Loser's Keepers...

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Loyal

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What is the most expensive thing you ever found and what did you do with it? Did you keep it? Return it to it's owner?

My only example is also an example of personal failure. When my ship went into dry dock for overhaul, the crew had to move into floating berthing barge. Every serviceman who moves into a new living arrangement knows the cleaning involved before moving in. We were all assigned different spaces to clean and I ended up in a bathroom/head. I was a hard charger back then trying to do my best, and I climbed the angle irons to deep clean. I found a serviceman's wallet with a couple hundred dollars in it. The wallet had been there for a couple of years. I wanted to return it to the owner and had every intention of doing so. You can throw a wallet like that into and post office box and theoretically it would return to the owner if he was still in the Navy. But if I did that, there is no way the money would have made it to him. There were no credit cards with only a DL and a military ID inside. That extra step of sending the wallet to a home address made me delay doing the right thing. The longer I delayed, the more reasons I could find to not do it. Eventually, I "borrowed" from the wallet over the months, until there was nothing left. I finally dumped the empty wallet into a postal box, after all. I learned to never delay doing the right thing.
It would be harder to give back very valuable things like gold coins and cash that have no identifiers as to who owned them, especially if the sense is that they had been lost for decades. Or, what about a bag full of hundred dollar bills, which is probably drug money? Keep it or turn it over to authorities?
 

snackdaddy

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If I found bag with $10K I would promptly turn the $5k over to the authorities. Just doing the right thing.
 

Soul Surfer

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What is the most expensive thing you ever found and what did you do with it? Did you keep it? Return it to it's owner?

My only example is also an example of personal failure. When my ship went into dry dock for overhaul, the crew had to move into floating berthing barge. Every serviceman who moves into a new living arrangement knows the cleaning involved before moving in. We were all assigned different spaces to clean and I ended up in a bathroom/head. I was a hard charger back then trying to do my best, and I climbed the angle irons to deep clean. I found a serviceman's wallet with a couple hundred dollars in it. The wallet had been there for a couple of years. I wanted to return it to the owner and had every intention of doing so. You can throw a wallet like that into and post office box and theoretically it would return to the owner if he was still in the Navy. But if I did that, there is no way the money would have made it to him. There were no credit cards with only a DL and a military ID inside. That extra step of sending the wallet to a home address made me delay doing the right thing. The longer I delayed, the more reasons I could find to not do it. Eventually, I "borrowed" from the wallet over the months, until there was nothing left. I finally dumped the empty wallet into a postal box, after all. I learned to never delay doing the right thing.
It would be harder to give back very valuable things like gold coins and cash that have no identifiers as to who owned them, especially if the sense is that they had been lost for decades. Or, what about a bag full of hundred dollar bills, which is probably drug money? Keep it or turn it over to authorities?
Where did your ship go into dry dock?
 

RhodyRams

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way back in the early 90s I found $120 and a gram of coke in Autozone parking lot

needless to say,I decided to not change my oil that day
 

Memento

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Jemma
I was eighteen years old at the time and working at a hotel for a summer job. The people in charge told me to clean up a room by myself. It was filled with baggies of white powder, spilled white powder, and pills, all over the room. Literally everywhere.

I quit that day, went to a restaurant and bought myself a burger; no amount of money was worth this. Looking back, I could've just picked it all up and sold it, but I wasn't a dealer, nor was I going to be.
 

Soul Surfer

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I was on a subtender that they put into dry dock in Charleston South Carolina. I was there the day it pulled in and we did a two-year rehab on it. When I pulled into the dock and looked like the scene from Ghostbusters 2 where the Titanic pulls in. We stayed on the barracks barges ourselves. What type of ship were you on?
 

Loyal

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  • Thread Starter Thread Starter
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I was on a subtender that they put into dry dock in Charleston South Carolina. I was there the day it pulled in and we did a two-year rehab on it. When I pulled into the dock and looked like the scene from Ghostbusters 2 where the Titanic pulls in. We stayed on the barracks barges ourselves. What type of ship were you on?
I was on a Spruance Class destroyer called USS Fletcher.
 

RamBall

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Dave
I once found a 35mm camera in my jacket after photography class. I did the right thing and sold it to the highest bidder for $150.