Briton: I’ve Found Sunken Treasure Left by Nazis
This article is from the archive of The New York Sun before the launch of its new website in 2022. The Sun has neither altered nor updated such articles but will seek to correct any errors, mis-categorizations or other problems introduced during transfer.

PARIS — A British researcher claims to have located Rommel’s elusive sunken treasure just weeks after a team of German divers scouring the Mediterranean failed to find the hoard.
The treasure has long been reputed to have been dumped somewhere off the coast of Corsica by fleeing SS men, who planned to recover it after the war.
However, Terry Hodgkinson, who has been researching the missing gold for 15 years, told the Daily Telegraph that he was now “confident” he knew its exact location in waters less than a nautical mile from the town of Bastia. Mr. Hodgkinson, who is also a television scriptwriter, has teamed up with Corsican experts and won permission from the French authorities to enter the race to find six steel cases said to contain 440 pounds of gold bullion plus other precious objects pillaged from the Jewish community in Tunisia during the war.
“We are confident of the location, but it will require the latest techniques to retrieve it, as the cases, which were once soldered, have no doubt separated and sunk deep into the sand,” he said.
The only way to reach the loot would be to “hoover” up the seabed — a costly and time-consuming method. Now the main obstacle is funding.
After months of research in Tunisia, he believes he has uncovered the truth not just about the treasure spot, but also previously unknown aspects of the story behind its arrival in Corsican waters. Accounts suggest that it was not Field Marshal Erwin Rommel but the ruthless SS colonel Walter Rauff who stripped Tunisian Jews of their wealth.
Rauff, who created the Nazis’ notorious “gas vans” — mobile gas chambers — commanded a special Middle East extermination unit introduced a month after Rommel’s victory against the British at Tobruk in June 1942.
However, his mission came to an abrupt halt after the British overcame Rommel, also known as “the Desert Fox,” at El Alamein in October 1942. The Nazis left North Africa and are believed to have sunk the treasure as they fled Corsica under heavy British and American bombardment.