The Fort Knox Deception: America’s Greatest Gold Mystery

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by Nick Giambruno, International Man:

When most people think of Fort Knox, they picture towering stacks of gold bars, locked away in impenetrable vaults, guarded by the US military—the ultimate symbol of security.

But that’s the Hollywood version of Fort Knox. The reality is far more sinister.

In truth, Fort Knox holds the world’s largest pile of stolen gold—a hoard the US government obtained through confiscation, forcibly taken from private citizens.

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For decades, this gold has been shrouded in secrecy, with no full assay or independent audit ever conducted to verify its existence or purity.

The real story of Fort Knox isn’t one of security, but of financial theft on an unprecedented scale—and quite possibly, an ongoing fraud that persists to this day.

Let me explain…

In 1933, President Franklin D. Roosevelt issued Executive Order 6102, forcing Americans to surrender their gold in exchange for paper dollars—under threat of hefty fines or up to 10 years in prison.

Shortly after, the government devalued the dollar by 41%, raising the price of gold from $20.67 to $35 per ounce—an outright theft of wealth from the public.

For 94 years (1834–1933), the US dollar was legally defined as 1/20th of an ounce of gold ($20.67 per ounce), ensuring its stability and real value—until FDR unilaterally changed the rules.

The official justification? To “reset” the economy and jumpstart growth amid the Great Depression—but in reality, it was one of the largest wealth transfers in American history.

Fort Knox was constructed in 1936 to secure this massive stash of confiscated gold, centralizing the US government’s control over the nation’s monetary assets.

That’s why most of the gold stored in Fort Knox consists of bars with unusual purity—far from the international standard.

A Good Delivery bar is a standardized gold bullion bar that meets the strict requirements set by the London Bullion Market Association (LBMA) for international trade. Weighing 400 ounces with a minimum purity of 99.5% gold, these bars are the global standard for transactions between central banks, governments, institutional investors, and major bullion dealers.

Yet, Fort Knox holds something quite different—an oddity among national gold reserves.

Of the 147 million ounces of gold the US government claims are stored there, only 17% meet the Good Delivery standard.

The vast majority of Fort Knox’s gold reserves consist of “coin bars”—lower-purity bars made up of 90% gold and 10% copper. These bars were created by melting down pre-1933 US gold coins, which were confiscated from American citizens under FDR’s Executive Order 6102.

To this day, Fort Knox holds over 56% of the US government’s reported 261 million ounces of gold reserves. The remaining gold is primarily stored at the West Point Mint, the Denver Mint, and the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, which together account for most of the rest.

But that’s just what the US government claims—it has never been independently verified.

The so-called “audits” at Fort Knox that took place decades ago (1974 and 1953) were meaningless spectacles—a farce, a photo op for the public designed to create the illusion of accountability. They inspected only a tiny fraction of the gold and failed to verify its purity.

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