The Fort Knox depository has only opened its doors to non-authorized personnel on three occasions: In 1943 for President Franklin D. Roosevelt, in 1974 for 10 Congress members to break down "cobwebs" to "re-assur[e] the public that their gold is intact and safe" and in 2017 for a delegation including Sen. Mitch McConnell, R. Ky., and then-Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin. "It is freakishly well secured," then-Gov. Matt Bevin, R. Ky., said after visiting the Fort Knox depository in 2017. "The gold is safe," Bevin added.
www.forbes.com
Treasury secretary pays visit to Fort Knox gold
Steven Mnuchin's Aug. 21 visit to the gold vaults of the Fort Knox Gold Bullion Depository in Kentucky was the first by a Treasury secretary in 69 years. It had been more than four decades since a senior Treasury Department official inspected the bulk of the nation's gold reserves.
U.S. Mint Director Mary Brooks led a contingent of congressional representatives and journalists on Sept. 23, 1974, to take inventory of the nation's gold reserves amid concerns some of the gold may be missing.
A subsequent audit accounted for all of the gold, with none recorded missing.
Mnuchin tweeted a message from his Twitter account, "Thanks to @usmintstaff for hosting at#FortKnox#USBD. First@USTreasury Secretary to visit since John Snyder in 1948. Glad gold is safe!"
Mnuchin was accompanied on his Aug. 21, 2017, inspection tour of the gold reserves at Fort Knox by Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky.; U.S. Rep. Brett Guthrie, R-Ky.; and Kentucky's Republican governor, Matt Bevin.
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