New York Post: Cops in China find 13 tons of gold stashed in ex-mayor’s cellar
The story got me thinking. How does one hide 13 tons of gold and another $37 billion in physical cash and assets? For that matter how much space are we talking about here? What does a ton of gold look like? What does a billion dollars in bills look like? Well, let's find out.
Starting with the gold, I found this image of 80 replica gold bars representing one ton of gold.
From this we can visualize 13 tons of gold taking up about as much space as 3 or 4 washing machines. Not all that significant and easily doable for a crooked politician or villainous drug lord.
More interesting is the $37 billion in cash and assets. We have no idea how much of the assets were in cash but even if only a small portion of it was cash it would take up a great deal of space. Here is artist Michael Marcovici's depictions of what $1 billion in $100 USD notes would look like.
Of course the bust happened in China, so it is likely the bills where not United States Dollars. Chinese banknotes are in denominations of 1, 5, 10, 20, 50, and 100 Yuans. As of today it takes 7.15 Yauns to equal 1 US Dollar. So if the crooked ex-mayor was hording Yuans you have to visualize the image above times seven just to equal one billion.
So returning to my original thought, it would take a significant amount of space to hide $37 billions in assets (actually $37 and a half since the gold was worth about half a billion dollars). The article says the police found it in a secret cellar of Zhang Qi's home. I guess it was one hell of a cellar.
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