“I was demanding every day to take physical delivery in person. Brinks would not speak to me as their contract was with Goldmoney, not me. I was demanding Goldmoney tell me the location of the Brinks Vault. After nine weeks, they agreed. A few days later I got a call from the vault, along with a message: ‘Your Bullion Shipment Has Arrived.’”
The metal Reeves had paid storage fees on for 2 years had now arrived at the vault. I ask him if he addressed the issue with Brinks, if they confirmed they had in fact stored or not stored his bullion for two years.
He smiles, “It gets better. When I got there, it wasn’t a Brinks facility. I took delivery of my silver, but from a totally different vault operator.”
“So,” I summarize, “you bought bullion from Goldmoney, you contracted them to store your metal, separately labeled and segregated from any other bullion, in one specific city in one specific vault operated by Brinks. For two years they charged you storage fees. You asked for your bullion back, and for eight weeks the metal was being delivered, until week nine, when the metal became undelivered, appearing suddenly and ready for pickup inside of another company’s vault? How do you explain that?”
“They obviously never bought the metal in the first place!,” says Reeves
https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2018-08-01/caveat-emptor
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