President Donald Trump is casting doubt -- without providing evidence -- over whether much of the nation's store of gold still exists at the famous United States Bullion Depository at Fort Knox, Kentucky, raising questions about whether somebody "stole" it. What's more, he's said he wants to go to Fort Knox to see for himself.
President Donald Trump and the Department of Government Efficiency's Elon Musk have said they will visit the U.S. Bullion Depository at Fort Knox to see if its gold is missing. When a delegation that included prominent Kentucky Republicans visited the ...
The United States Bullion Depository at Fort Knox has stored precious metal bullion reserves for the United States since 1937.
More than a stunt, the Fort Knox visit might be a chance for the President to change the price of gold and dump the price hike into cryptocurrency.
Despite assurances made last week by Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent that all of the U.S. gold reserves kept at the Fort Knox military installation are “present and accounted for,” President Trump continues to insist that he and Elon Musk will soon travel to Kentucky to make sure the gold bars haven’t been stolen.
Donald Trump and Elon Musk look like they’re getting ready to bring their road show to Kentucky soon to make sure no one has absconded with the gold at Fort Knox. “We’re going to go to Fort Knox, the fabled Fort Knox, to make sure the gold is there ...
The president and the tech billionaire want to know if the stores of the precious metal are where they are supposed to be.
Elon Musk urged U.S. officials to audit how much gold is at the Fort Knox military base in Kentucky, addressing decades-old conspiracies that the U.S. gold reserves are no longer there. The senior advisor for President Donald Trump has shared a few posts ...
President Donald Trump said he's going to check on the country's supply of gold stored at the infamously secure Fort Knox depository.
Musk and President Trump have cast doubt on the safety of the country's gold reserve, demanding to go to Fort Knox to ensure the gold is "still there."
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump said Elon Musk would be checking out Fort Knox to make sure the gold is still there. While flying back to Washington aboard Air Force One on Wednesday night, a reporter asked President Donald Trump whether Elon Musk would pursue budget cuts at the Pentagon.