National Public Radio (NPR) aired a piece on the Bureau of Engraving and Printing's Mutilated Currency Division July 7, 2017. I enjoyd listening to it on my morning commute, and
now you can listen, too. Follow the link. -Editor
When paper money gets mangled, ripped or ruined it is still money, backed by the U.S. government. We visit the room where mutilated money is painstakingly put back together.
ELIZABETH KULAS, BYLINE: Dan Deming lives on an old farm in Wisconsin. It's been in his family for generations. And there was always this legend that the previous owner had buried his life
savings somewhere on the property.
DAN DEMING: There is actually spots in the basement here where my grandfather tried to bust up the concrete to find money.
KULAS: He never found anything. But then, years later, Dan was knocking down this 100-year-old chicken coop out in the yard.
DEMING: I see a box tipped over with a bunch of pieces of paper on the ground. The first thing that popped in my head was, it wasn't a story. It was real.
KULAS: An old metal box filled with this rotten, moldy money.
DEMING: Some of it was just so degraded you couldn't even tell.
KULAS: Dan's bank would not take his money, but they did know someone who would. So they sent it back to the place where it came from, to the U.S. Treasury, an office there called the
Mutilated Currency Division. It's basically the customer service department for the dollar bill. Packages like Dan's make their way to this big room a few blocks from the Washington Monument.
There are eight employees working away at desks. They're called currency examiners. One of them is Kehlan Cotton. He's got a pile of charred bricks in front of him. Someone had just sent them
in the mail.
KEHLAN COTTON: This currency is actually burned. They're claiming $100,000.
JACOB GOLDSTEIN, BYLINE: So they just...
KULAS: Someone sent you $100,000 in priority mail box?
COTTON: Yes, yeah.
KULAS: Kehlan doesn't pull out a laser or a microscope to get through this stack of bills. He pulls out a chisel, like something that you'd find at a hardware store. He turns it over,
takes the wooden handle and just starts rolling it back and forth.
COTTON: This actually - rolling it actually makes the currency lose.
KULAS: It's low tech, but it works. The stack starts to loosen up. He can pull apart individual bills. When he's done, he'll count up the fragments and reimburse the amount that he can
identify.
The office gets all kinds of cases. Eric Walsh is a manager. He's worked here for 13 years. He's seen a lot.
ERIC WALSH: We had a farmer who - his cow ate his wallet. We always encourage to mail it in in its original package. So he actually shipped in the cow's stomach containing the wallet.
The Office Where Mutilated Money Gets Repaired: The article title is a misnomer, of course - the money couesn't get repaired, it gets counted then fully destroyed. Nice
interview. Like I said, check out the full version online.
And I know this is radio and all, but if your reporters are there in the room why not have them snap some pictures? They would be a great companion to the online transcript. Just spare us the
cow's stomach. -Editor
To read the complete article, see:
The Office Where Mutilated Money Gets Repaired
(http://www.npr.org/2017/07/07/535920428/the-office-where-mutilated-money-gets-repaired)
Wayne Homren, Editor
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