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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Miami Cops Find No Sign Of Lost Loot Offer Of Amnesty Unheeded After Brink’s Truck Spills Cash

Los Angeles Times

A dozen police officers fanned out through the impoverished neighborhood of Overtown Thursday, demanding that residents return the loot that fell from an overturned Brink’s truck the day before.

After going door to door for six hours, warning that keeping the money was a crime and offering a 48-hour amnesty, they returned to the station house.

The total turned in: zero.

The total missing: more than $400,000 in bills and coins, and $300,000 in food stamps, out of a total of $3.7 million the Brink’s truck was carrying before it flipped on a highway overpass and rained manna on scores of residents below.

“The streets were like silver,” one man said. Another witness reported that some women took off their blouses and filled them with money, walking off in their bras.

Police Lt. Bill Schwartz said his officers “got no response” Thursday to the amnesty offer. “No one helped,” he said, expressing something like shock.

But no one in Overtown seemed surprised. “I wouldn’t give it up either,” said Margaret Calhoun, 29, who was on the job as a hospital technician at the time the armored truck flipped over and burst open like a sledge-hammered piggybank. “These people need to feed their kids, and that money was like from God.”

Indeed, the theory of divine providence was much in the air Thursday in Overtown, where incomes are low and unemployment high. As boys and girls on their way home from school stopped to sift through the weeds and dirt of the embankment below a highway overpass, a group of men stood in front of an adjacent apartment complex and echoed the explanation for the crash offered the day before by James Toni.

“These are hard-working people,” said Toni. “They don’t make enough money. God sent a truck.”

“That’s right,” said Dion Gittens, 18, who admitted to picking up some small change. “God gave it, so let God take it away.”

From folks shopping and hanging out at tiny corner markets, laughs and mocking cries of “You got the money?” were heard.

The counter was busy at nearby Republic National Bank, with customers asking for coin wrappers and changing coins for currency.

“They were bringing money in bags and in their shirts,” Michelle Barrett, who works at Republic, said Thursday. “They brought in an average of $200 apiece.”

In Darien, Conn., at Brink’s headquarters, even company spokesman Marven Moss seemed cynical about the chances of the police amnesty offer. “Do you really think they’re going to get much of it back that way?” he asked.

But as Schwartz insisted, pocketing the Brink’s truck money is theft, and theft is wrong.

“Immoral and unethical,” added Schwartz. “People are treating this like a carnival, but this is a serious crime. Hundreds of thousands of dollars were stolen.”

So, after the amnesty period ends at noon Saturday, Schwartz said police will begin to review television news videotape, and file charges against those who can be identified.

“Finders keepers, losers weepers is just a saying,” said Schwartz. “This is a depressed area, we know that. And none of us likes to think there is anyone out there unable to feed their children. But that money belongs to someone else.

“I’m hoping people will realize that this money they have stuck in their underwear drawer, or buried in the back yard, is more of a burden than a blessing. And it could be dangerous. They have to know that if we’re looking for it, the bad guys are looking, too.”

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