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The E-Sylum: Volume 20, Number 3, January 16, 2017, Article 24

VIRGINIA MAN PAYS DMV WITH 300,000 CENTS

People just love trying to "stick it to the man" by being jerks and paying bills and debts with quantities of coins. Here's the latest publicity hound trying this trick. Guess it worked. Dick Hanscom and Arthur Shippee forwarded this BBC News about a Virginia man who bought five wheelbarrows to the DMV. Thanks. It didn't make the cut for the Washington Post. -Editor

PAying DMV with wheelbarrows of cents A US businessman in dispute with the Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) has paid his $3,000 tax bill using five wheelbarrows containing 300,000 coins.

Nick Stafford from Cedar Buff, Virginia, delivered so many coins that the DMV's automated counting machines could not cope with the volume.

His delivery follows a row he had with the Virginia DMV branch over contacting its staff to make tax inquiries.

It took staff at least seven hours to count the coins, working until late.

They finally finished the task early on Thursday morning.

Mr Stafford told the BBC that he made his protest because he wanted government departments to be more responsive to public inquiries.

"It shouldn't matter if you pay $300 per year in income taxes or pay $300,000 per year in income taxes like myself, because the backbone of a free democracy/republic begins with government transparency, period," he said.

Mr Stafford explains on his company's website that his dispute with the DMV arose because the department would not give him direct phone numbers of who to contact in order to register three vehicles and pay the sales tax - bearing in mind he owns three houses in different locations.

Earlier this week a judge dismissed the three law suits he filed, refusing his request for the DMV and its employees to be fined. But legal representatives of the state did hand over to him the phone numbers he requested - most of which he has now posted prominently on his website.

Mr Stafford says the DMV had to accept his unusual form of payment because the US Coinage Act of 1965 says that coins are "legal tender for all debts, public charges, taxes and dues".

Actually, other laws state that coins are only legal tender in very limited quantities, and the recipient is doing him a favor by accepting them. -Editor

To read the complete article, see:
US man pays tax bill using five wheelbarrows of coins (www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-38603615)

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Wayne Homren, Editor

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