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Florida Couple Faces Charges Over Sunken Treasure Sales

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A diver explores the mysterious remains of a centuries-old shipwreck resting on the ocean floor. Nejat Semerci/stock.adobe.com

Gold, shipwrecks, and an international legal storm. A maritime mystery decades in the making may soon play out in a French courtroom, as an American cruising couple stands accused of selling gold allegedly looted from an 18th-century shipwreck.

The case centers on Le Prince de Conty, a French East Indiaman that sank in 1746 off the coast of Brittany, just miles from home after a two-year voyage from China. Rediscovered in the 1970s, the wreck has long intrigued divers, archaeologists, and maritime historians—especially after gold ingots and Chinese porcelain began to surface in private collections.

Now, Eleonor “Gay” Courter, a well-known Florida novelist, and her husband, Philip, are under scrutiny for allegedly selling some of those gold bars online, including at least one purchased by the British Museum. According to reports by The Times (UK), CBS News, and other sources familiar with the investigation, the couple maintains their innocence and says they were unaware of the bars’ questionable provenance.

French investigators, however, believe the gold was illegally recovered by a French diver over several decades and funneled into private hands, eventually reaching the Courters. In 2022, authorities seized five gold ingots and repatriated them to France. A French magistrate is now weighing whether to bring charges against the Courters and several other parties, including a now-deceased French antiques dealer and an underwater photographer who admitted to recovering gold from the wreck in the 1980s and ’90s.

Le Prince de Conty, which carried tea, porcelain, and gold bullion from China, struck rocks in a fog and rough seas just offshore from Belle-Île-en-Mer. Of the 229 men on board, only 45 survived. In the years after the wreck, early salvage attempts recovered cannons and iron ballast, but many valuables—including the gold—remained missing.

The Courters say they believed the gold had been gifted to them legally by longtime French friends and had no idea French cultural property laws might apply. They were briefly detained in the UK but now reside in the United States.

Should the case proceed, it will mark a rare criminal prosecution for private sales of historical maritime artifacts — and a cautionary tale for cruisers, divers, and collectors alike who find themselves navigating the murky waters of shipwreck salvage and international law.

Why Cruisers Should Follow This

Legal pre‑emption matters: Marine legislation varies globally. Sailors transporting historical maritime items could unintentionally commit crimes without proper documentation.

Archaeological ethics on notice: Preserving wreck integrity and reporting findings is essential for protecting underwater heritage.

Due diligence when acquiring artifacts: Even items traded decades ago can resurface and trigger international legal consequences.

The post Florida Couple Faces Charges Over Sunken Treasure Sales appeared first on Cruising World.

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