If you've ever accidentally ripped a bill,eroticization of japanese culture in western contemporary art you probably thought your money was gone for good. That seems not to be true.
SEE ALSO: Treat yo' self: What to buy with your tax return moneyDaily Show writer, Dan Amira, found a perfectly good $10 bill that was ripped in half. Instead of lamenting the loss of his money, however, he wrote a brief letter to the Bureau of Engraving and Printing under the Department of Treasury, explaining his predicament.
"I don't know how it ripped in half," wrote Amira. "I think it was just old."
A few months after sending the broken $10 bill, Amira received a check from the United States Treasury for that same $10.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
If you're surprised that the treasury even cared about the bill, you'll be pleased to know that there is a whole division of the treasury dedicated to restoring mutilated currency, appropriately called the Mutilated Currency Division.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
According to their website, the Mutilated Currency Division will redeem your broken money if you send in 50 percent or more of the note. If you have less than 50 percent of it, then you must provide evidence that the missing portions have been "totally destroyed."
While there were a few naysayers in the replies, some shared their own stories of the Mutilated Currency Division coming to the rescue.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Thank you, Mutilated Currency Division for giving our broken money a new life. If you find yourself with a ripped bill, check out the process for reimbursement -- it may take up to 36 months, though, and if it's just a dollar, you might wanna try taping it instead.
Rilke and the LionsHow William Eggleston Would Photograph a Baseball Game by Adam SobseyA Fake Oral History of Allen TateThe Morning News Roundup for December 2, 2014Attending Peter Matthiessen’s Estate SaleBerlin’s Boulevard of Broken DreamsRemembering the Absolute SoundSleep of the Just by Sadie SteinA Penny Saved Is a Waste of TimeChristopher Smart Loved His CatWriting Tennessee Williams’s LifeAlec Soth’s Niagara, AnnotatedEmily Dickinson’s NorwayA Fake Oral History of Allen TateAlec Soth’s Niagara, AnnotatedThe Urbane TurkeyThe Poetry of Julia A. MooreAnother Evening Gone by Sadie SteinSleep of the Just by Sadie SteinTranscending the Archetypes of War: An Interview with Phil Klay by Matt Gallagher 'Self Reliance' review: Jake Johnson teams with The Lonely Island for comic mayhem Costco reportedly stops handing out free samples in some stores due to coronavirus Bella Ramsey reacts to 'The Last of Us' finale on Twitter Spotify's TikTok People are changing their Zoom backgrounds to spice up remote calls It may be easier to get coronavirus than we thought How Italy is fighting its coronavirus isolation with music Inside the red zone: Photos show dramatic impact of Italy's coronavirus lockdown We have a potent weapon against coronavirus and should use it promptly 'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for March 13 Google ends sales of its Glass headset Google Pixel Fold and 7a leaks reveal potential June launch Watch Pedro Pascal and Bella Ramsey crack up in 'The Last of Us' blooper The Mandalorian Season 3 features the Kowakian monkey Microsoft brings its Bing AI chatbot to a sidebar in its Edge web browser OpenAI announces GPT Quarantined Wuhan kids hacked their way out of app Online scammers stole more than $10 billion in 2022 thanks to cryptocurrency How 'The Last of Us' successfully translates the game's best mechanics to TV Jared Kushner apparently got coronavirus advice from a Facebook group
2.9598s , 10171.140625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【eroticization of japanese culture in western contemporary art】,Creation Information Network