Leon Trabuco’s Lost Gold

A Mexican businessman buries 16 tons of gold in the New Mexico desert and then dies before telling anyone where it is.

Farmington, New Mexico, 1933. In the heat of the summer, a pilot named Red Moiser landed several mysterious flights in the desert. There, he was met by a Mexican millionaire named Leon Trabuco.

It’s believed that Trabuco and four other men were quietly buying up much of Mexico’s gold reserves to resell in the United States when the price went up. Trabuco was convinced that because of the Great Depression, the United States would soon devalue the dollar, and that gold prices would skyrocket. But the chance to make huge profits carried huge risks. The gold had to be smuggled into the United States. If the men were caught, they faced long prison terms.

At a makeshift Mexican foundry, gold coins and jewelry were melted down and cast into ingots. In less than three months, the partners had collected almost 16 tons of solid gold. Trabuco searched the US for a safe place to hide the illegal treasure. When he couldn’t find a suitable spot, he decided it would be smarter to bury the gold.

Legend has it that Trabuco chose a sparsely populated region of New Mexico, near the Ute and Navajo Indian Reservations. Red Moiser allegedly made 16 flights, carrying one ton of gold each time. Pick up trucks then transported it to a secret burial site. Trabuco never revealed the location to his co-conspirators. And he never made a map.

Records indicate that the final shipment was delivered on July 14, 1933. Six months later, the Gold Reserve Act of 1934, became law. The price of gold soared. Overnight, the men’s potential profit increased by seven million dollars.

The group decided not to sell the gold, hoping the price would go even higher. But they were not aware of an executive order related to the Gold Act. It declared that after January 1934, private ownership of gold within the US was illegal. According to treasure hunter Ed Foster, the partners had missed their chance to strike it rich:

“FDR put into effect the gold embargo that takes gold off of the market and makes it illegal, and so, consequently, these five men from Mexico City, they had 20 ton of junk. It was not worth a dime because they couldn’t sell it for anything.”

He buried 16 tons of gold bars in New Mexico. The gold seemed to bring bad luck. Within five years, three of the partners had died untimely deaths. Over the next two decades, Trabuco was unable to sell the now illegal gold. When he died, he apparently took the secret location to his grave.

For 35 years, Ed Foster searched for Trabuco’s treasure in the desert around Farmington, New Mexico. He’s convinced that he found the 1933 landing strip used by Red Moiser on a plateau called Conger Mesa:

“I believe that Conger Mesa is where the plane would adjust and come in and land. I met this Indian lady that couldn’t speak English so I got an interpreter.  She said she had watched that plane land there many, many times.”

Ed interviewed another Navajo woman who was six years old in 1933. Ed said she remembered several Mexican men who lived on the Reservation: “This would be very unusual for a Mexican to move out here. For a Spanish or a White man to move out here and live would be unheard of.”

Twenty miles west of the mesa, near an old Navajo home, stands a building unlike any other on the reservation. Ed believes it was built by men Trabuco hired to guard the gold:

“This house has windows, a front door, and a back door. And it had a veranda. To me, this house would look good in Tijuana, Mexico, but not on the Navajo reservation.”

Ed found a clue on Shrine Rock

Ed also found another intriguing clue: a date and some words etched in the face of a stone outcropping. He calls it Shrine Rock, and believes it may be the key to finding Trabuco’s treasure. It reads: “1933 sixteen ton.”

Ed is sure that the gold is buried somewhere within this triangle formed by Conger Mesa, Shrine Rock and the Mexican-style home. Ed asked renowned treasure hunter Norman Scott to make a detailed survey of the area:

“I get an awful lot of stories coming to us after thirty years in the business and probably about 80 or 90 percent of them you have to chalk up to some fictional writer who is writing a book or a magazine. But this one has a ring of authenticity to it.”

Ed Foster had a plan:

“I have looked with my eyes and metal detectors for many years. And now they have technology, and that’s why I think it’s going to be found, with technology.  It’s not gonna be found with dumb luck, because I’ve spent all of that.”

Is Ed Foster just chasing a legend?  Or does the desert of New Mexico hold the secret to Leon Trabuco’s long lost fortune?

Via: Unsolved-Mystery

6 thoughts on “Leon Trabuco’s Lost Gold

  1. i have actually been to this site several times with an elderly gentleman who believes he knew exactly where the gold was buried and the amazing story he told along with his find. This was over 20 years ago that he showed me this site and he was out there faithfully with his diamond bit and his hammer chipping away at his beloved site. Now I gave Mr C his space and never disturbed him or his site yet was there several times to assist him with rock removal. Do i believe he was on the right site? Of coarse i do but its his belief and who am i to dispel it with any doubt of my own. Being that ive never looked for gold before i could do nothing but help and believe. Now my accounts of his searches may be somewhat cloudy but after seeing the photos my memory returns to his story and the accounts he related to me. All seem to be reasonable and likely so again no reason to doubt Mr C. One day ill return to see if he finished his dig.
    Respectfully
    Tim Schulte Sr

  2. I personally knew Ed Foster as well as his partner in crime Stan Ewing. He was a Bullshitter to the tenth degree. I can tell you that “the fly-in” as he called it is not in the area and hasn’t been for a very, very long time. It’s a red herring so to speak. He sure loved spinning the story and getting attention for it, but he would have never told you that it was gone out of pride and because he’d wasted so much time looking for something that was no longer there. He’s dead now of course so I suppose it doesn’t matter.

  3. I know where the gold is I found a picture of a map behind it is a picture of an Indian male who talks about treasures. He is from new Mexico, the Navajo tribe. You are close but all the scare. Contact me

  4. Sorry my phone decided to make it’s own words. I ment to say you are close but afar. Like the game hot and cold. You are very close.

  5. I think I can find them if some one there can accommodate me to save money on accomodation , I guarantee it will take me 5 weeks to find the treasure, I have something to find them even USA authorities do not have. anybody interested in helping me around this area can contact via my email howraz982@yahoo.com .

Leave a comment