Arrow-right Camera
The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Bandits get away with $3 million in gold

Lee Romney Los Angeles Times

SAN FRANCISCO – Thieves in Yreka, Calif., made off with $3 million in gold nuggets Wednesday after breaking into the Siskiyou County Courthouse and smashing a glass case that contained a display on the area’s mining history, officials said.

The collection in the town near the Oregon border was about the only remnant of the Northern California county’s little-known Gold Rush days.

Sheriff’s officials said surveillance video indicated that two men broke into the case, which was prominently displayed in the courthouse lobby, about 1 a.m. Officials said the thieves probably entered the building through a back window and rifled through a few offices before smashing the thick display glass.

Sheriff’s spokeswoman Allison Giannini said an alarm that was on the case did not sound.

Yreka police, along with the California Department of Justice, are assisting sheriff’s officials in the investigation.

“These thieves not only stole valuable gold that belongs to the people of Siskiyou County, but these individuals violated the security and sanctity of our courthouse and stole a piece of our Siskiyou County history,” Sheriff Jon Lopey said in a statement.

The county owns the gold, which was donated over the decades by various miners.

The collection was amassed over time and included samples from mines throughout the county, in various shades from reddish to vivid yellow. It had been displayed at the World’s Fair at San Francisco’s Treasure Island in 1939.