May 12th, 2008, 08:54 PM
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#1 (permalink)
| | Anime Otaku
Join Date: Oct 2001 Location: Tampa, FL USA
Posts: 104,725
| States Seizing Property for General Budgets
The 50 state governments are currently holding more than $32 billion in unclaimed property. While some states take active measures to locate the legal property holders, other states are taking borderline measures to bank roll unclaimed property back into their general operating budgets.
Perhaps the most extreme example is California, which has dropped the waiting period to only three years, though state legislators recently tried to drop the term to a mere one year. It also no longer even bothers sending notices to the rightful propery owners. The California state government is facing a related class action lawsuit for essentially using the unclaimed property process as a revenue generation scheme. Quote:
San Francisco resident Carla Ruff's safe-deposit box was drilled, seized, and turned over to the state of California, marked "owner unknown."
"I was appalled," Ruff said. "I felt violated."
Unknown? Carla's name was right on documents in the box at the Noe Valley Bank of America location. So was her address -- a house about six blocks from the bank. Carla had a checking account at the bank, too -- still does -- and receives regular statements. Plus, she has receipts showing she's the kind of person who paid her box rental fee. And yet, she says nobody ever notified her.
"They are zealously uncovering accounts that are not unclaimed," Ruff said.
To make matters worse, Ruff discovered the loss when she went to her box to retrieve important paperwork she needed because her husband was dying. Those papers had been shredded.
And that's not all. Her great-grandmother's precious natural pearls and other jewelry had been auctioned off. They were sold for just $1,800, even though they were appraised for $82,500.
"These things were things that she gave to me," Ruff said. "I valued them because I loved her."
[....]
Which raises the question, in the Internet era, is anybody really lost anymore? California and other states are just beginning to make use of modern databases that can find most anyone in minutes. Unfortunately, California only uses those databases to search after it has already seized a citizen's property.
[....]
California is not the only state to come under fire for its handling of unclaimed property. In Delaware, unclaimed property is the third largest source of state revenue. Idaho recently passed an unprecedented law that says the state gets to keep unclaimed property permanently if the rightful owners don't claim it within 10 short years. And all 50 states pay private contractors 10 to 12 percent commissions to locate and seize accounts for them. It's an inherent conflict of interest: the more rightful owners are found, the less money the contractors make.
Source: ABC News |
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May 12th, 2008, 09:37 PM
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#2 (permalink)
| | Ultimate Member
Join Date: May 2000 Location: Miami, FL.
Posts: 2,781
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Back to using a safe buried in the backyard for me. |
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May 13th, 2008, 01:11 PM
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#3 (permalink)
| | Ultimate Member
Join Date: Feb 2003 Location: Bethalto, IL
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Our joyful hearts today,
Their grateful tribute pay,
Happy and free,
After our toils and fears,
After our blood and tears,
Strong with our hundred years,
O God, to Thee.
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