Victorio Peak treasure

The Victorio Peak treasure (also seen in print as the Treasure of Victorio Peak or Treasure of San Andres) describes a cache of gold reportedly found inside Victorio Peak in 1937 in southern New Mexico.

History
The treasure was allegedly found in 1937 by American businessman and gold prospector Milton Ernest "Doc" Noss. While there have been multiple documented expeditions to the peak, no gold has been officially recorded as being recovered from the site. Noss was ultimately killed by an associate, Charley Ryan, in 1949 after Ryan accused Noss of fraud and Noss threatened to kill Ryan and his family.

A 1961 search by the U.S. Army—the peak lies within White Sands Missile Range—was stopped following a request to state officials by Noss's first wife, Ova. She later was part of an unsuccessful 1963 search. During the 1970s, lawyer F. Lee Bailey represented clients who claimed to know where the treasure was located. By 1992, a grandson of Ova formed the Ova Noss Family Partnership to finance additional searching. The partnership conducted unsuccessful searches until March 1996, when the Army suspended their access.

Theories abound on the origins of the alleged treasure, including that it was pilfered from Mexico during the reign of the Austrian puppet Emperor Maximilian, or through collusion between Pancho Villa and Germany prior to World War I.

In media
The reported treasure and efforts to find it have been covered in books and on television, including:


 * a September 1977 segment of 60 Minutes by Dan Rather, who also interviewed Ova Noss


 * the 1978 book 100 Tons of Gold by David Leon Chandler


 * the television show Unsolved Mysteries; originally on May 10, 1989, and an update on February 11, 1990


 * a 2008 book co-authored by Robert Boswell, titled What Men Call Treasure


 * a six-part television series titled Gold, Lies & Videotape, which debuted on Discovery Channel in January 2023