Dragunov-21 wrote:Well if Au3+ ions are purple, then I've got no idea
what my picks are now plated in lol...

A solution of auric chloride in water is orange (might look yellow when dilute), this is not to say that gold plating solutions are orange - they can be purple.
There is no way you had any gold ions(Au3+ or Au+) in solution. It simply isn't possible. If the gold was going to react and dissolve in the acid, it would've gobbled up the little flakes of gold, wouldn't it?
Gold can sit in a beaker of hydrochloric acid for years, and it still won't react.
There is other metal inside the SIM card, given you said that you got a 'reddish gold' plate on your pick, I'd say that you've got a thin copper layer on it. Electroplated gold is VERY pure and will be gold in colour, a very very thin layer can actually be green - but not reddish.
There isn't any ppssibile way you could have got gold ions in solution, or plated onto your picks by the method you described, besides which, there just isn't enough gold on 100 SIM cards to do the job, even for a very thin layer of gold.
I won't go into further detail, this has gotten well away from talk about lockpicks! If you're interested in further details of the chemistry involved, so you can gold plate things, PM me.
...Mark