege and his group visited the director of
the Mint to ask for his permission to recover the gold. The director wrote to
the Secretary of the Army asking that permission be granted, not because he
believed there was gold to be found or that there was any treasure hidden on
the range at all, but because the Mint had been bothered by so many requests
for additional information. The Secret Service said that there was a real
possibility that nongold bars had been place in the cave by Doc Noss in some
kind of scam or con game.
Next
up, Questions about the Reliability of the Information Part Four
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