Methods of donations can be made by;
Venmo… @Amy-Crockett-Lowe
PayPal… crickett4@gmail.com
Or direct deposit at America First Credit
Thank you and may God Bless you in these trying times….
Methods of donations can be made by;
Venmo… @Amy-Crockett-Lowe
PayPal… crickett4@gmail.com
Or direct deposit at America First Credit
Thank you and may God Bless you in these trying times….
Several years ago a friend of mine had heard of Spanish artifacts having been found up in one of the many canyons of the Wasatch Front. He and a friend decided to go up in the canyon and do some siphon dredging. “We had a hell of a hole going on” he said, “about 6 feet in diameter and near 8 feet deep”... All of the dirt and small rocks cast off to the side, he decided to run his detector over it and got several hits, he gathered up a bunch of these thought to be flat sinkers, he put them in his pocket and after a not so successful day packed up and went home...
The next morning he remembered the lead sinkers in his pocket and dug them out a spread them on the table. After little cleaning he realized these were not sinkers, they were widow mites, old Roman coins. He called his buddy and told him we need to go back up there... Armed with their metal detectors they made their way back up the mountain and just above where they were dredging. He told me there was a nice flat spot there where he imagined and told his buddy would have been perfect for an old Spanish camp site. Having both agreed they begin to detect the flat spot area.
Not long after starting to detect, his buddy got a good hit. Both gathered around the spot and begin digging away in what was said to be pretty hard ground. About 6 inches down they exposed what appeared to be the hilt of an old sword, if the whole sword was there, the blade went straight down. A little more digging and it was confirmed not only an old sword, but quite ornate and it was definitely still attached to a blade which refused to move. Just past the hilt the digging got more difficult, he described it as caliche. Trying to dig down deep enough to free the blade was difficult but as they dug down deeper they began to free up many old Roman coins, it was estimated to be about 400.
Nearing where the end of the blade should be, the ground finally let go of the sword. Curiosity caused them to dig just a bit further when they began to pull up some old pieces of burlap, possibly what was left of the old bag which originally carried the coins. In the last effort to pull up what was a far size piece of the burlap and seeming;y wrapped around... were 3 beautiful large presumed quartz crystals. What the hell? They thought, what are these doing here and what are they for? These questions are my motivation in writing this article in an effort to find an answer. The small one seems to have a darker tinted look to it and the two cylindrical 6 sided shape ones have been intentionally beveled on the bottom side as if to fit into a designated stand of sort. My friend told me, “I swear you can believe it or not, but one night I had them sitting on my mantel, we turned out the lights and went to bed,“ he said he woke not long after having fallen asleep for the night and noticed through their open bedroom door, a light source coming from the living room. Curious of course as no light should have been left on, he went to find the two nicer crystals just as he had left them and touching each other, and they were glowing! He said it lasted for hours before dimming... He said he has tried many things several times since to make it happen again but to no avail.
Why were these strange crystals at the bottom of the 4 foot hole under a few hundred Roman coins and a sword shoved down thought the middle of it all as if an attempt to kill it, LOL, Did the Crystals glow for the man who buried them as well and it scared the bejesus out of him? Where did the suspect Spaniard with an ornate likely officers sword, get these crystals and why did he have them? Did he find them somewhere and was just as confused as I am?
and others
Taken from copies of the original documents
The year was 1777, another 44 years yet before
Like the Confederate soldier of our Civil war, the many robberies were not for personal gain but to weaken the enemy and in the case of
In 1727 Just 50 years prior to Valentin becoming Captain of the Durango band of Banditos, Nicholas Castillo was passed the torch making him captain by Captain Jose Ramirez, a Zacatecas Indian “a very brave man indeed” who was seriously injured in a recent assault. After Captain Ramirez had passed, word came from the spies placed in each of the Taverns that a mule train was about to leave
It took many days to make the transfer from the kill site to the caverns of Majoma, and to erase all evidence. The silver and the gold was placed in separate caverns. By January of the next year most if not all of Castillo and his men were hunted down and killed or captured and shot or hung.
How many robberies took place over the 200 years since the Mexicans organised is not known, The Documents I have been blessed to receive specifically speak of 3 accounts over a period of about 60 years involving Majoma and one not far north of it, however there must be many more as there is no less than 14 other cache sites mentioned... two of which the loactions were just found within a week of the date of this article, and two more fantastic documents, one in Nayrit and the other beginning in Jalisco and ending in Nayarit, with information intended to guide some future source to the famed but hidden, Coral Falso, the only other cache site ever compared to the grander of Majoma & written by none other than one of the Lauriono Brothers, the most revered by the people and famous band of banditos of Mexico.
Another more fantastic robbery took place in 1777 under the command of Captain Valentin Castrillon, told in the following.
Captain Valentin Castrillon was now Captain since the Brave Indian and former Captain Mursia had died and left him Valentin in command.
One day word came through spies, that a rather large shipment was headed their way which consisted of 12 mule trains of 40 mules each, 10 trains of pack mules carrying silver and 2 trains of Red Dune mules carrying Gold and shod with silver shoes.
Later they would discover the shipment was sent by General Barron de Vilpamaro, lord and master of the large mines of Sonora and Tamazula, he was sending it as tithing to his queen Isabel de EspaƱa and that is why he sent them like this and the 10 trains of silver were from a convoy that came from Guarisona (Arizona) el Pilar, Gavilanes, San Dimas, Tlayoltita, El Naranjal, Metalito, Palualto, El Alto, others from Topia and other areas.
Captain Valentin gathered in his men and prepared them for the ambush at the location they knew as Lajita. When the Spanish mule trains entered the brena Valentin attacked, the battle was brutal and by the time the dust settled, 72 Spaniards were dead and 23 of Valentin’s banditos. Immediately the men gathered in the mules and began the short journey of 1 ½ leagues away but it was through some of the nastiest terrain God ever created. It took days to dispose of the dead many bodies of which some were used to create a bridge across a deep desert wash to shorten the distance to the Cavern.
After the spoils were off loaded and filling even more of the cavern which they at one time vowed more than a hundred years before, to fill this cavern with Gold only, it seemed they had finally reached that goal as they could not get this stone lid back on and to fit tight. Valentin instructed his men to dig shallow trenches around the coral which held the cavern and dispose of the remainder of the vast cache. The trenches were filled with silver and gold and it is said it was done hap hazard and that even to this day, some of it remains uncovered. They had the same problem with the silver cache cavern, with not enough room to place it Valentin ordered the men to dig a pit in which they threw the over burden of silver and mixing a sort of concrete covered the hole.
It wasn’t long after that the Spanish authorities had had enough of the constant robberies of the last 200 years or so and an all out effort was organized to hunt down the native banditos. Over the next few short months many of the banditos had been captured and executed and only a few short years after that,
I have 24 years invested in this project.... If you wish to become a part of this project/expedition, we seek only finacial help at this time... if interested, you tell me what you expect from it... tuscoro@gmail.com