Woman finds bag of cash - turns it into the Bank

A woman (unemployed school teacher) found a bag in the road with two “huge bundles of hundred dollar bills, wrapped in rubber bands” inside. The bag was in the middle of the road, getting run over by traffic. The bag has the logo of Chase Bank on it, so she takes it to a local branch. She doesn’t count the money, but tells the bank manager there must be $200,000, the manager agrees, “maybe more”.

The bank later says there was “maybe $20,000” in the bag, gives the lady who found it a “thank you” and a $500 gift card and won’t say anything else.

Now, something seems fishy, here. As far as I know, the bank would wrap the bills in paper wraps (not rubber bands). I think a stack of 50 bills would be about a half inch in thickness, so two stacks totaling $20,000 would be two one inch tall stacks. Not exactly “huge”. For $200,000, that would be two 10 inch tall stacks, definitely “huge”. Now, I wouldn’t expect a layman to be able to judge this just by looking at it, but a bank manager should and not estimate an amount as being over $200,000 when it actually was around one tenth that.

IMO, the finder should have taken the money to a lawyer, so it could be documented and given to the police. With a lawyer involved, it would be less likely to “change in value” and they would be more likely actually try and find the rightful owner. By giving the money to the bank, of course the bank is going to say, “yeah, it’s mine, thanks” and shut the door, which is what they did.

Oh, link

excavating (for a mind)

Eh. “Huge” is a bit ambiguous. To someone who has never handled much cash, a couple 1 inch stacks of hundreds could be pretty amazing. Back when I handled cash at a bank, we used rubber bands. The paper-wrapped stacks only come that way from the Fed. So, once given to a teller and counted, the paper bands are gone. Deposits going from customer to teller to vault to Fed are rubber banded.

We rubber banded in the same amounts the Fed did, so one stack of banded hundreds would be $10,000. A “brick” of hundreds would be 10 stacks, each individually banded, and then one big rubber band around the brick. The Fed shrink-wraps the bricks. Transferring cash from one branch to another would only have rubber banded bills if it was previously handled money, and two bricks would not fit into a gallon baggie.

I can imagine the bank would not want any further information given out so as not to compromise their method of “courier” or give anyone ideas about how much they could be robbed for, since it sounds like it wasn’t an armored vehicle the money was “dropped” from!

Is someone who find money like this legally bound to return it?

If it’s just lost and not abandoned, probably (depending on jurisdiction and with some exceptions).

Regardless of whether or not you keep or return the money you should take the time to count the friggin money.

She is stupid and her apparently her husband, mother, and teenage daughter are too.

Count the money, photograph the same and then report it to the police. You can then stop by the bank and tell them that you recovered what appears to be their cash and they will then have the opportunity to prove to the law that the money is legally theirs.

That’s a good question. I don’t know the real legal answer to this, but I can tell you that unless the finder is OK with keeping it as mattress money and keeping it in the house, they pretty much have to come up with how they got it if they try to deposit it.

Cash deposits of $10,000 and up have to be accompanied by an IRS form filled out by the depositor. Unless you can come up with a really good cover story and possibly documentation to back it up (like a death certificate if you claim it was in a shoebox from your recently deceased grandma), the IRS is going to come knocking and at the very least tax you on it. “I found it” isn’t really going to fly. Banks also pay attention to large cash deposits in personal accounts even when they’re under $10,000, large personal cash deposits are very unusual. So, the other alternative would be to, well, start your own business and launder it (not recommended).

Handing it over to the police or the bank would probably be the least troublesome thing to do, it wouldn’t be worth the headache to me.

Something Devine: Here’s some money Candace Scott. Use it for your family. Good luck!
Candace Scott: <gives it away> My luck must be changing!
Something Devine: :smack:… I give up.

Why not a safety deposit box? An extra hundred every trip to the grocery, or to buy clothing or pay for car/home repairs. I could see that coming in handy.

Have to admit, unlike the woman in the story, it would have at least “crossed my mind.”

Fortune is wasted on the stupid.

There is no way I’m turning that money in. 200k would make things a lot easier around here.

I’m always on the lookout for large bags of cash. So far, no luck.

I am not an attorney, but hey. . .finders keepers.

Yes with the important legal corollary, “losers weepers.”

Bags of cash on road in Texas? My thought process: open bag, view thick bundles of cash, calculate nearest Neiman Marcus or Horschow store, speed off in that direction.

Without making any moral judgments… if you should decide to keep it, first… don’t tell anyone. Next, peel off two or three of those $100’s and run over to Lowe’s and pick up a home safe. Put the money in, and from there on whenever you would normally run to the ATM, use your bank card, etc. just pull a bill or two out of the safe and you are essentially “depositing” the money into your account by not spending it from the account. Anything big, go ahead and use the normal money in your account and it won’t draw any attention.

Sure, you won’t gain interest in the whole amount at first, but the money you would normally have withdrawn will gain interest. Not as good of a return, but almost no chance of getting caught.

Unless the bills are marked in some fashion - if it was cash from a drug sting - dumped because its not spendable, you may be explaining to the court what happened to the Lindbergh baby.

Maybe I’m naive, but if I spend $300 at Lowe’s to buy the safe, and it gets put in the till, it probably doesn’t get to a bank until it is bundled with all of the other sales of the day/week. In a large metro area we’re talking thousands and thousands each time the Brink’s truck picks up. Same with the grocery store, etc. Do the banks even scan them? I would think that the best they could do is narrow it down to the area/city, but as long as you don’t make a habit of spending them at the exact same place on the exact same day of the week I think the risk is very small.

Whereas I wouldn’t hesitate to turn that $50k over to the bank.

Yup. Found money of questionable origin is the plot of the film “A Simple Plan.” After watching it, my husband and I decided that if we found money similarly, we would leave it where it was and attempt to get out of there unnoticed.

The money could also be counterfeit. Go on a nice spending spree and the Secret Service might come knocking, asking about how it is you claim you just “found” some money (in a bank bag) and thought it’d be a-OK to keep and spend it.

Stopping at the bank to pull a hundred bucks out of a safe deposit box probably takes more time than the actual trip to the supermarket. No way I’m doing that once a week.