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What would you do if you found lost cash?

Posted Oct 24 2007, 08:39 AM by Karen Datko
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This post comes from partner blog Five Cent Nickel.

I recently asked readers how they would handle finding a large sum of money in a wallet with no ID. My wife and I ran into this situation just over 10 years ago.

We were living on a shoestring and about to have a baby. In fact, my wife's due date had passed, and we were out walking to get things moving. We ran across a wallet containing 11 $100 bills and nothing else. No identification, no credit cards, nothing.

I must admit it was tempting, given our situation, to pocket the money, but $1,100 is a lot of money, and walking off with it would have been not only wrong, but also possibly devastating to the person who lost it.

My wife's first reaction was: "The mall security office is just inside the door. We have to turn it in."

I was less sure. After all, there's no guarantee that mall security (or the police, for that matter) would do the right thing and hold it for the owner. I wanted to tell them that we had found a wallet with a large sum of money in it, give them our contact info, and then hold on to it in hopes that someone would come along and claim it with a detailed description.

Right thing, wrong way?

In the end, my wife won out, in large part because we were so close to the security office that we didn't have time to think things through. A security guard wrote up a report, put the wallet in an envelope, and stashed it in a safe. The guard also promised that we could have the money if it went unclaimed for 30 days.

As we walked away, I had a sick feeling in the pit of my stomach. We had just handed $1,100 to strangers in hopes that they'd do the right thing.

Just after we left, a panic-stricken man rushed into the security office, and we lingered at a distance. A few minutes later, the totally relieved man emerged. Apparently he had lost the wallet on his way into the mall just a few minutes ahead of us.

We did the right thing, but probably not in the smartest way possible. Nonetheless, it worked out for the best.

No regrets

Would I do it again? Yes, and I'm not alone. As of this writing, the majority of readers who responded agreed that trying to return the money is the right thing to do. That being said, I'd be smarter about it. At the very least, I’d turn it over to the police instead of hoping that mall security would do the right thing. Note that in many locales the law requires it. 

The only annoying thing about all of this was that we never got so much as a thank-you from the owner. To be fair, it’s possible the security guard didn't tell him who turned it in. Nonetheless, it would've been nice to receive a few words of appreciation for not walking off with more than a grand in cash.

Other articles of interest at Five Cent Nickel:  

"10 tips for dealing with a lost wallet"

"Pay down your mortgage with 'found' money"

"Instilling values in a child: Teach by doing"

Comments

 

I'd have turned the amount of money they found in the wallet into the police and gotten a copy of the report to check back in 30 days.

Today a lady in the building I work hit the jackpot at the vending machines. She ended up with around $40.00 in change. She called the vending company and they told her to turn it into our receptionist to hold for them. Being a snow day and only a couple of people at work the finance person locked it in the safe.

I'd say honesty is the best policy, but when you're broke it's sometimes hard to be honest.

I found $100 on the UNCLAIMED PROPERTY website in my state last week. As soon as I got the check I cashed it and I STILL HAVE $90 JUST IN CASE I WANT SOMETHING. Having money JUST IN CASE is a LOT BETTER than having NO MONEY BECAUSE YOU HAVE TO SPEND IT AS SOON AS YOU GET IT!!! WAKE UP AMERICA!!!!

If I should happen to find a wallet or purse (identification or not) I would take it to the closest police station.  If I should happen to pick up a paper bag with money in it.............I would keep it.

I had found 3,040 dollars while walking through a parking lot , in a dirty part of town so I am assuming right off the bat that it might belong to a drug dealer .  So after some disscussion with my significant other we decided to call the police.  When we asked what would happen to the money after a certain time peroid their response was that after 90 days it would be put back into the royal mint and distributed back into the banks .  Does anyone know if that is right or are the police pulling a scam.  

Dear Anthony,

Royal Mint? Is that some sort of jelly?

Really, if you're finding dollars why is there a "Royal" anything involved?

I think the geographical location will be a major factor. (i.e. I'm not saying all in that city I do believe  there is a lot of honest people everywhere. But I'd say generally a Big city like  NY or Los Angeles, Boston , etc there is quite a lot of people who would keep the money and toss the wallet.

Having grown up needy and greedy, I'd have to say I'd keep the money in most circumstances.  However, I'd have to keep it from my husband, who is the most honest (to a fault!) person in the world.

The right thing is the right thing, regardless of whether you're rewarded or not, or (as long as you have given a "no id" wallet to the right people) whether the unclaimed money is handled correctly or not.

You're only responsible for _your_ behavior, and you did what you should have.

my son was 10 years old at the time we were in walmart. We were in the sporting goods dept and he saw some money under a shelf. He dove under the shelf and came out with $110.00. I went to the sporting goods counter and talked to the cashier who told me that "found items" be it money or gold chains found by customers often became "lost" by other employees in customer service. I gave the guy my phone number and did not tell him the total of the money or the bills my son found. He said he left a note that a customer found some cash and if anyone showed up to give me a call. We waited three weeks with no calls made to claim it, so I gave half to my son to spend and put half in his savings account. It was a lesson for him and at least gave the person that lost the money a chance to redeem it back.

Oh Please....

You mean to tell me you wouldn't keep the money.  Go for it.  Keep it and pay some bills.

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