RE:RE:RE:RE:1.2 grams over 100 meters is a lot of gold...I read the ruling by the Gold Commissioner and per the law the guy who staked the claim owns the stuff. Seems pretty clear.
However...there is absolutely no way he can ever profit from it even if the Supreme Court upholds his claim. He cannot access it, the First Nations won't let him near it, he'll have to be responsible for all the environmental monitoring etc, he cannot build a mill, use the roads....nothing.
What will happen if the Supreme Court sides with him is what should have happened already....write him a check for the claim and run that stuff through the mill.
One way or the other it's soon to be settled and we will process all that good stuff. Only a question of how large the check we write to get the claim which we should have gotten years ago.
I have to give the guy credit...he saw an opportunity and took it....Skeena could play hard ball and let him have it but he's get nothing ever. The lawyers will settle it soon if the court doesn't. All good