Vancouver Sun

Value Village staff find, return senior's forgotten $85,000

Owner had moved into long-term care, family mistakenly donated cash in items

- STEPHANIE IP sip@postmedia.com

Value Village employees often find sums of long-forgotten money tucked into donated jackets or purses.

But store manager Jeffrey Stonehouse has never found a sum as big as $85,000.

“I have the exact amount here — $85,549,” he told Postmedia News on Thursday. “That is certainly the largest sum we've ever found.”

Stonehouse has worked with Value Village for 15 years, managing the Hastings Street store and a processing depot on Venables Street.

On Monday, he and a co-worker were going through recently donated items when his co-worker opened a yellow plastic bag to reveal what appeared to be bank deposit books and stacks of envelopes.

“She ripped open an envelope and leaned over to show it to me,” said Stonehouse, who said the envelope contained what seemed like a wad of money. The pair opened more envelopes and found more money. And even more money.

“We were ... a little confused about what we were looking at. The first thought that goes through your mind is — `Is this money legal? Is it counterfei­t?' And then — `Is it from an ethical source?'”

Stonehouse said the pair immediatel­y reported and catalogued the money as store protocol requires. The pair also went through the rest of the bag and found bank receipts that showed the name of a possible owner.

In total, there was $85,549 in Canadian bills, the most recent of which was printed in 1988, said Stonehouse. Other documents found inside the bag seemed to indicate the owner may not have seen the money in about a decade or so, he said.

Const. Steve Addison said Vancouver police received a call from Stonehouse on the afternoon of Jan. 18, asking for help returning the money. Officers were dispatched to collect the money and the bank receipts, and have since been able to locate and confirm the identity of the owner.

Addison said it appeared the owner is a woman who had moved into a long-term care home almost a year ago, but that the money was unknowingl­y donated by well-meaning family members.

“We didn't solve a crime, but we helped facilitate a happy ending,” Addison said on Thursday. “Not everything that police are called to turns out to be a crime. We deal, as police officers, with a myriad of calls as we know, and we're just happy to be able to be involved in this.”

Stonehouse said Value Village often gets calls about items that were mistakenly donated: wedding rings, wedding dresses, other sentimenta­l items. Employees have generally had great success at helping owners track down or retrieve their donated items from the vast array of donated goods that are processed, sorted and put out for sale. But nothing compares with the $85,000 discovery made this week.

“It was a little distractin­g that day. ... It felt good when you take that step to give something back to somebody,” Stonehouse said. “I don't know if they were missing it, but I'm sure they were pretty glad when they got it.”

 ?? FRaNCIS GEORGIAN ?? Value Village manager Jeffrey Stonehouse says he and a co-worker reported and catalogued the money — the most recent printed in 1988 — they found in some donated items, as store protocol requires.
FRaNCIS GEORGIAN Value Village manager Jeffrey Stonehouse says he and a co-worker reported and catalogued the money — the most recent printed in 1988 — they found in some donated items, as store protocol requires.

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