@GoldFinger1969:
As you may or may not be aware, P--- runs a series of Slab Labs, under Errors, Varieties and Coin Collecting Ideas. One featured, Episode 11, Part 2, in which Fred Weinberg is interviewed for approximately 19+ minutes. He makes a startling number of revelations including the time, years ago, he observed a 1933 D.E. at Sotheby's for $250,000. Chief of Security (who he claimed can access Ft. Knox, at will) William "Bill" Daddio, recognized and approached him to ask him a single question: could he identify the 1933 D.E. as being the same offered at Sotheby's years earlier. Mr. Weinberg was afforded access to the coin at a secure location and admitted he was unable to state with any degree of certainty if it were one and the same. The exchange with an interviewer (whose name I did not catch) lasted roughly half the recorded Slab Lab episode. He readily offered up a sizeable number of precise observations on errors and varieties anyone, including myself, would find interesting.
But I have a question: if you were afforded the opportunity to scrutinize that coin, would not your focus be the leg wound caused by a misfired rocket-propelled grenade? I mean, what else is there to look for?
[Sorry I do not know the link. (PCGS Newsletter, info@p---.com).]