Family finds $45,000 in new home — then returns it

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You find boxes of cash in your new home...

  • Do you Keep all of it - since you bought the house

    Votes: 26 92.9%
  • Do you return some of it - well times are tough for everyone

    Votes: 1 3.6%
  • Do you return all of it - cause "its the right thing to do"

    Votes: 1 3.6%

  • Total voters
    28

Cheaptimes

C'mon now...
Jan 3, 2005
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#1
SALT LAKE CITY – When Josh Ferrin closed on his family's first home, he never thought he'd make the discovery of a lifetime — then give it back.
Ferrin picked up the keys earlier this week and decided to check out the house in the Salt Lake City suburb of Bountiful. He was excited to finally have a place his family could call their own.
As he walked into the garage, a piece of cloth that clung to an attic door caught his eye. He opened the hatch and climbed up the ladder, then pulled out a metal box that looked like a World War II ammunition case.
"I freaked out, locked it my car, and called my wife to tell her she wouldn't believe what I had found," said Ferrin, who works as an artist for the Deseret News in Salt Lake City.
Then he found seven more boxes, all stuffed full with tightly wound rolls of cash bundled together with twine — more than $40,000.
Ferrin quickly took the boxes to his parent's house to count. Along with his wife and children, they spread out thousands of bills on a table, separating the bundles one by one.
They stopped counting at $40,000, but estimated there was at least $5,000 more on the table.
Ferrin thought about how such a large sum of money could go a long way, pay bills, buy things he never thought he could afford.
"I'm not perfect, and I wish I could say there was never any doubt in my mind. We knew we had to give it back, but it doesn't mean I didn't think about our car in need of repairs, how we would love to adopt a child and aren't able to do that right now, or fix up our outdated house that we just bought," Ferrin said. "But the money wasn't ours to keep and I don't believe you get a chance very often to do something radically honest, to do something ridiculously awesome for someone else and that is a lesson I hope to teach to my children."
He thought about the home's previous owner, Arnold Bangerter, who died in November and left the house to his children.
"I could imagine him in his workshop. From time to time, he would carefully bundle up $100 with twine, climb up into his attic and put it into a box to save. And he didn't do that for me," Ferrin said of the man who had worked as a biologist for the Utah Department of Fish and Game.
Bangerter purchased the home in 1966 and lived there with his wife, who died in 2005.
After most of the money was counted, Ferrin called one of Bangerter's sons with the news.
Kay Bangerter said he knew his father hid away money because he once found a bundle of cash taped beneath a drawer in their home, but he never considered his dad had stuffed away so much over the years.
"He grew up in hard times and people that survived that era didn't have anything when they came out of it unless they saved it themselves," Kay Bangerter, the oldest of the six children, told the Deseret News. "He was a saver, not a spender."
Bangerter called the money's return "a story that will outlast our generation and probably yours as well."
"I'm a father, and I worry about the future for my kids," Ferrin said. "I can see him putting that money away for a rainy day and it would have been wrong of me to deny him that thing he worked on for years. I felt like I got to write a chapter in his life, a chapter he wasn't able to finish and see it through to its conclusion."

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20110520/ap_on_fe_st/us_found_money
 

Mac Jesus

Girls send me your nudes
May 31, 2003
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#5
My late grandmother found a duffel bag full of money way back before I was born in a hotel room she was cleaning. She got hella paranoid and turned it into the police, thinking that if she kept it more bad would come then good. My mom was hella pissed talking about, you been praying for money and now here it is and you go and give it back.
 
Props: S.SAVAGE
Apr 2, 2010
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#10
Sometimes its better to not know where it came from, after reading the story I would of probably gave it to the kids the guy saved the money up for..(Unless thats just a bullshit story to make it seem right to give the money to them, they could of been asshole children for all we know)

If I didn't I would of kept it..and invested well.
 

Nuttkase

not nolettuce
Jun 5, 2002
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at the welfare mall
#13
I'd of kept it.

My family is from the south. My Great Grandmother had a big trunk full of confederate money that was given to her.

She was poor, & went crazy when my mom was young & my mom said she remembers my great grandma having an 'episode' & threw thousands of confederate bills in the fireplace, because it was worth nothing
( @ the time ) & hated not having money. (oxymoron)

...needless to say confederate money is worth fucking BANK now.

My family could have been a little bit wealthy had that money been passed down through the generations.
My great great grandmother didn't pay up like $500 on real estate my family owned after my great great grandfather died. Needless to say that was a bit of cash back in those days (late 1800s) but from what I heard they had more then enough to do it. The bank seized the properties and resold them.

This is where it was and it was seven or eight city blocks of property too.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Hub,_Bronx

We could have been rich as fuck. :mad:
 
Props: S.SAVAGE
Apr 26, 2003
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#15
My great great grandmother didn't pay up like $500 on real estate my family owned after my great great grandfather died. Needless to say that was a bit of cash back in those days (late 1800s) but from what I heard they had more then enough to do it. The bank seized the properties and resold them.

This is where it was and it was seven or eight city blocks of property too.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Hub,_Bronx

We could have been rich as fuck. :mad:
Lol, that reminds me of the story my grandfather tells me about his grandfather coming to California from Chicago and passing up buying acres of land thats now the Vegas strip. "Fuck the desert, were goin to California."
 
Jul 21, 2002
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www.youtube.com
#17
If I found it in a briefcase in a parking lot or something, I would've considered trying to find who it was supposed to go to in the event it was ransom money or something.


Finding it in an attic in my new home??????????????? FORGETABOUTIT!!!!!!! I'd consider it a good omen.