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Home » Florida retirees may face trial in France over sale of stolen gold from 18th-century shipwreck – UK Times
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Florida retirees may face trial in France over sale of stolen gold from 18th-century shipwreck – UK Times

By uk-times.com4 July 2025No Comments3 Mins Read
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An 80-year-old novelist and her husband could face trial in France over the alleged theft and illegal sale of gold bars taken from an 18th-century shipwreck.

Investigators say Florida resident Eleonor “Gay” Courter and her husband, Philip Courter, helped a French diver sell gold bars that he stole from a shipwreck decades ago. The couple denies having any knowledge of wrongdoing.

Le Prince de Conty, a French ship trading with Asia, sank off the coast of Brittany in 1746. The shipwreck was first discovered in 1974. A year later, the wreckage was looted after a gold ingot was found there, the AFP reports.

Michel L’Hour, head of France’s underwater archaeology agency, then spotted a suspicious sale of gold from a U.S. auction house in 2018. He contacted U.S. authorities, who then seized the five ingots and two other artifacts. The artifacts were repatriated to France in 2022.

Authorities went on to identify the seller as Eleonor Courter, who claims she was given the gold by her French friends Annette May Pesty and Gerard Pesty, who has since died.

Eleonor and Philip Courter were living in Florida when authorities say they sold the stolen gold bars

Eleonor and Philip Courter were living in Florida when authorities say they sold the stolen gold bars (AFP via Getty Images)

Annette Pesty brought the gold ingots on the television show Antiques Roadshow in 1999, claiming she got them while diving off the African island of Cape Verde, AFP reports. But investigators didn’t believe that to be true and instead turned their focus to her brother-in-law, Yves Gladu, who worked as an underwater photographer.

In 2022, Gladu confessed to stealing 16 gold bars from the shipwreck between 1976 and 1999. He denied giving any to the Courters and said he instead sold them to a man in Switzerland. But investigators discovered Gladu had known the Courters for decades, AFP reports. The couple went on trips with him to Greece in 2011, the Caribbean in 2014 and French Polynesia in 2015, investigators say.

Investigators now believe the Courters possessed at least 23 gold bars and had sold 18 of them for more than $192,000, according to AFP. The Courters say they had arranged for the money to go to Gladu.

Police arrested the Courters in the U.K. three years ago. The couple has been on house arrest there ever since.

A French prosecutor has requested that the Courters, Gladu and Pesty all be tried in connection with the theft and sale of the gold ingots. The trial, if ordered by an investigating magistrate, will likely take place next year.

The Courters’ attorney, Gregory Levy, maintains his clients didn’t know they were doing anything wrong and says they did not profit from the sale of the gold.

“The Courters accepted because they are profoundly nice people,” Levy told AFP. “They didn’t see the harm as, in the United States, regulations for gold are completely different from those in France.”

The Courters have two sons and a daughter, whom they adopted from foster care when she was 12, according to Eleonor’s website. The 80-year-old has published nearly a dozen books, five of which are bestsellers.

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