1 posted on
10/05/2007 4:54:26 AM PDT by
ninonitti
To: ninonitti
Why do I get the feeling someone from Loomis is about to lose his or her job?
2 posted on
10/05/2007 4:56:19 AM PDT by
Man50D
(Fair Tax, you earn it, you keep it!)
To: ninonitti
plastic bag on the road stuffed with $65,000 Hope they used heavy-duty plastic, and that it was firmly zip-locked.
3 posted on
10/05/2007 4:58:24 AM PDT by
Larry Lucido
(Hunter 2008)
To: ninonitti
Nice story!
Pleases me that the reason she stopped was to help a turtle cross the road!
To: ninonitti
If I found $65K in drug money, I promise you no one would be writing news articles about how I stupidly turned it in to the government.
6 posted on
10/05/2007 5:03:01 AM PDT by
Fairview
( Everybody is somebody else's weirdo.)
To: ninonitti
Is it illegal for Loomis to give this woman a reasonable reward?
To: ninonitti
Why can’t I find a bag full of money! Of course, I’d donate it to Hitlery (I’m sure she would find SOME way of accepting it) and then turn myself in....
To: ninonitti
It turned out the money had fallen off a Loomis armored car half an hour before... I can hear W.C. Fields saying:
"Ah, yes...the old $65,000-fell-off-the-armored-car trick..."
16 posted on
10/05/2007 5:34:04 AM PDT by
econjack
("You have enemies? Good. That means you've stood up for something, sometime in your life.")
To: ninonitti
Unless it was stone cold obvious where the money came from, I don’t think I would have turned it in. I just can’t see myself handing $65k over to the government.
17 posted on
10/05/2007 5:43:04 AM PDT by
T.Smith
To: ninonitti
"It turned out the money had fallen off a Loomis armored car"
Off, not from or out of, but off; sounds like someone set the bag on a bumper, fender, etc. (top is probably too high to be convenient) and forgot about it. The worst I've done is the occasional soda.
Though I suppose it could have been intentional, hoping to retrieve the fallen bag later.
19 posted on
10/05/2007 5:48:17 AM PDT by
kenth
To: ninonitti
Apparently, Congressman William Jefferson (Democrat-Louisiana) was sending a freezer to the landfill but forgot to clean out the “goodies” first!
/sarc
23 posted on
10/05/2007 6:00:39 AM PDT by
macmedic892
(I am serious. And don't call me Shirley.)
To: ninonitti
“It turned out the money had fallen off a Loomis armored car”
Whoops!
31 posted on
10/05/2007 6:46:18 AM PDT by
popdonnelly
(Get Reid and Harkin out of the Senate.)
To: ninonitti
A hiring manager interviewing three women for a secretarial position asked each this question: If you found a $50 bill on the sidewalk, what would you do? The first woman replied that she would immediately report her discovery to the police, the second stated she would hold the money and turn it in if it were reported missing, and the third said she would keep the money and say nothing.
Q: Which woman got the job?
A: The one with the large breasts.
35 posted on
10/05/2007 11:35:09 AM PDT by
quark
To: ninonitti
This woman’s integrity should make most politicians die of shame by comparison.
38 posted on
10/05/2007 4:11:02 PM PDT by
LibKill
(I'm AUTISTIC. You can't blame me for anything. If you do you are a HATER.)
To: ninonitti
Another case of finding money that fell offf a truck (in Pennsylvania):
Money for Nothing (1993)
Finders Keepers: The Story of a Man Who Found $1 Million
Synopsis: When Joey, a likable longshoreman from the city's working class happens upon $1.2 million in unmarked casino money on his way to score drugs, his life is turned upside down. He lives the week following the discovery in a whirlwind, plotting his future even as he grows anxious that he could be found out, captured, or even killed. The pulsing suspense never lets up as the entire city of Philadelphia is swept up in the hunt for he missing money and Joey struggles with an incredible moral dilemma.
Book Magazine: Bowden follows the success of Black Hawk Down and Killing Pablo with another tale of drama culled from real life. His latest nonfiction book tells the story of Joey Coyle, a drug addict from Philadelphia who in 1981 found $1.2 million in unmarked casino money that had fallen off an armored truck. Coyle's remarkable predicament attracted the attention of Hollywood producers, who worked with Bowden to make 1993's Money for Nothing , starring John Cusack. Coyle's ultimately tragic tale provides a fine showcase for Bowden's talents as a storyteller
40 posted on
10/05/2007 4:31:06 PM PDT by
lowbridge
(All I Have To Say Is....KERMIT THE FROG IS IN SESAME STREET GOD DAMNIT!)
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