LOA, good points. First, try to think as the people of that time would have thought. That is part of the reason I concluded it is just down the street. 
Military strategists who knew where their summer vacation home was, within two days travel, and knew there was a safe place to bury it without witnesses from the hostile tribe adjacent to them.
As far as verifying the treasure existed, it was Bernal Diaz, whether or not he was really Cortes, who claimed to have seen nearly 20 tons of treasure, and that the Aztecs said it had mostly been retrieved from the Lake, which was the final link to my decision.
Also, of all those places listed, my theory definitely has gold found on the premises, around 1910, per family witness. This was consistent with the use of the found gold for a church bell, by the photo which shows the church tower damaged in the same time period. Most of these places do not involve verified presence of gold.
As far as proof this treasure was never found, the skeleton on top with the gold neck piece clearly was not moved in 400 years. So, it is unlikely whatever was underneath, if anything was, was moved for the same time period.
I vacillate. At this time, I am back in It's Here mode. Next week, who knows?
The most important point LOA made was it's property of Mexico. To even dig for it will almost certainly involve serious prison time. If you survive.
I have not changed my mind at all on my belief they did not take the gold months away where it could never be retrieved. They kept that stuff close, even to leaving it in the house Cortes slept in.
I am also tending to believe that different emperors had their own treasure. That would explain all the contradictions, including the possibility that some of the treasures were taken far away. Just not at the time they were dying in large numbers. You don't send out a major convoy of sick people to travel for months.
I also believe it is possible that other tribes in the USA region had gold in quantities. Just not Moctezuma's gold.
I realize Cortes and modern Americans use the name Montezuma. There is no reason to believe the tribes north of the border used anything but his correct name in the time period we are looking at. So, when someone says the Indians said it was Montezuma's gold, they negate their own word. In that time it wasn't even Moctezuma, that came later. It was a variety of things, including Motecuzoma among others. Never Montezuma.
A warning on Ciudad Victoria. That is one of the most dangerous places in Tamaulipas in recent times. Buses shot up. People kidnapped. Illegals from further south held prisoner. (A bunch were freed in a recent week.) The bus from Mexico City my wife used to take passed through Cd. Victoria. Now, it goes by Monterrey. And, it is rumored her bus line pays so many pesos a bus trip for being left un-robbed.
A Mexican truck driver told my SIL when he comes through Cd. Victoria, he stops somewhere and pays so much a truck load. If they do not, they don't make it to the border.
Don't even think of going to Cd. Victoria.

Military strategists who knew where their summer vacation home was, within two days travel, and knew there was a safe place to bury it without witnesses from the hostile tribe adjacent to them.
As far as verifying the treasure existed, it was Bernal Diaz, whether or not he was really Cortes, who claimed to have seen nearly 20 tons of treasure, and that the Aztecs said it had mostly been retrieved from the Lake, which was the final link to my decision.
Also, of all those places listed, my theory definitely has gold found on the premises, around 1910, per family witness. This was consistent with the use of the found gold for a church bell, by the photo which shows the church tower damaged in the same time period. Most of these places do not involve verified presence of gold.
As far as proof this treasure was never found, the skeleton on top with the gold neck piece clearly was not moved in 400 years. So, it is unlikely whatever was underneath, if anything was, was moved for the same time period.
I vacillate. At this time, I am back in It's Here mode. Next week, who knows?
The most important point LOA made was it's property of Mexico. To even dig for it will almost certainly involve serious prison time. If you survive.
I have not changed my mind at all on my belief they did not take the gold months away where it could never be retrieved. They kept that stuff close, even to leaving it in the house Cortes slept in.
I am also tending to believe that different emperors had their own treasure. That would explain all the contradictions, including the possibility that some of the treasures were taken far away. Just not at the time they were dying in large numbers. You don't send out a major convoy of sick people to travel for months.
I also believe it is possible that other tribes in the USA region had gold in quantities. Just not Moctezuma's gold.
I realize Cortes and modern Americans use the name Montezuma. There is no reason to believe the tribes north of the border used anything but his correct name in the time period we are looking at. So, when someone says the Indians said it was Montezuma's gold, they negate their own word. In that time it wasn't even Moctezuma, that came later. It was a variety of things, including Motecuzoma among others. Never Montezuma.
A warning on Ciudad Victoria. That is one of the most dangerous places in Tamaulipas in recent times. Buses shot up. People kidnapped. Illegals from further south held prisoner. (A bunch were freed in a recent week.) The bus from Mexico City my wife used to take passed through Cd. Victoria. Now, it goes by Monterrey. And, it is rumored her bus line pays so many pesos a bus trip for being left un-robbed.
A Mexican truck driver told my SIL when he comes through Cd. Victoria, he stops somewhere and pays so much a truck load. If they do not, they don't make it to the border.
Don't even think of going to Cd. Victoria.