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Posted

Works that way in the US, too. The Bureau of Engraving and Printing will replace mutilated bills. (If it's merely damaged - torn in large pieces, dirty, badly faded - the local bank will exchange it.)

Posted

Works that way in the US, too. The Bureau of Engraving and Printing will replace mutilated bills. (If it's merely damaged - torn in large pieces, dirty, badly faded - the local bank will exchange it.)

 

So if you really want to stick it to your kids, burn the bills instead?

Posted

 

So if you really want to stick it to your kids, burn the bills instead?

Thats right. Banks can take back mutilated bills as long as one serial number is intact and you give them at least 50% of the bill (whether thats taped together or not). This rule is useful to know if you rob a bank and the dyepack goes off. Most of the currency is still able to be salvaged.

Posted

I wonder what her heirs did to piss her off.

 

 

My guess it was sticking her here?

 

"After the woman died in a retirement home..."

 

Maybe she didn't want to be there? Is "retirement home" a nicer version of "nursing home?"

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