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Nazi Gold Ghost Train 'Found In Poland'

Sky News â€“ 8 hours ago, August 20, 2015, Source

 

A Nazi treasure train rumoured to have vanished along with its cargo of gold, gems and guns in Poland at the end of World War Two may have been found, according to reports.

 

Local folklore has it that the armoured train entered a tunnel near a cliff-top mediaeval castle near the southwestern city of Walbrzych as the Red Army approached in 1945 and never came out.

 

The tunnel was later closed and its location forgotten.

 

But now a German and a Polish man claim to have found the train and are seeking 10% of the value of the haul.

 

A law firm representing the pair has contacted the local authority saying they will reveal its location if they receive a share.

 

Marika Tokarska, an official at Walbrzych district council, said: "Lawyers, the army, the police and the fire brigade are dealing with this.

 

"The area has never been excavated before and we don't know what we might find."

 

Local media report the train was loaded with treasure from the then eastern German city of Breslau, now called Wroclaw and part of Poland.

 

Radio Wroclaw said the 150m (495ft) long train was carrying guns, "industrial equipment", gems and other precious cargo.

 

Another media report said the train belonged to the German army.

 

However, others argue there is no evidence the mystery train ever existed.

Radio Wroclaw quoted local historian Joanna Lamparska, who said: "A handful of people have already looked for the train, damaging the line in the process, but nothing was ever found.

 

"But the legend has captured imaginations."

 

Trains were used by the Nazi regime to transport looted valuables back to Berlin in the face of the allied forces' advance 70 years ago.

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Polish official 'convinced' that mystery Nazi treasure train exists

The Associated Press , Published Thursday, August 27, 2015 11:42AM EDT , Last Updated Thursday, August 27, 2015 12:06PM EDT, Source

 

WARSAW, Poland -- A leading Polish cultural official said Thursday he is "convinced" of the existence of a Nazi treasure train that has been missing for 70 years and which two men claim to have found recently.

 

Deputy Culture Minister Piotr Zuchowski also warned treasure hunters in southwestern Poland to stop looking for the "so-called 'gold train"' because it could be mined and dangerous.

 

Since the end of World War II, local Polish legend has said that a German train filled with gold, gems and armaments went missing around the city of Walbrzych while fleeing the Red Army in 1945. Fortune-hunters have looked for it for decades, and in the communist era, the Polish army and security services even carried out apparently fruitless searches for it.

 

This month two men, a Pole and a German, said they found a train with armaments and valuables, leading to hopes it could be that long-lost mystery train.

 

So far no evidence has been offered to the public of the train's existence. However, Zuchowski did hint that there's something to the men's claims and the Culture Ministry announced it will hold a news conference on the topic Friday afternoon.

 

"In connection with the published information referring to the find of the so-called 'gold train' in the region of Walbrzych, an increase in the activity of treasure hunters has been observed," Zuchowski said in a statement. "I am appealing to people to stop any such searches until the end of official procedures leading to the securing of the find. Inside the hidden train -- of whose existence I am convinced -- there could be dangerous materials from the time of World War II. There is a great chance that the train is mined."

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