The yacht that used to be passed down to each new US president just sold for $0

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The years of Delaware court fights over the the former U.S. presidential yacht Sequoia appear to be over as she has now been sold for zero dollars after an investment group won a court case over the vessel, the Guardian reports.

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Presidents from Herbert Hoover to Jimmy Carter for decades entertained dignitaries and diplomats on board the 32m wooden yacht until Carter had it sold at auction in 1977 for $286,000.

In more recent years Sequoia was used for sightseeing tours of the Potomac River, offering four-hour charters for $10,000 from a dock in Washington D.C. Currently, the yacht lies at a shipyard in Deltaville, Virginia.

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Yacht Harbor

The USS Sequoia

Delaware judge Sam Glasscock ruled on Monday that FE Partners - an investment group with ties to a wealthy industrialist family in India - could exercise an option to acquire the Sequoia at an adjusted option price of zero. Sam Glasscock wrote in his Monday ruling:

"The Sequoia, an elderly and vulnerable wooden yacht, is sitting on an inadequate cradle on an undersized marine railway in a moribund boatyard on the western shore of the Chesapeake, deteriorating and, lately, home to raccoons."

Monday's ruling stems from a dispute involving a $7.5m loan from FE Partners to the boat's owners, Sequoia Presidential Yacht Group LLC, led by Washington lawyer and businessman Gary Silversmith.

The former Presidential Yacht USS Sequoia

Wikimedia Commons

The USS Sequoia in 2003

Silversmith sued in 2013 to block FE Partners from exercising its right under the loan to buy the yacht, but after the judge found that the loan was fraudulently induced, Sequoia agreed to a default judgment in favor of FE. The judge eventually reduced the price to 0$ after deducting expected repair costs and other liabilities.

Silversmith said:

"Today the court ruled that the lender can buy the Sequoia with a credit bid that essentially allows them to not pay any additional money at closing. Of course we are disappointed. We remain ready, willing and able to pay off the lender in full but unfortunately it appears that we will be denied that opportunity."

FE Partners general counsel Richard Graf commented:

"FE Partners is committed to restoring and preserving the Sequoia in cooperation with the US Coast Guard so that future generations of Americans will be able to enjoy the storied past of this magnificent yacht."

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