Combat K
Jr. Member
- Joined
- Oct 20, 2017
- Messages
- 53
- Reaction score
- 31
- Golden Thread
- 0
- Location
- little rock, ark
- Detector(s) used
- researcher only at this point
- Primary Interest:
- Other
- #1
Thread Owner
Just as I was about to update whathappenedtojerry.com and right after my request to the City Clerk of Paradise (hopefully still alive) to comment on what town officials knew/know of the where-a-bouts of Jerry Strickland, former CIA contract pilot spoken of in a book written in federal prison some years back 2 things happened. 1. The clerk acknowledged my email but never replied to the questions and 2. the entire place burned to the ground. I really didn't think those damn winds blew so hard that far north. Sure, I have seen the infamous Santa Anna's howl many times as well as the Santa Barbara area 'Sundowners' but nothing like this. Now it is no longer just Jerry that is being searched for and my deepest sorrow and sympathies go out for those lost and for those looking for the lost. As for the half billion dollars in gold and cash we think was buried up there near the air park, it is now a good question. The story I was told by Senior Lencho was the treasure was placed in a dozen box's and then buried somewhere on Jerry's ten acre spread. I was going to make my next post a video with my reading of the directions I had. Though not an exact set of directions, I think it may be close. But the question now (and it only adds to the drama and mystery of the Treasure of Paradise) is did that inferno melt or destroy the treasure after these 32 + years it has gone missing? If gold (pure gold as the treasure is probably coins and ingots) melts at around 2000 degrees but the stuff was buried perhaps six feet deep, does anyone have a guess if it's still intact? The fire raged at temps hot enough to melt aluminum (1200 +) and perhaps 14-1800 degrees to evaporate a body. So there you have it. As things calm down up there I will be back at whathappenedtojerry.com to continue the search. In the meantime, I sincerely send sympathies to Paradise, Calif.and greatly appreciate any thoughts you fellow treasure hunters might contribute to this fascinating but now tragic story and search.