Just so everyone knows the money was given back digitally the same day, the very next day I talked with the manager again to apologize and she said it wasn't necessary but I insisted and were all good now :) they got their money im not out anything and the teller was not fired or even yelled at...Happy ending
That's good because it would be bad carma and your not that guy that would keep it's not enough maybe a million dollars would have you second guessing lol 👍🏽
Yeah, you having a sufficiently high balance to withdraw is the only way they wouldn't immediately involve police after you refused to bring the money back.
The big issue for me is they tried to get you to drop everything to fix it. Their mistake, they need to help correct the situation in the most convenient way possible.
That's on Wal-Mart for not hiring check out people they want you to check out your own goods pay for a bag and have one person looking at your recites. I just roll on by the guy holding my recites and tell him I'm not playing that game I have to check out my goods doing everything a paid checker does. Hire checkers we won't have to go through this game's.
@@MidwayShooter yes. It was a malicious act. I hacked the machine and stole it. I’m a criminal mastermind and you caught me. Congratulations. Want the 8 bucks? Lol
When I was in the Air Force in the 70s I banked at a small bank in the town just off base. I wrote a check to my auto insurance company for around $200. They marked my bill as payed, but the money was never deducted from my checking account. I reported it to the bank, but they said no check was ever submitted and the insurance Co. said I was listed as paid up so I got 6 months of car insurance for free. Six months later THE EXACT THING HAPPENED AGAIN. So I went a year without paying for car insurance totaling around $400+. The insurance Co. said they got both checks and the bank said no such checks were submitted against my account. This was before the days of electronic transactions; maybe that had something to do with it. Somebody screwed up somewhere. As for me I told both parties what was foing on, but the ins. co said that they couldn't bill me on a supposedly paid up bill and the bank said that they couldn't deduct money from my checking if no one submitted a check to them. I often wonder if an employee at either the bank or the insurance Co. saw a teenage kid in uniform and decided to help me out by secretly disposing of the physical checks. I'll never know...
You probably dealt with them in a civil and reasonable manner. That works much better than being rude. Always be pleasant, and you'll get better results. Wow. A year's worth of insurance... Good job!
Glad to hear you still being a decent person Jeff. Honestly Banks are so disreputable most wouldn't blame you, good luck and glad you're willing to come around and do the right thing 👍
only a matter of tiem before all these banks close for good...we live in a digital age and the big brothers looking to go to a digital dollar there wont be a need for banks, at least physical locations...
My wife works for an online sports book and recently they accidentally paid a guy out like 20,000$ extra for a bet he made however he immediately spent it so now they're going to court
There was time's people left there bank card in the machine saying next transaction. I pulled the card out and gave it to the bank to give it back to the owner. That happen to me a few time's. It's just bad carma to try and get over on someone. I would feel guilty. I've had way to much good fortune that happen to me in my life. I'm blessed to have the friend's and family.
Same thing happened to me and I had to give it back as well. But, I notified them. I knew it was not mine but someone else’s who might have needed it even more than I did at that moment.
I think most people's first reaction would be the same. In the end if you do the right thing that's what counts. I once found an airport employees wallet in a restroom stall that had like $800 in it. I tried to turn it in and they refused to take it. They took me straight to the employee it belonged to and the first thing he did was check the money. He didn't even say thank you. Just looked at me. It felt good afterwards knowing I did the right thing.
In those circumstances I say something kind of snide... like "you are welcome" (then something like a-hole just loud enough to hear as I walked away) people do not seem to have any concept of a polite society anymore, or the golden rule...
@Anonymous my parent once found a bank bag with several thousand us in it (late eighties or early nineties) we were not very well off financially. It would have been a huge blessing, but my parents contacted the local police to turn it over. The police would not take it, they told them to look for a deposit slip, or checks in the bag, there were none. Then they were told that they had to put an ad in the local papers that they found a money bag, contact with the description of the bag and the amount it contained to claim it... they never got a call, they waited three months, they put the ad in several papers, contacted all the local businesses (if we needed it that bad, imagine if it was someone's savings, or mortgage payment, rent for their business) in the end, they were contacted back by an investigation ty or who told them it was theirs to keep. My parents passed it along, we had friends who my parents decided to pass the blessing to by sending them an anonymous gift to help them with Christmas gifts for their kids that year, and we didnt lose our house... worked out well for all involved besides whoever lost that bag.
That's happened to me at Kroger's I found a purse in a buggy some woman had pushed to the cart return and left the purse it had a little more than $500 bucks in it I REALLY thought about keeping it and leaving the purse but my softer side got the best of me and I turned it in at the service counter went about my shopping walking past the service counter and heard the girl I gave it too telling one of her friends/ coworker how she got 500 bucks for a tip after that I keep what I find as whoever found my wallet I lost twice did !! " finders keepers losers weepers" 🤷♂️🤑🤑
Everyone's a jerk sometimes but not everyone can acknowledge that they were acting irrational and make things right. I've definitely yelled at people on the phone after waiting for hours on hold. I always felt embarrassed afterwards and apologized.
Once a counting machine shorted me about $5. One always must pre-count coins before putting them in a mechanical coin counter. They ended up removing the coin counting machines at TD bank because they were not accurate enough.
For my high school graduation my grandparents wrote me a check and put my middle name on it because that’s what I go by, and since it didn’t have my legal name on it, I couldn’t cash it. So my mom just gave me the money for it.
What happened to me this year was, I bought a part for a pump on ebay, and when I tested it, it didn't work. So I contacted the seller and told him, and he refunded the money. But after further testing, it did work. It just had a built in delay. So I contacted the seller and said it does work and I sent him the money that he refunded back to him. I could have kept it for free but I could never feel good about myself if I did that. Maybe if it was a 2 dollar part I wouldn't have bothered to do the effort to send the two dollars back.
I used to get paid every two weeks. I would drive thru the bank window on my way home from work to cash my check. Once I did this and drove a few feet so the person behind me could complete his transaction and also allow me to count my money. The bank made a mistake and gave me $750 too much. I parked my car and went inside the bank and told them they over paid me. They were very appreciative and thanked me over and over again. Two weeks later I went thru the drive thru and everything was in order but some time after I got home I got a call from the bank and they wanted to know if they had over paid me again. I was pissed. This implied that if they gave me too much money this time that I was going to be dishonest about it and not tell them about it. I still get mad when I think about it.
Reminds me of a story (someone on RUclips made a video about it I think) about how this guy was in the metro waiting for the train and this guy started hassling this girl like trying to pick her up and was getting to the point where he was kinda abusive and he intervened and the dude got all up in his face and was yelling at him. Thankfully it stopped at that but when it was all over the chick didn't even thank him so he was also regretting his good samaritism when it almost got him in trouble (and he said the dude was considerably bigger than him) for the girl to not even care that the other dude got aggressive with him just because he helped her out and let alone thank him.
I had a bank teller give me too much money one time, and I informed her that she did. She responded "No I didn't". I respectfully said I wasn't going to argue with her about it and left the bank. Obviously, when her till didn't balance at the end of the day, she promptly debited the money out of my account. I never received any apology for her unbelievable arrogance when I told her she had made a mistake.
I'm sure the amount wouldn't have crippled the bank. They should pay for their own mistake. They have no problem with overdraft fees, late fees, atm fees. Etc. Mistakes should be a cost of doing business.
well thats the thing just like the IRS when they make mistakes there is ZERO responsibility but if us the customers make mistakes the banks and government gets a pass? no fees? no compensation? lol thats how the world works, the rich keep getting richer becasue they make the rules...
@@MrCguy24 I didnt want the employee to be fired but at the same time why isnt anyone responsible for their job anymore? we have the horrible customer service we have in the US becasue no one gets yelled at or fired easily...post pandemic people can do whatever they want and its all good, lol NOW in this specific case I dont know if she was told how these tickets work so I cant blame her if she wasnt told what to do and then wasnt watched by another employee...
Banker here, might be able to add to the conversation. Few quick points: 1. Communication is always key 2. Legally speaking, even if the bank makes a mistake such as this, they can ask you to pay it back, provided they can prove you were overpaid. They could just automatically take it back without asking even though that is obviously not the best way. Often times, community banks will let you know of the error and if need be take the $ hit as an acknowledgment that they messed up and to thank you for your business. Taking the loss is situationally better than pissing off customers for a mistake the bank made. Also, if you noticed the mistake and zeroed out the balance of the account and told them you won't pay it back, they would be justified in making your account go negative and then charge off the account/send it for collections. That would be very annoying as the $ is now in collections and you would be flagged in any future banking business as having a charged off account. IE you could be declined for any new accounts at banks because they charged off your account over this coin debacle. 3. As you said this whole situation was a perfect storm of circumstances. It's unfortunate for both parties. That being said I would hope that the bank chooses the high road and doesn't fire a new employee over a simple mistake that in all reality, is quite small. I would hope a few hundred bucks doesn't break the bank. IMO a better response would be for the bank to call you and make you aware of what happened and ask what the most convenient solution for the customer is that benefits both parties. IE you bring it back the next time you are in town,etc. Hope this helps, best of luck in your coin hunting future.
"provided they can prove you were overpaid" yes in this case the extra amount sort was the exact amount on my coin receipt which would be clear p[roof of the error...if I didnt use the machine and just got cash from the teller and they gave too much they couldn't prove they gave me too much and not someone else even with all the cameras around...Also the employee is fine was not fired or in trouble they got their money back asap and its resolved now..
Not the bank, but the DMV for me. At that time, DMV was over 60 miles from my house. I got new tabs, came home, then got a call. They said they messed up, and I was due for a new license plate and that I needed to come back. This was during the last time gas was $4 a gallon, and they were 60 miles from my house in a direction I have no need to ever go. Basically told the person on the phone "ain't happenin' buddy", I'm not spending $20 in gas and my time for your screw up. They got all pissy and loud, but ultimately, I ended up talking to their manager and they agreed to mail me the plates and I was to mail a check for $6. Mistakes happen, but sorry I'm not paying the penalty for someone else's mistake. Especially the government's.
I've had this happen to me, the bank added extra money into my account.. I was aware of the law and just notified the bank as soon as I realized. They thanked me, took the amount from my account no issues. As much as it would be nice to keep their mistakes... It's not their money or mine lol.
One time I woke up and checked my bank account and i had about 20k extra in there. I was so angry, because like you, I knew it was just going to be a big problem and if I were to touch that i would be liable. so annoying lol
A teller can absolutely be fired over that. Every bank keeps a tally of how “short” or “long” each teller is day to day and through the year. Too many screw ups or too much of a discrepancy and they’ll absolutely be terminated.
Good on you for making it right. Actually it's not that much money and they wouldn't pursue it if you just said no. They can easily write it off as a new person mistake. The company I work for deals in a lot of cash and it happens all the time. Especially if you're going to put it out on YT you have to do the right thing, but you knew that and said so.
well everything situational since the money missing was exactly what my coin voucher was for thats proof I was given it so they could just take it fromkj the account, thats why is aid for a split second I thought about draining the account so they couldn't do that...
I had a clt who got a lot of money by mistake from an ATM. He tried to negotiate with the bank, hoping to keep some. They referred the matter to a prosecutor!
If you closed your account they would have ran it negative the amount you owed and charged it off to a collection company which could tank your credit stop you from getting an account at another financial institution.
This reminds me of the funny case where a company sent a guy one of those fake checks in the mail. He deposited it for shits and giggles, but the dumb company actually put their actually account info on it and didn’t appropriately mark it to make it unable to be cashed. He ended up with $100k or something in his account. They had no idea until he brought it up and suddenly the bank, company and authorities were breathing down his neck, however he had legally cashed a check made out to him and sent to him. It came down to a moral decision to return it.
Unfortunately, if there's a bank error, the money's never yours. A bank teller gave me too much money once, and I brought it to her attention. She arrogantly responded "No, I didn't". Respectfully, I told her I wasn't going to argue with her about it, and left. Of course, when her till didn't balance at the end of the day, she promptly debited the money from my account. I knew I was right, but she could have called and apologized for her arrogant dismissal when I brought it to her attention.
I've never had a bank make a mistake. But I have been overpaid accidentally by a past employer. I didnt realize it and spent my check. When they asked for the extra $100 back, I flipped out and they ate the cost of it. In hindsight I should've been more level headed. Mistakes happen all the time.
A little over a decade ago my brother and I were at Walmart with our Dad and we went to get a couple of sodas from the soda machine in the cart area. I pushed the grape soda button after paying and nothing happened, so I just started mashing it like an angry gamer and all of a sudden we heard a "CLUNK CLUNK CLUNK CLUNK" and bull's eye, FOUR grape sodas were waiting at the bottom of the machine. Needless to say, we extracted them all and ran for it.
I purchased a watch from Russia through Amazon knowing it would take approximately a month to receive it. Well a month went by and i'm checking tracking and its showing its held up at the Russian mail service. 3 months go by and the watch still hasn't showed up so by this time I'm fed up so I get on Amazon and cancel the order. Amazon credits me back. 5 months later the watch shows up at my door step. Nice watch. A few days later the 3rd party Russian vendor emails me and wants his money and I emailed him back and explained everything. I'm at a moral dilemma. Because the product wasn't delivered in a reasonable time frame do they deserve the money. I thought the watch was lost. Well I wanted to do the right thing so I set up a payment for this vendor. Part of me says if you can't deliver the product according to your shipping description then you should pay for your mistakes. Mind you, I cancelled the order.
although it may be a bit embarrassing I will go back like normal to make it normal, theres no reason to avoid them or hide...Its not a big deal unless I made it a big deal I think avoiding them would make it more awkward the next time I did go in lol...
I put a 5 dollar bill in a vending machine at work. Bought a bag of chips for $1.25. It gave me $8.75 change. The machines have shorted me previously. So I just called it even.
i was withdrawing money from the atm and was distracted with a phone call and accidently left without taking it after it came out. i was bummed. couple of weeks later i got a letter from my bank saying they knew what happenend and they had put the money back in my account
I have an account with a local bank just to use their coin machine without having to drive 20 miles. I took three gallon ziplock bags full of quarters, nickels, and dimes (each in their own bag) in to the bank to sort. I KNEW exactly how much was in the bags, I counted each twice, and had someone else count a third time. I had the quantities and $ amount on the side of each bag... after pouring all the coins in, the tally came up around 4.00 and some change short (odd thing was it was a total like 4.72... which should not have been possible as there were no pennies in the lot) I asked why this happened and they said I must have had foreign objects or coins in there. I asked where the rejects were ejected if not the return drop. They said they all fell out of the return, or got stuck to the magnet at the feed point. I wasnt going to argue too hard for less than $5.00 but asked to see the manager and said I smelled some shenanigans. They disagreed, basically said I need to learn to count better or go elsewhere... so I was not about to correct them when I found out that the teller accidentally gave me 200.00 extra at cashout... the hundreds had to have stuck together cause I watched her count it out. Later, I was discussing with my mother how I thought the coin machine was more like a slot machine, she said to never use the kno at that bank, she thinks it ripped her off... so I figured f em... if they want to screech or cry about it, we can get the state to come investigate their coin machine. A friend told me to go get a couple hundred dollars of rolled coins from the bank, then go straight to the machine and feed them all in and see if the numbers jive or not... I may still do it.
after buying multiple full bags of coins direct from the machine I can tell you every single time theres more in the bag than ther is suppose to be, I only buy half dollar bags but get quarters dimes nickels and pennies in there that are all "extra" coins not accounted for in addition to a few extra half dollars as well, all that means is someone got shorted using the machine...becasue they are "free" to use I dont mind the slight inaccuracy sometimes but your right they will state the machine is never wrong and clearly it is, lol
@@cutlerylover I would just like for it to be acknowledged by the bank, perhaps a calibration verification sticker that states the known accuracy of the machine. That was why I had thought to take a known amount and dump it in the machine to see the error rate. (I do calibrations and gage reproducibility and repeatability studies at work, so I know that small errors are exaggerated over time/distance, if this were not in the banks favor... it would not be happening.) Same bank really does not like to sell the half dollars at all. I asked to buy whatever $2 bills and half dollars they had, and had told me they had none (when they were plainly visible behind the counter... someone at that bank is shopping the coins/notes before allowing back into the wild)
@@Tat2Dragons ya know what? I think I can live with the banks error in my favor. Especially since their machine is "stealing" from customers. Sure am upset about a rando on the internet calling me a thief though... I dont know if I will be able to cope...
In the case you have, you actually don't have to give it back to them it's their fault and it's not like it was coming from someone else's account for payment. It would either be covered by the bank insurance or the operator of the coin machine would have to take the loss. It's definitely the right thing to do taking the money back though. Although they should cover the time and gas you use getting it back to them. Time is money and most people don't give that away free.
At this point I agreed to have them withdraw it from my account so were even I dont care a mistake happened I just didnt want to waste gas and time to fix their mistake...Its all good now they have whats theirs and I didnt lose anything...But from a legal standpoint they could have put a freeze on that amount so I couldn't do anything with it until the situation was resolved...
@@SpartanSpree whats interesting is if the teller gave me that extra money from something else than I would NOT have a legal obligation to return it, its only becasue the exact amount missing was the exact amount I used at the coin machine they have a tie to prove it was given to me lol...if you do cash a check for $20 and they give you $30 theres nothing they can do to get it back...if money is put into an account by mistake thats different since they have proof it was given to you...But also interesting banks work different if any other business gave you too much change they cant get it back easily...or at all...
go to the bank in person , apologize and explain that you did not understand . you won't be the guy that got mad , you'll be that nice guy that came in and said " I'm sorry " .
I already gave them back the money and talked with the manager its all good the teller wasn't fire or even got in trouble and they understand why I was upset...Its more than embarrassing for her to have to call in the first place to ask for money back...
If the coin machine picks up where it left off after servicing, that first ticket should be clearly labelled as not redeemable, or it shouldn’t give a ticket when it stops in the middle like that. You’re probably not the first customer to have that issue with the coin machine, but it doesn’t happen often enough to be worth the trouble of fixing/replacing the machine
its an odd way it works unlike all the other machines, now the banker did say the ticket states non redeemable but it must be small somehwre on the ticket I didnt notice all I did was look at the amount...
Seems like a wakeup call to be more aware of your surroundings and situations man, I've had change from a store where they thought it was a 50 when it was a 20.... Best thing is to just learn from this and use the lesson to grow and be better:)
Not sure I'm following here. If the machine stopped at $200, then started counting again from that number. Wouldn't that have been noticeable when it started recounting?
It is almost impossible for a bank to not win. They can break the law and still come out ahead. You gave them coins They own the machine that counted the coins Their employee they trained paid you Now they demand you drive back to them you say no so now they will take money frol your account. I would be switching banks.
I think the real thing here is the bank didn't make a mistake. The girl did. So its kinda a crappy thing to keep the money. Like if it was the actual business that made the mistake absolutely screw them. But in this case it was just the girl was just trying to do her job a messed up. I also agree that you shouldn't have to go out of your way to give them the money back they should just debit it from your account.
I would say yes you have to give them the money back but not when its convenient for them and inconvenient to you their mistake not yours and no Matter what you've got going on she should know better than trying to tell you that you have to do it on her/banks clock if they messed up your money they have like 3 business days to fix their mistake why can't you have 3 as well and if it falls on a weekend with holidays it could be several days before you got your money back! Just saying 🤷♂️
Here is a joke that Playboy paid me $50 for. An executive manager was interviewing three woman for an executive secretary job. He called in the first one and posed this situation. He asked her what she would do if she got paid and was overpaid paid by $5000. She stated that was easy and that she would cash the check and skip town. He posed the same question to the second woman and asked what she would do. She replied that she would cash the check but would put the money in her account so that if she was caught she would have the money to give back to them. He posed the same question to the third woman and she stated that she would immediately tell him of the error. Now I ask you what woman do you think got the job? The one with the biggest tits.
There's and interesting video by steve lehto about the bank messing up. Interestingly something along the lines of, if they mess up and you where expecting that amount to be deposited and you then spend it you have an argument to keep it? not sure will link when I find it.
Tell them they can come and pick it up or wait until you're in the area. It's not your fault. Your time is worth money to you, your gas isn't free. If you add it up that's 1.5hrs of work plus gas both ways plus wear and tear on your vehicle.. I'm pretty sure they would owe you at the end of that.
Thats was really my only gripe was they made a mistake so its not going to cost me money to fix it, I had them electronically withdraw the owed amount and its resolved...
@@maninacan.6285actually the point was I didnt know I was wrong I knew I was right until I understood the situation, then I realized I was wrong for how I spoke, then they were wrong for expecting me to return it asap for their convenance of not being short for the day...but it was peacefully resolved thats what matters
in this specific case they have a receipt that they paid me the exact amount thats missing lol so there's not much to argue other than its inconvenient...
Hope you hide that neck knife on your next trip to that bank. They might decide to feel nervous from your previous behavior on the phone and hit a panic button. Next thing you know the cops will be there causing a scene. Kind of silly that hunting for change could cause such chaos. The bank already loathes having to deal with coin hunters like yourself. My local branches know all the regular hunters.
I filmed this video got the call later from a higher up paid over the phone and talked to the manager again earlier today, she said no apology was needed but I insisted...
Sorry but that’s their fault!!! Train their tellers better!! Seems to be a recurring issue on service these days! And I’m sick of it all while trying to stay positive these days!
Sounds like you owed them the money dude. You did say you had brought about 1000 bucks worth of half dollars in the beginning so that second ticket would jive.
I knew I had at least 100 but didnt know the exact number becasue I had taken a bunch of coins out of the bag I hunted...thats where the disconnect was in addition to the tellers mistake...she didnt know she shouldn't give me the money and I didn't know not to take it...Its ok though money was returned apology was given on both ends and its over
I talked to here on the phone again after it was resolved to apologize and she said it really wasnt necessary she knew it was a big hassle for me...what I needed to do was hear the information then call her back later after I really thought about it lol...in the moment I got heated thats all..
Entertaining story as usual. Is that long hair peaking out from under your hat? Weren't you going to do a reveal at some point? One time at the ATM I withdrew 100 dollars and four twentey dollar bills came out with one hundred dollar bill . The bank never noticed.
sob stories are sob stories. why should you have to pay for someone elses mistake? if you work on another persons knife and break the blade are you going to be "Well tough luck but your knife is broke now" NO !!!! your going to have to pay for YOUR mistake, not push it off onto the customer, not to say that I don't have understanding or compassion(about returning the money) but if you choose to keep the money than their threat of just taking it out of your account should be illegal IT'S NOT YOUR MISTAKE bottom line.
theres 2 ways to look at this, some people will say keep it thats their mistake, others will say it doesnt matter if its a mistake its not yours to keep...the reality is from a legal standpoint its not mine to keep even if I wanted to they have a legal right to take it out of the account...we resolved it and I gave it back digitally so I didn't have to waste gas...
@@cutlerylover I understand and would have done the same if nothing else to be the better person, it's just inferiating (Spelling) they want try to resort to bullying to get their way. in the end it feels better to be the "Bigger person" and give it back, also clears the conscious (and yes I had to look up the spelling for conscious LOL)
I hope whatever it is that brought you out of character gets resolved soon & on a positive note! We all struggle and handle situations such as stress differently & even though I was a Captain on my FD, my steel resolve had a small space that let the rust in and it ate my lunch one day when I snapped at someone for a snide remark that I could usually let slide off. I had a meeting with the Cheif a couple days later. 😐
@@cutlerylover When you go to the bank, you know exactly how much money you got back. You knew she screwed up before you even left the bank. Nothing was "distracting" you that much.
One time I went through the drive through to cash in 2000 in twentys to hundreds and the teller just sent a envelope back and I went on my way but later that night when I got home I went to put the money in my safe and I just counted to double check I was putting 2 grand in but it turned out the teller gave me 3 grand I did end up keeping it cuz it wasn't my normal bank and thru the drive through so I just figured it was good luck for me and bad luck for the teller but I always wondered if she got in trouble for that but I'm sure they probably have insurance for stuff like that
im sure they do have insurance to cover losses but im also sure someone got in trouble for that...but in your situation theres no real proof who got the money so they cant do much about getting it back...
Just so everyone knows the money was given back digitally the same day, the very next day I talked with the manager again to apologize and she said it wasn't necessary but I insisted and were all good now :) they got their money im not out anything and the teller was not fired or even yelled at...Happy ending
That's good because it would be bad carma and your not that guy that would keep it's not enough maybe a million dollars would have you second guessing lol 👍🏽
Yeah, you having a sufficiently high balance to withdraw is the only way they wouldn't immediately involve police after you refused to bring the money back.
You're a better man than me Jeff... lol
The big issue for me is they tried to get you to drop everything to fix it. Their mistake, they need to help correct the situation in the most convenient way possible.
He did take the money and should have known it wasn't right.
*Bankers Error in your favor*
*Collect $200*
Return $200
Collect a Life tile :P
lol...
Who knew that the “Bank error in your favor, collect $200” was a lie?
Love it. Came here to say this but I knew someone already did.
One time I was at Walmart self checkout and the machine gave me two fives instead of two one dollar bills. I didn’t stick around to ask questions lol
That's on Wal-Mart for not hiring check out people they want you to check out your own goods pay for a bag and have one person looking at your recites. I just roll on by the guy holding my recites and tell him I'm not playing that game I have to check out my goods doing everything a paid checker does. Hire checkers we won't have to go through this game's.
You’re proud of that?
@@MidwayShooter yeah buddy. I scored 8 bucks that day. Big win for the working man. Eat the rich
@@wasawasablingbling so you stole 8 bucks 💰👍🏽
@@MidwayShooter yes. It was a malicious act. I hacked the machine and stole it. I’m a criminal mastermind and you caught me. Congratulations. Want the 8 bucks? Lol
When I was in the Air Force in the 70s I banked at a small bank in the town just off base. I wrote a check to my auto insurance company for around $200. They marked my bill as payed, but the money was never deducted from my checking account. I reported it to the bank, but they said no check was ever submitted and the insurance Co. said I was listed as paid up so I got 6 months of car insurance for free. Six months later THE EXACT THING HAPPENED AGAIN. So I went a year without paying for car insurance totaling around $400+. The insurance Co. said they got both checks and the bank said no such checks were submitted against my account. This was before the days of electronic transactions; maybe that had something to do with it. Somebody screwed up somewhere. As for me I told both parties what was foing on, but the ins. co said that they couldn't bill me on a supposedly paid up bill and the bank said that they couldn't deduct money from my checking if no one submitted a check to them. I often wonder if an employee at either the bank or the insurance Co. saw a teenage kid in uniform and decided to help me out by secretly disposing of the physical checks. I'll never know...
You probably dealt with them in a civil and reasonable manner. That works much better than being rude. Always be pleasant, and you'll get better results. Wow. A year's worth of insurance... Good job!
Glad to hear you still being a decent person Jeff. Honestly Banks are so disreputable most wouldn't blame you, good luck and glad you're willing to come around and do the right thing 👍
only a matter of tiem before all these banks close for good...we live in a digital age and the big brothers looking to go to a digital dollar there wont be a need for banks, at least physical locations...
My wife works for an online sports book and recently they accidentally paid a guy out like 20,000$ extra for a bet he made however he immediately spent it so now they're going to court
its a tough situation but im sure there are clear laws so one side will certainly win lol
There was time's people left there bank card in the machine saying next transaction. I pulled the card out and gave it to the bank to give it back to the owner. That happen to me a few time's. It's just bad carma to try and get over on someone. I would feel guilty. I've had way to much good fortune that happen to me in my life. I'm blessed to have the friend's and family.
Same thing happened to me and I had to give it back as well. But, I notified them. I knew it was not mine but someone else’s who might have needed it even more than I did at that moment.
I think most people's first reaction would be the same. In the end if you do the right thing that's what counts. I once found an airport employees wallet in a restroom stall that had like $800 in it. I tried to turn it in and they refused to take it. They took me straight to the employee it belonged to and the first thing he did was check the money. He didn't even say thank you. Just looked at me. It felt good afterwards knowing I did the right thing.
In those circumstances I say something kind of snide... like "you are welcome" (then something like a-hole just loud enough to hear as I walked away) people do not seem to have any concept of a polite society anymore, or the golden rule...
@Anonymous my parent once found a bank bag with several thousand us in it (late eighties or early nineties) we were not very well off financially. It would have been a huge blessing, but my parents contacted the local police to turn it over. The police would not take it, they told them to look for a deposit slip, or checks in the bag, there were none. Then they were told that they had to put an ad in the local papers that they found a money bag, contact with the description of the bag and the amount it contained to claim it... they never got a call, they waited three months, they put the ad in several papers, contacted all the local businesses (if we needed it that bad, imagine if it was someone's savings, or mortgage payment, rent for their business) in the end, they were contacted back by an investigation ty or who told them it was theirs to keep. My parents passed it along, we had friends who my parents decided to pass the blessing to by sending them an anonymous gift to help them with Christmas gifts for their kids that year, and we didnt lose our house... worked out well for all involved besides whoever lost that bag.
That's happened to me at Kroger's I found a purse in a buggy some woman had pushed to the cart return and left the purse it had a little more than $500 bucks in it I REALLY thought about keeping it and leaving the purse but my softer side got the best of me and I turned it in at the service counter went about my shopping walking past the service counter and heard the girl I gave it too telling one of her friends/ coworker how she got 500 bucks for a tip after that I keep what I find as whoever found my wallet I lost twice did !! " finders keepers losers weepers" 🤷♂️🤑🤑
Ah...Ye ol' life, happening😂😂😂...I'm glad they didn't try to make you waste gas & time driving there👍👍 thanks for sharing Jeff!💪😎👍
Everyone's a jerk sometimes but not everyone can acknowledge that they were acting irrational and make things right. I've definitely yelled at people on the phone after waiting for hours on hold. I always felt embarrassed afterwards and apologized.
its true we all have bad moments the real men recognize it...the even better men apologize when necessary haha
Once a counting machine shorted me about $5. One always must pre-count coins before putting them in a mechanical coin counter. They ended up removing the coin counting machines at TD bank because they were not accurate enough.
For my high school graduation my grandparents wrote me a check and put my middle name on it because that’s what I go by, and since it didn’t have my legal name on it, I couldn’t cash it. So my mom just gave me the money for it.
What happened to me this year was, I bought a part for a pump on ebay, and when I tested it, it didn't work. So I contacted the seller and told him, and he refunded the money. But after further testing, it did work. It just had a built in delay. So I contacted the seller and said it does work and I sent him the money that he refunded back to him. I could have kept it for free but I could never feel good about myself if I did that. Maybe if it was a 2 dollar part I wouldn't have bothered to do the effort to send the two dollars back.
I used to get paid every two weeks. I would drive thru the bank window on my way home from work to cash my check. Once I did this and drove a few feet so the person behind me could complete his transaction and also allow me to count my money. The bank made a mistake and gave me $750 too much. I parked my car and went inside the bank and told them they over paid me. They were very appreciative and thanked me over and over again. Two weeks later I went thru the drive thru and everything was in order but some time after I got home I got a call from the bank and they wanted to know if they had over paid me again. I was pissed. This implied that if they gave me too much money this time that I was going to be dishonest about it and not tell them about it. I still get mad when I think about it.
Reminds me of a story (someone on RUclips made a video about it I think) about how this guy was in the metro waiting for the train and this guy started hassling this girl like trying to pick her up and was getting to the point where he was kinda abusive and he intervened and the dude got all up in his face and was yelling at him. Thankfully it stopped at that but when it was all over the chick didn't even thank him so he was also regretting his good samaritism when it almost got him in trouble (and he said the dude was considerably bigger than him) for the girl to not even care that the other dude got aggressive with him just because he helped her out and let alone thank him.
I had a bank teller give me too much money one time, and I informed her that she did. She responded "No I didn't". I respectfully said I wasn't going to argue with her about it and left the bank. Obviously, when her till didn't balance at the end of the day, she promptly debited the money out of my account. I never received any apology for her unbelievable arrogance when I told her she had made a mistake.
I'm sure the amount wouldn't have crippled the bank. They should pay for their own mistake. They have no problem with overdraft fees, late fees, atm fees. Etc. Mistakes should be a cost of doing business.
yeah im sure the bank will be fine but what about the employees job
@@MrCguy24 the money was given back and the teller was not fired just told it cant happen again...
well thats the thing just like the IRS when they make mistakes there is ZERO responsibility but if us the customers make mistakes the banks and government gets a pass? no fees? no compensation? lol thats how the world works, the rich keep getting richer becasue they make the rules...
@@MrCguy24 I didnt want the employee to be fired but at the same time why isnt anyone responsible for their job anymore? we have the horrible customer service we have in the US becasue no one gets yelled at or fired easily...post pandemic people can do whatever they want and its all good, lol NOW in this specific case I dont know if she was told how these tickets work so I cant blame her if she wasnt told what to do and then wasnt watched by another employee...
Three times a bank has screwed up and i came out ahead. Every other time they have screwed i paid for their mistakes and they came out ahead.
Banker here, might be able to add to the conversation. Few quick points:
1. Communication is always key
2. Legally speaking, even if the bank makes a mistake such as this, they can ask you to pay it back, provided they can prove you were overpaid. They could just automatically take it back without asking even though that is obviously not the best way. Often times, community banks will let you know of the error and if need be take the $ hit as an acknowledgment that they messed up and to thank you for your business. Taking the loss is situationally better than pissing off customers for a mistake the bank made. Also, if you noticed the mistake and zeroed out the balance of the account and told them you won't pay it back, they would be justified in making your account go negative and then charge off the account/send it for collections. That would be very annoying as the $ is now in collections and you would be flagged in any future banking business as having a charged off account. IE you could be declined for any new accounts at banks because they charged off your account over this coin debacle.
3. As you said this whole situation was a perfect storm of circumstances. It's unfortunate for both parties. That being said I would hope that the bank chooses the high road and doesn't fire a new employee over a simple mistake that in all reality, is quite small. I would hope a few hundred bucks doesn't break the bank. IMO a better response would be for the bank to call you and make you aware of what happened and ask what the most convenient solution for the customer is that benefits both parties. IE you bring it back the next time you are in town,etc.
Hope this helps, best of luck in your coin hunting future.
"provided they can prove you were overpaid" yes in this case the extra amount sort was the exact amount on my coin receipt which would be clear p[roof of the error...if I didnt use the machine and just got cash from the teller and they gave too much they couldn't prove they gave me too much and not someone else even with all the cameras around...Also the employee is fine was not fired or in trouble they got their money back asap and its resolved now..
Not the bank, but the DMV for me. At that time, DMV was over 60 miles from my house. I got new tabs, came home, then got a call. They said they messed up, and I was due for a new license plate and that I needed to come back. This was during the last time gas was $4 a gallon, and they were 60 miles from my house in a direction I have no need to ever go. Basically told the person on the phone "ain't happenin' buddy", I'm not spending $20 in gas and my time for your screw up. They got all pissy and loud, but ultimately, I ended up talking to their manager and they agreed to mail me the plates and I was to mail a check for $6.
Mistakes happen, but sorry I'm not paying the penalty for someone else's mistake. Especially the government's.
I've had this happen to me, the bank added extra money into my account.. I was aware of the law and just notified the bank as soon as I realized.
They thanked me, took the amount from my account no issues.
As much as it would be nice to keep their mistakes... It's not their money or mine lol.
One time I woke up and checked my bank account and i had about 20k extra in there. I was so angry, because like you, I knew it was just going to be a big problem and if I were to touch that i would be liable. so annoying lol
A teller can absolutely be fired over that. Every bank keeps a tally of how “short” or “long” each teller is day to day and through the year. Too many screw ups or too much of a discrepancy and they’ll absolutely be terminated.
Good on you for making it right. Actually it's not that much money and they wouldn't pursue it if you just said no. They can easily write it off as a new person mistake. The company I work for deals in a lot of cash and it happens all the time. Especially if you're going to put it out on YT you have to do the right thing, but you knew that and said so.
well everything situational since the money missing was exactly what my coin voucher was for thats proof I was given it so they could just take it fromkj the account, thats why is aid for a split second I thought about draining the account so they couldn't do that...
I had a clt who got a lot of money by mistake from an ATM. He tried to negotiate with the bank, hoping to keep some. They referred the matter to a prosecutor!
If you closed your account they would have ran it negative the amount you owed and charged it off to a collection company which could tank your credit stop you from getting an account at another financial institution.
This reminds me of the funny case where a company sent a guy one of those fake checks in the mail. He deposited it for shits and giggles, but the dumb company actually put their actually account info on it and didn’t appropriately mark it to make it unable to be cashed. He ended up with $100k or something in his account. They had no idea until he brought it up and suddenly the bank, company and authorities were breathing down his neck, however he had legally cashed a check made out to him and sent to him. It came down to a moral decision to return it.
Unfortunately, if there's a bank error, the money's never yours. A bank teller gave me too much money once, and I brought it to her attention. She arrogantly responded "No, I didn't". Respectfully, I told her I wasn't going to argue with her about it, and left. Of course, when her till didn't balance at the end of the day, she promptly debited the money from my account. I knew I was right, but she could have called and apologized for her arrogant dismissal when I brought it to her attention.
I've never had a bank make a mistake. But I have been overpaid accidentally by a past employer. I didnt realize it and spent my check. When they asked for the extra $100 back, I flipped out and they ate the cost of it. In hindsight I should've been more level headed. Mistakes happen all the time.
A little over a decade ago my brother and I were at Walmart with our Dad and we went to get a couple of sodas from the soda machine in the cart area. I pushed the grape soda button after paying and nothing happened, so I just started mashing it like an angry gamer and all of a sudden we heard a "CLUNK CLUNK CLUNK CLUNK" and bull's eye, FOUR grape sodas were waiting at the bottom of the machine.
Needless to say, we extracted them all and ran for it.
They don't have a legal right to take the money. A court has to order it. Doesn't mean the 2 party's can't settle between them
I purchased a watch from Russia through Amazon knowing it would take approximately a month to receive it. Well a month went by and i'm checking tracking and its showing its held up at the Russian mail service. 3 months go by and the watch still hasn't showed up so by this time I'm fed up so I get on Amazon and cancel the order. Amazon credits me back. 5 months later the watch shows up at my door step. Nice watch. A few days later the 3rd party Russian vendor emails me and wants his money and I emailed him back and explained everything. I'm at a moral dilemma. Because the product wasn't delivered in a reasonable time frame do they deserve the money. I thought the watch was lost. Well I wanted to do the right thing so I set up a payment for this vendor. Part of me says if you can't deliver the product according to your shipping description then you should pay for your mistakes. Mind you, I cancelled the order.
I'd most likely never go back to that bank. But time heals all as they say.
although it may be a bit embarrassing I will go back like normal to make it normal, theres no reason to avoid them or hide...Its not a big deal unless I made it a big deal I think avoiding them would make it more awkward the next time I did go in lol...
I always enjoy these storytime videos because most of the time it is only some nutty thing that can only happen to you.
I put a 5 dollar bill in a vending machine at work. Bought a bag of chips for $1.25. It gave me $8.75 change. The machines have shorted me previously. So I just called it even.
i was withdrawing money from the atm and was distracted with a phone call and accidently left without taking it after it came out. i was bummed. couple of weeks later i got a letter from my bank saying they knew what happenend and they had put the money back in my account
Wow! The machine must have pulled the money back in...👍
People get mad too quick these days, myself included. I feel ya on not wanting to drop everything and drive back to fix their mistake.
What if they called and said they owed him $300. "Can I call you back about it later? I'm busy". 😅
I have an account with a local bank just to use their coin machine without having to drive 20 miles. I took three gallon ziplock bags full of quarters, nickels, and dimes (each in their own bag) in to the bank to sort. I KNEW exactly how much was in the bags, I counted each twice, and had someone else count a third time. I had the quantities and $ amount on the side of each bag... after pouring all the coins in, the tally came up around 4.00 and some change short (odd thing was it was a total like 4.72... which should not have been possible as there were no pennies in the lot) I asked why this happened and they said I must have had foreign objects or coins in there. I asked where the rejects were ejected if not the return drop. They said they all fell out of the return, or got stuck to the magnet at the feed point. I wasnt going to argue too hard for less than $5.00 but asked to see the manager and said I smelled some shenanigans. They disagreed, basically said I need to learn to count better or go elsewhere... so I was not about to correct them when I found out that the teller accidentally gave me 200.00 extra at cashout... the hundreds had to have stuck together cause I watched her count it out. Later, I was discussing with my mother how I thought the coin machine was more like a slot machine, she said to never use the kno at that bank, she thinks it ripped her off... so I figured f em... if they want to screech or cry about it, we can get the state to come investigate their coin machine. A friend told me to go get a couple hundred dollars of rolled coins from the bank, then go straight to the machine and feed them all in and see if the numbers jive or not... I may still do it.
after buying multiple full bags of coins direct from the machine I can tell you every single time theres more in the bag than ther is suppose to be, I only buy half dollar bags but get quarters dimes nickels and pennies in there that are all "extra" coins not accounted for in addition to a few extra half dollars as well, all that means is someone got shorted using the machine...becasue they are "free" to use I dont mind the slight inaccuracy sometimes but your right they will state the machine is never wrong and clearly it is, lol
@@cutlerylover I would just like for it to be acknowledged by the bank, perhaps a calibration verification sticker that states the known accuracy of the machine. That was why I had thought to take a known amount and dump it in the machine to see the error rate. (I do calibrations and gage reproducibility and repeatability studies at work, so I know that small errors are exaggerated over time/distance, if this were not in the banks favor... it would not be happening.) Same bank really does not like to sell the half dollars at all. I asked to buy whatever $2 bills and half dollars they had, and had told me they had none (when they were plainly visible behind the counter... someone at that bank is shopping the coins/notes before allowing back into the wild)
Knowing the teller accidentally gave you $200.00 extra and deciding to keep it makes you a thief. Not cool!
@@Tat2Dragons ya know what? I think I can live with the banks error in my favor. Especially since their machine is "stealing" from customers. Sure am upset about a rando on the internet calling me a thief though... I dont know if I will be able to cope...
@@jwreagan That says a lot about you.
In the case you have, you actually don't have to give it back to them it's their fault and it's not like it was coming from someone else's account for payment. It would either be covered by the bank insurance or the operator of the coin machine would have to take the loss. It's definitely the right thing to do taking the money back though. Although they should cover the time and gas you use getting it back to them. Time is money and most people don't give that away free.
At this point I agreed to have them withdraw it from my account so were even I dont care a mistake happened I just didnt want to waste gas and time to fix their mistake...Its all good now they have whats theirs and I didnt lose anything...But from a legal standpoint they could have put a freeze on that amount so I couldn't do anything with it until the situation was resolved...
So if you overpay for a bill the company should just keep it? Lol come on Greg your mom raised you better.
@@SpartanSpree whats interesting is if the teller gave me that extra money from something else than I would NOT have a legal obligation to return it, its only becasue the exact amount missing was the exact amount I used at the coin machine they have a tie to prove it was given to me lol...if you do cash a check for $20 and they give you $30 theres nothing they can do to get it back...if money is put into an account by mistake thats different since they have proof it was given to you...But also interesting banks work different if any other business gave you too much change they cant get it back easily...or at all...
go to the bank in person , apologize and explain that you did not understand . you won't be the guy that got mad , you'll be that nice guy that came in and said " I'm sorry " .
I already gave them back the money and talked with the manager its all good the teller wasn't fire or even got in trouble and they understand why I was upset...Its more than embarrassing for her to have to call in the first place to ask for money back...
@@cutlerylover you're a good man
That sounds like a great movie plot just make the amount larger! Lol 😅 🤑
Hope all is well Jeff, been watching since the non lethal weapons video came out. Love the storyline videos!
If the coin machine picks up where it left off after servicing, that first ticket should be clearly labelled as not redeemable, or it shouldn’t give a ticket when it stops in the middle like that. You’re probably not the first customer to have that issue with the coin machine, but it doesn’t happen often enough to be worth the trouble of fixing/replacing the machine
its an odd way it works unlike all the other machines, now the banker did say the ticket states non redeemable but it must be small somehwre on the ticket I didnt notice all I did was look at the amount...
Seems like a wakeup call to be more aware of your surroundings and situations man, I've had change from a store where they thought it was a 50 when it was a 20....
Best thing is to just learn from this and use the lesson to grow and be better:)
Save your time and skip this video. Yes I know this helps the algorithm by commenting, but it’s worth saving someone else’s time.
? lol...
It's worth a watch at 1.75 speed lol
Not sure I'm following here. If the machine stopped at $200, then started counting again from that number. Wouldn't that have been noticeable when it started recounting?
No bank has ever made that mistake with my family, they never miss those overdraft fees however
It is almost impossible for a bank to not win. They can break the law and still come out ahead.
You gave them coins
They own the machine that counted the coins
Their employee they trained paid you
Now they demand you drive back to them you say no so now they will take money frol your account.
I would be switching banks.
I think the real thing here is the bank didn't make a mistake. The girl did. So its kinda a crappy thing to keep the money. Like if it was the actual business that made the mistake absolutely screw them. But in this case it was just the girl was just trying to do her job a messed up. I also agree that you shouldn't have to go out of your way to give them the money back they should just debit it from your account.
The bank giveth and the bank taketh away!
Everybody these days is highly strung quick to react snappy angry. Absolutely it's stress and it's coming from the top down.!
I would say yes you have to give them the money back but not when its convenient for them and inconvenient to you their mistake not yours and no Matter what you've got going on she should know better than trying to tell you that you have to do it on her/banks clock if they messed up your money they have like 3 business days to fix their mistake why can't you have 3 as well and if it falls on a weekend with holidays it could be several days before you got your money back! Just saying 🤷♂️
For a second I thought cutlerylover was getting into scam baiting lol
Here is a joke that Playboy paid me $50 for. An executive manager was interviewing three woman for an executive secretary job. He called in the first one and posed this situation. He asked her what she would do if she got paid and was overpaid paid by $5000. She stated that was easy and that she would cash the check and skip town. He posed the same question to the second woman and asked what she would do. She replied that she would cash the check but would put the money in her account so that if she was caught she would have the money to give back to them. He posed the same question to the third woman and she stated that she would immediately tell him of the error. Now I ask you what woman do you think got the job? The one with the biggest tits.
The bank isn’t a service.
YOU and YOUR money are the product.
thats why they are there, too make money from my money lol...
There's and interesting video by steve lehto about the bank messing up. Interestingly something along the lines of, if they mess up and you where expecting that amount to be deposited and you then spend it you have an argument to keep it? not sure will link when I find it.
Tell them they can come and pick it up or wait until you're in the area. It's not your fault. Your time is worth money to you, your gas isn't free. If you add it up that's 1.5hrs of work plus gas both ways plus wear and tear on your vehicle.. I'm pretty sure they would owe you at the end of that.
Thats was really my only gripe was they made a mistake so its not going to cost me money to fix it, I had them electronically withdraw the owed amount and its resolved...
@@cutlerylover all's well that ends well.
You knew you had to give it back, so why the fuss. You were wrong! Thanks for sharing.
@@maninacan.6285actually the point was I didnt know I was wrong I knew I was right until I understood the situation, then I realized I was wrong for how I spoke, then they were wrong for expecting me to return it asap for their convenance of not being short for the day...but it was peacefully resolved thats what matters
@@cutlerylover he's trolling bro don't respond. You were very clear about that in the video.
We all have these moments.
They CLAIM that you got too much money, yeah right, im not going to drive 40 minutes at my expense for something you claim went wrong
in this specific case they have a receipt that they paid me the exact amount thats missing lol so there's not much to argue other than its inconvenient...
@@cutlerylover if they want you to solve their problem, well nobody works for free
Been there. Busy and I get a call so I get angry even when I’m wrong.
yeah I should have let it go to the answering machine and called back later lol
Spend the halfs that's what I do. I keep a pickle jar full of them I my car.
yeah but I get 1000-2000 coins at a time, thats going to be hard to spend in my daily life, lol
(13:19 Mother Natures confetti for your honesty 😂)
lol
Idk in the board game monopoly we all have played you get to keep the ATM error 🤷
Jeff really out here pulling a community chest card
haha
The title should be “ How Jeff got the new employee fired”.
Hope you hide that neck knife on your next trip to that bank. They might decide to feel nervous from your previous behavior on the phone and hit a panic button. Next thing you know the cops will be there causing a scene. Kind of silly that hunting for change could cause such chaos. The bank already loathes having to deal with coin hunters like yourself. My local branches know all the regular hunters.
Sounds like an error on the bank teller?
She should have know what she was doing how you to know that recites wasn't redeemable.
well i have a headache now
It's not the bank's! It's a person's.
If an apology is needed, don't wait. Call her right away.
I filmed this video got the call later from a higher up paid over the phone and talked to the manager again earlier today, she said no apology was needed but I insisted...
Sorry but that’s their fault!!! Train their tellers better!! Seems to be a recurring issue on service these days! And I’m sick of it all while trying to stay positive these days!
Sounds like you owed them the money dude. You did say you had brought about 1000 bucks worth of half dollars in the beginning so that second ticket would jive.
I knew I had at least 100 but didnt know the exact number becasue I had taken a bunch of coins out of the bag I hunted...thats where the disconnect was in addition to the tellers mistake...she didnt know she shouldn't give me the money and I didn't know not to take it...Its ok though money was returned apology was given on both ends and its over
They should have let you keep the money. I don’t think you were the jerk here.
So you're saying if you rob the bank you can't keep the money? lol. They could have called the police to visit you.
I mean I dont think you were a jerk she should understand it was an annoying issue for you
I talked to here on the phone again after it was resolved to apologize and she said it really wasnt necessary she knew it was a big hassle for me...what I needed to do was hear the information then call her back later after I really thought about it lol...in the moment I got heated thats all..
WOW, that's bazzar, like the hat!
Entertaining story as usual. Is that long hair peaking out from under your hat? Weren't you going to do a reveal at some point? One time at the ATM I withdrew 100 dollars and four twentey dollar bills came out with one hundred dollar bill . The bank never noticed.
This reminds me of the time the bank added an extra zero to my pay check. It was 3400 but was input as 34000 😂😂😂
I hate when that happens...
sob stories are sob stories. why should you have to pay for someone elses mistake? if you work on another persons knife and break the blade are you going to be "Well tough luck but your knife is broke now" NO !!!! your going to have to pay for YOUR mistake, not push it off onto the customer, not to say that I don't have understanding or compassion(about returning the money) but if you choose to keep the money than their threat of just taking it out of your account should be illegal IT'S NOT YOUR MISTAKE bottom line.
theres 2 ways to look at this, some people will say keep it thats their mistake, others will say it doesnt matter if its a mistake its not yours to keep...the reality is from a legal standpoint its not mine to keep even if I wanted to they have a legal right to take it out of the account...we resolved it and I gave it back digitally so I didn't have to waste gas...
@@cutlerylover I understand and would have done the same if nothing else to be the better person, it's just inferiating (Spelling) they want try to resort to bullying to get their way. in the end it feels better to be the "Bigger person" and give it back, also clears the conscious (and yes I had to look up the spelling for conscious LOL)
Hairs lookin long Jeff 🤣
it is...reveal still panned just taking a lot longer than expected, but I guess thats life right...
Diary of a fat man update pleaseeeee
I think I missed last couple of years as I don’t remember you with those heavy glasses. What happened? Don’t tell me it’s diabetes. Please.
lol yeah you missed a few years
I hope whatever it is that brought you out of character gets resolved soon & on a positive note! We all struggle and handle situations such as stress differently & even though I was a Captain on my FD, my steel resolve had a small space that let the rust in and it ate my lunch one day when I snapped at someone for a snide remark that I could usually let slide off. I had a meeting with the Cheif a couple days later. 😐
When's that hat coming off Jeff?
as soon as im under 300 lbs as promised
Stop trying to justify your lapse in judgement.
The customer is always right.
unless your at a bank and they want their money back hahahaha
You knew what you were doing.
You just got caught.
not the case...if I knew what I was doing id keep the money and never make a video on the internet about it, duh...
@@cutlerylover When you go to the bank, you know exactly how much money you got back.
You knew she screwed up before you even left the bank.
Nothing was "distracting" you that much.
One time I went through the drive through to cash in 2000 in twentys to hundreds and the teller just sent a envelope back and I went on my way but later that night when I got home I went to put the money in my safe and I just counted to double check I was putting 2 grand in but it turned out the teller gave me 3 grand I did end up keeping it cuz it wasn't my normal bank and thru the drive through so I just figured it was good luck for me and bad luck for the teller but I always wondered if she got in trouble for that but I'm sure they probably have insurance for stuff like that
im sure they do have insurance to cover losses but im also sure someone got in trouble for that...but in your situation theres no real proof who got the money so they cant do much about getting it back...
Good luck for you? lol 🤣 You’re a thief.
@@Tat2Dragons like you wish you were
@@JAGacp45 A thief? Absolutely not. WTF! lol 🤣
To be honest. You knew how much in coins you had. You knew what happened and thought you could get away with it. Come on where is the integrity.
not at all, did you watch the video? if I thought id get away with stealing money why would I make a video about it when it failed? lol...