Tiki Tom
My Mail is Forwarded Here
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- Oahu, North Polynesia
I'm thinking that those are some pretty long odds that he is playing. Not sure I'd pay $14,000 for a random tooth that I happened to find in the mud. Then again, Portillo is a billionaire and has deeper pockets than me. The FOX News article left me with so many questions that I looked for another link. According to an article in the Chicago Tribune (couldn't get it to link properly), Portillo is a WWII buff and went out of his way to visit the site of Yamamoto's crash. However, it was not an archaeological dig. He was just kicking around the site in the jungle when he noticed a tooth in the mud. Simple as that. Strikes me as a bit macabre to be talking about it in terms of an investment, but that's just me. More likely, I think (hope) he's viewing it as a bit of a historical mystery/adventure.
"Dick Portillo, founder of the Portillo's fast food chain, was on 2015 trip to Papua New Guinea where U.S. pilots shot down Japanese naval commander Isoroku Yamamoto's plane when the tooth surfaced in the mud. A clan that owns the site confiscated the tooth, but later turned it over for $14,000.
"If it comes to be true, it's peanuts compared to the value that I would look at," Portillo told the Chicago Tribune. "If it doesn't, you win some and you lose some."
http://www.foxnews.com/us/2016/09/2...g-may-own-wwii-japanese-commanders-tooth.html
"If it comes to be true, it's peanuts compared to the value that I would look at," Portillo told the Chicago Tribune. "If it doesn't, you win some and you lose some."
http://www.foxnews.com/us/2016/09/2...g-may-own-wwii-japanese-commanders-tooth.html
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