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mech (discriminating characterist)

I like it and wish him well.


comment by mech (discriminating characterist)  on  03/03  at  09:53 PM

Great story, unfortunately untrue:

http://www.snopes.com/crime/clever/carpark.asp


comment by Tacitus  on  03/03  at  10:00 PM
SondraK, unapologetic Lympian Slayer

Still a nice story...dreemy… :)


comment by SondraK, unapologetic Lympian Slayer  on  03/03  at  10:16 PM
DougM (constitutional fetishist)

Tacitus,
Yeah, as I noted, I was afraid of that.
Gives me an idea, though.


comment by DougM (constitutional fetishist)  on  03/03  at  10:22 PM

Greetings:

I had an accounting professor who said to beware of employees, especially bookkeepers and accountants who never take vacations or other time off.  Embezzlers, they likely be, said he.


comment by 11B40  on  03/04  at  10:44 AM

Good story but....http://urbanlegends.about.com/od/humor/a/bristol_zoo_car_park_attendant.htm


comment by Steddie  on  03/04  at  11:00 AM

That story may be apocryphal, but Mel Spillman’s story isn’t.  He was a court clerk in San Antonio who handled the estates of people who died without obvious heirs.  He manipulated the process to divert their money to himself rather than the state or distant relatives.  He financed a big house and a fleet of Ferrarris this way.

What’s interesting is that this part of his job was officially eliminated in 1988—but he kept on doing it anyway, and since neither the medical examiner nor anyone else in the courthouse system realized that, they kept sending him estates to work on. 

IIRC, even after he actually retired from the county in 1999, he continued to work estate cases, since others didn’t realize he was not an official employee any longer.  He was finally caught in 2002 after a judge noticed something odd in some paperwork.


comment by Eric  on  03/04  at  04:44 PM

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