By Todd Wallack
Globe Staff / January 27, 2011
It’s the $64,000 question — or $64,500 to be exact: What happened to more than two tons of US coins a Fall River bank handed off to an armored car carrier last year?
BankFive regularly sells its extra coins to Eastern Bank of Boston, which exchanges currency for local small banks. But last February, two shipments of coins — 111 plastic bags of loose change — left BankFive in Brink’s armored trucks, bound for a company in Taunton that processes money for Eastern Bank.
“The money never reached us,’’ said Eastern Bank spokesman Andrew Ravens.
Where the money has gone is a mystery. It would seem pretty hard to misplace or have this amount of change stolen. It’s bulky, difficult to move, and inconvenient to exchange: 470,000 quarters, dimes, nickels, and pennies. The coins weigh an estimated 4,317 pounds and, if stacked, would be three times the height of Boston’s Hancock Tower.
“It’s hard to believe all those coins would just be lost,’’ said Scott McConchie, a Boston lawyer representing BankFive. “How can you steal that many bags?’’
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http://www.boston.com/business/articles/2011/01/27/two_banks_brinks_trucks_and_no_sign_of_a_jumbo_load_of_coins/?p1=News_linksBetter check at the Dick Cheney Residence...