Dirt Fishin Dale
Hero Member
- Aug 23, 2006
- 799
- 17
- Detector(s) used
- Minelab E-Trac, Excal 1000, Binford 5000 super hunter
Sometimes you just need to be quiet about things.
------------------------------------------------------------
SANFORD, Fla. -- Bernard Salcedo was looking for a bad wire in his attic after the power went out when he found $100,000 in cash, starting a messy legal fight over who should get the cash.
The money was hidden in a cavity cut in the insulation in four plastic bags filled with $20 and $100 bills stuffed into a strongbox. The 26-year-old computer engineer remembered someone was killed in the home years earlier, so he called police.
"We didn't know if the murderer knew about the money," Salcedo said. "We decided the best course of action was to let someone know."
Now, the home's former owner is laying claim to the cash. Similar bundles of cash were found hidden in the home after Scott Quinn, a 37-year-old bail bondsman and gun dealer, was found stabbed to death in 2003.
Police returned the money to the victim's estranged wife, Lana Quinn, the widow's lawyer Michael Herring said.
The alleged killer, Randolph Mora, 26, overdosed on pills in prison awaiting charges in 2004. Salcedo and his wife bought the home from Quinn in 2006.
Scott Quinn kept large amounts of cash because he frequently attended gun shows and made cash purchases as part of his business, Herring said.
He also said Salcedo had no claim to the money, but that his client would pay an undisclosed finder's fee.
Salcedo's attorney Eric Frommer insisted there was no way to prove the money belonged to Lana Quinn.
Police are keeping the cash in a vault until the two sides hash things out.
------------------------------------------------------------
SANFORD, Fla. -- Bernard Salcedo was looking for a bad wire in his attic after the power went out when he found $100,000 in cash, starting a messy legal fight over who should get the cash.
The money was hidden in a cavity cut in the insulation in four plastic bags filled with $20 and $100 bills stuffed into a strongbox. The 26-year-old computer engineer remembered someone was killed in the home years earlier, so he called police.
"We didn't know if the murderer knew about the money," Salcedo said. "We decided the best course of action was to let someone know."
Now, the home's former owner is laying claim to the cash. Similar bundles of cash were found hidden in the home after Scott Quinn, a 37-year-old bail bondsman and gun dealer, was found stabbed to death in 2003.
Police returned the money to the victim's estranged wife, Lana Quinn, the widow's lawyer Michael Herring said.
The alleged killer, Randolph Mora, 26, overdosed on pills in prison awaiting charges in 2004. Salcedo and his wife bought the home from Quinn in 2006.
Scott Quinn kept large amounts of cash because he frequently attended gun shows and made cash purchases as part of his business, Herring said.
He also said Salcedo had no claim to the money, but that his client would pay an undisclosed finder's fee.
Salcedo's attorney Eric Frommer insisted there was no way to prove the money belonged to Lana Quinn.
Police are keeping the cash in a vault until the two sides hash things out.