Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

Ontario Man Reunited With $100K 'Rainy Day' Stashed Inside Old Recycled TV

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Feb, 2017 11:19 AM
    About 30 years ago an Ontario man stuffed a wad of cash and banking documents inside a box, opened up the back of his television and hid the package inside.
     
    He then didn't give it much thought until detectives came to his home near Peterborough, Ont., last month carrying the box and asking him if he knew what it contained. 
     
    It turned out the 68-year-old forgot all about his secret stash — amounting to $100,000 —and had given his television to a friend who dropped it off to be recycled. The cash was only discovered when the set was recently dismantled at a depot.
     
    "He was quite surprised and excited that it was returned to him," said Const. Nicole Rodgers of Barrie police. "I think it's amazing."
     
    Police discovered that the man — whose name they did not release — thought he still had his stash squirrelled away at home, Rodgers said.
     
    Growing up, the man had stored money around the house, Rodgers said, and it was a practice he continued throughout his life.
     
    "They didn't use a lot of institutions or banks," she said. "He had put it in a really safe place and that place was inside the TV."
     
    The man told detectives the money came from an inheritance given to him by his parents, Rogers said. But after forgetting about the cash, he gave the television that held the stash to a friend a few years ago, Rodgers said.
     
    About a year ago, that friend recycled the television, which ended up at the Global Electric Electronic Processing, a recycling plant in Barrie.
     
    Last month, an employee at the depot began taking apart the TV and came across the box and the banking documents, according to police. The employee then took the goods to her supervisor, who called police.
     
    Rodgers said the company didn't have to call police — by law the television was given to them and became their property.
     
    "It's commendable what the employee and the company did," she said. "They just said 'this isn't about this being ours, it has to mean something to someone.'"
     
    Police discovered that the banking documents dated to 1985, Rodgers said, along with contact information. And since man hadn't moved in more than three decades, they found him quickly.
     
    Police also asked the RCMP to see if the money was counterfeit or linked to a crime. The cash came back clean, Rodgers said. So they began talking to the 68-year-old man.
     
    "You don't call them up and say hey, 'we have some money,'" Rodgers said. "We had detectives go out and speak to them in person."
     
    Police discovered that the man was a business owner, discovered when his parents retired and spent a month investigating the situation.
     
    Rodgers said the man and his family were "ecstatic" when the cash was returned.
     
    "They said the money will be in a safe place," Rodgers said, adding that she didn't know if that meant inside their home or at a bank. "I hope they learned their lesson — or at least make a note on the fridge where it is."

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    12 School Children Killed In UP Accident, PM, President Mourn Deaths

    12 School Children Killed In UP Accident, PM, President Mourn Deaths
    At least 12 children were killed on Thursday when a school bus they were travelling in collided with a sand-laden truck in Uttar Pradeshs Etah district amid dense fog, police said.

    12 School Children Killed In UP Accident, PM, President Mourn Deaths

    Woman Who Sought Kidney On Craigslist Gets It From Mother

    Woman Who Sought Kidney On Craigslist Gets It From Mother
    BARRINGTON, N.J. — A New Jersey woman who found a kidney donor on Craigslist in 2015 but later was told the organ transplant couldn't happen because of complications has now received a kidney.

    Woman Who Sought Kidney On Craigslist Gets It From Mother

    Photomontages From Holocaust Memorial Selfies Go Viral

    Photomontages From Holocaust Memorial Selfies Go Viral
    The creator, Shahak Shapira, told The Associated Press he produced the "Yolocaust" website after seeing thousands of selfies and other photographs of young, smiling people posing on the memorial to Europe's 6 million murdered Jews on social media.

    Photomontages From Holocaust Memorial Selfies Go Viral

    Indian American DJ Ravi Jakhotia To Perform At Trump's Inauguration

    Indian American DJ Ravi Jakhotia To Perform At Trump's Inauguration
    Trump will be officially sworn into office as the 45th President of the US on January 20.

    Indian American DJ Ravi Jakhotia To Perform At Trump's Inauguration

    For Driverless Cars, A Moral Dilemma: Who Lives Or Dies?

    For Driverless Cars, A Moral Dilemma: Who Lives Or Dies?
    Imagine you're behind the wheel when your brakes fail. As you speed toward a crowded crosswalk, you're confronted with an impossible choice: veer right and mow down a large group of elderly people, or veer left into a woman pushing a stroller.

    For Driverless Cars, A Moral Dilemma: Who Lives Or Dies?

    Community Currencies Important In Demonetisation: Innovator Geeta Mehta

    Community Currencies Important In Demonetisation: Innovator Geeta Mehta
    Leveraging the power of social capital, community currencies such as Social Capital Credits (SoCCs) have a "very important" role in situations such as demonetisation, says its developer, New York-based Indian American Geeta Mehta.

    Community Currencies Important In Demonetisation: Innovator Geeta Mehta