?:reviewBody
|
-
Multiple photographs have been shared in South Korean social media posts with a claim that they show gold bars stored at Fort Knox, the US military installation that houses much of the national gold reserves. The claim is misleading: while photos of the building’s exterior are indeed from Fort Knox, all images of gold and other treasures in the post were snapped at unrelated locations. The claim was shared here on Facebook on May 30, 2021. Screenshot of the misleading post, captured on June 15, 2021 The post links to a post on a South Korean social media platform Pickis titled: Fort Knox, the world’s biggest gold depository. The post features 10 images, the first three purporting to show the exterior of Fort Knox, and the following seven pictures of gold and treasures purportedly stored at the site. Fort Knox in Kentucky is home to the US Bullion Depository, where around 4.18 million kilograms of gold is stored, according to the US Mint . Identical claims have been shared on Facebook here , here and here ; as well as here on Naver Blog; and here on social media platform Tistory. The claim, however, is misleading. The first three photos shared in the blog genuinely show Fort Knox. AFP used keyword and reverse image searches to trace the images to websites here , here and here . However, the seven following images in the post, purportedly showing gold and treasures stored at Fort Knox, are unrelated to the US Bullion Depository. First misleading picture The first image showing gold bars stacked on shelves was shared with the caption: See the photo? That is the gold stored at Fort Knox. The scene looks like it comes from the Pyramids. However, the photograph was, in fact, taken at the gold vaults of the Bank of England in London. It was published here by Bloomberg on August 23, 2020. The photo’s caption, which includes a credit to the Bank of England, reads: Gold bullion in the vaults at the Bank of England. Screenshot of the Bloomberg article, captured on March 3, 2021 Second misleading picture The second photo claims to be a door to a vault at Fort Knox, shared with the claim: As predicted, security is tight. AFP traced the image to this Instagram post, dated September 3, 2019, in an account belonging to Brent Durken , a professional photographer based in Cleveland, Ohio. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Brent Durken (@brent_durken) The post’s caption reads: The main bank vault under what used to be the historic Cleveland Trust Company on the corner of Euclid and E.9th. The building is now Heinen’s Grocery Store. Third misleading picture The third picture, showing gold bars stacked on shelves features in this article from German news website Private Banking Magazin, published on October 8, 2015. Screenshot of the Private Banking Magazin article, captured on June 11, 2021 The image’s caption reads, A storage room for gold bars from the Bundesbank, in reference to Germany’s central bank, the Deutsche Bundesbank . A spokesperson for the Deutsche Bundesbank told AFP in an email on June 9, 2021, that the photo shows one of the Bundesbank’s vaults at our headquarters in Frankfurt/Main. Fourth misleading picture The fourth image showing gold bars stacked in a large pile was traced back to this blog post from January 14, 2014. The post claims that the photo was taken inside the vaults of Switzerland’s Zürcher Kantonalbank a few years back. Screenshot of the blog post on thestreet.com, captured on June 15, 2021 In a reply to AFP’s inquiry about the photo, Yannik Primus, a spokesperson for the Zürcher Kantonalbank , wrote: We can confirm: This photo was originally taken several years ago in our vault in Zurich. Fifth misleading picture The fifth image purports to show treasure stored at Fort Knox, which according to the claim stores not only gold, but also ancient treasures. But the image in fact comes from the book The Holy Crown of Hungary by Endre Toth and Karoly Szelenyi, as seen on this Hungarian bookseller website, edigital.hu. Screenshot of the website edigital.hu, captured on June 11, 2021 The image shows the Holy Crown of St. Stephens, a Hungarian crown currently stored at the Parliament Building of Hungary, according to this Hungarian image database website that cites the book. Sixth misleading picture AFP traced the sixth image, also purportedly showing gold bars stacked on shelves, to a Pinterest page linking to a Flickr page owned by American photographer Todd Klassy. Screenshot of Pinterest page showing the photo, captured June 10, 2021. Inside the ‘curing room’ at the Chalet Cheese Factory between Monticello and Monroe, Wisconsin. This is the last remaining Limburger cheese factory in the United States. This room if filled with what will become Brick and Limburger cheese. The haze at the top of the photograph is the condensation that evaporates during the curing process, reads the photo’s caption. Klassy said that he took that photograph in the US state of Wisconsin, not at Fort Knox. The image is a photo of Limburger cheese taken from inside the Chalet Cheese Cooperative cheese factory outside of Monroe, Wisconsin, he told AFP on June 11, 2021. He added that the objects in the photo are not gold, but blocks of cheese. Seventh misleading picture The last image, apparently showing gold bar-like objects with the words Fort NOC engraved on them, in fact shows playing card cases sold on the website 52kards.com . Screenshot of a website selling playing cards, captured June 10, 2021
(en)
|