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Wisconsin is home to a lot more American treasures than just milk and cheese. The Badger State is also home to Harley Davidson Motorcycles, the Green Bay Packers, and catfish (Potosi, WI). A fun fact I just found out about Green Bay that few know about is that it is also the toilet paper capital of the world. There’s another type of paper that can be found piled up in Wisconsin’s Treasury Dept. though - the good-smelling kind, green. Yep, Wisconsin unclaimed money totaling almost $400 million is in the State Treasury’s hands and they are hoping to give it back to over one million people who are owed their fair share.

Unclaimed funds are handed over to the Treasurer’s Office when lost assets aren’t given back to the rightful owners after a specified period. The ‘dormancy period’ for Wisconsin abandoned funds is 5 years. Lost money can come from several sources - uncashed savings and salary checks, lost or unused gift checks, stock dividends, lost traveler’s checks, forgotten bank accounts, and other monies that have been forgotten about or otherwise abandoned. The only tangible assets covered in the Wisconsin Unclaimed Property Law are the contents of safe deposit boxes that have been classified abandoned. The State Treasurer’s Office tries to find the owners of coins, jewelry, family heirlooms, pocket watches, sports cards, etc. but ultimately resorts to auctioning them off at eBay after three years. “There are a lot of safety deposit boxes that get turned over to us which a lot of people don’t tell their kids, ‘Hey we have a safety deposit box.’ So we actively search for those owners for three years and if we can’t find them we auction off the contents of the boxes. We do that on eBay,” said State Treasurer Dawn Marie Sass.

According to Wisconsin’s State Treasurer in a recent interview on a report by the Wisconsin Radio Network, they simply run out of space to store all the unclaimed assets as they keep piling up each year. “We do actively search for people for up to three years and then after that time, because we don’t have a lot of space, we do have these auctions”, she stated in a report recently. The proceeds from these items are then held on to by the state like other types of forgotten monetary assets and are used by the state until their owners come to claim them. “Until we can find an owner or an heir, yes, we do use the profits to support our office…”, says Sass. The money from auctioned unclaimed items in Wisconsin may still be claimed at any time in the future though. “You know there are people who, you know, may be in the service and are stationed over seas for five, six, seven years and then they come back and realize that their, you know, mother’s safety deposit box was turned over. So, you know, they had no way of knowing that before they came back year, so we always keep the money earmarked for whoever that belonged to, so they never lose out.” Sass adds. The interest that is earned on these assets helps fund things like Wisconsin low-interest loans to municipalities and school libraries.

The State Treasurer has stated that one of the largest checks for Wisconsin unclaimed property handled by her office was in the amount of 750 thousand dollars. All the more reason that Wisconsinites should do an unclaimed funds search and learn if they have some Wisconsin ‘cheddar’ being held by the State Treasurer.

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Jackson Hewitt® Reminds Taxpayers About More Than $1 Billion in
States with the highest number of

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Have you ever lent a few dollars to a friend, and because they were a friend, you didn’t press them to pay your cash back quickly? Then, as time went on, did you forget all about the cash? Well, you may not have, but millions of Floridians do each and every year, only their “friends” are companies holding dormant bank accounts, uncashed payroll checks, stocks, dividends, just to name a few.





After the companies lose contact with people associated with these properties, they turn them over to the Fla Department of Financial Services, and the funds, totaling hundreds of millions each and every year, become what is known as unclaimed money or unclaimed property. Florida unclaimed money never actually belongs to the state, but they are charged with holding on to it until the rightful owner steps forward to claim it.

The process of turning that missing cash in to found funds is easy if you know what you are doing. Many people make the mistake of searching just once at some third party site that made inaccurate claims about its unclaimed money database. Others only search FL’s unclaimed property list. Beyond that, one of the most common mistakes people make time after time, is just searching once.

Searching just once doesn’t take in to account that in accordance with varying dormancy periods on forgotten funds, these properties are turned over at different times. This means that if you search for unclaimed funds in FL just today, but your money haven’t been turned over to the state until the following day (or next week, month, or year), you’d never locate it. For this reason (among others), searchers should steer clear of internet sites that charge “per search”.

Many people hunting for Florida lost assets simply do not realize that their funds might be in the hands of government offices in other states. What if your insurance companies or corporate headquarters of a former employer were in other states? When the dormancy periods end, your unclaimed gov money will be handed over to those other states, so digging through Florida missing cash database would be pointless.

Although FL’s $1 billion is a lot, looking at the records of other states regularly is important in the Sunshine State in particular, because the state houses so many transplants. It is not a secret that FL is a haven for retirees, but most didn’t live there in their younger days.

Despite the fact that FL doesn’t put any time limits on locating and taking back your property, most people would obviously choose to be reunited with money sooner rather than later. On top of that, if the cash belonged to a passed relative, the process of proving that you are the rightful heir can take a little more work than reclaiming your own forgotten funds, so it is of the utmost importance to get started as soon as you can.

The majority of people think it’s not possible for them to have ever forgotten or abandoned cash, but you would be stunned at how many really do. The reality is that the majority of citizens are owed some type of unclaimed money, so people owe it to themselves to search.

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Pop singer Jason Mraz has unclaimed money in W.Va.
West Virginia's treasurer wants Jason Mraz to come pick up his money.

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W.Va. treasurer says singer Jason Mraz has
CHARLESTON, W.Va. — West Virginia’s treasurer wants Jason Mraz to come pick up his

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Iowa is known to the rest of the nation as the state where presidential caucuses take place, but there is more to the Hawkeye State than election year political events. There are millions of dollars in Iowa unclaimed money owed to regular citizens who only need to step forward and take back what technically already belongs to them. IA and states across the country continue to take in millions of dollars in unclaimed funds every year, and the amount taken in easily exceeds the amount given back to the rightful owners. This means that the abandoned asset pile grows bigger each day giving better odds of tracking down a claim to all citizens.

A program called “The Great Iowa Treasure Hunt”, which is handled by the office of State Treasurer Michael L. Fitzgerald, deals with IA’s unclaimed funds. According to The Great Iowa Treasure Hunt’s website, the most common types of missing money include (but are not limited to): dormant bank accounts, utility refunds, uncashed checks, unclaimed wages, safe-deposit boxes, insurance dividends, stock certificates and dividends. Residents of Iowa who have or have had one or more of these types of accounts have a terrific chance of discovering money owed to them, and are urged to search often.

IA is what is known as a “custodial state” in how it handles unclaimed funds. This means that the state never actually takes ownership of missing money, they just hold them indefinitely until the rightful owner, or a rightful heir (if the owner has passed away), locates and claims them. This is nice because a lot of people aren’t even aware of the lost money phenomenon yet and those that are usually still don’t know the correct way to search. Not having a time period under which a claim must be filed can put minds at ease for those just learning about these monies.

While most people have still not heard of unclaimed funds, those that have often dismiss it immediately because they just can not accept that there are literally tens of billions of dollars owed to citizens across the country. The sad reality is, these people allowing their own cynicism to get between them and their cash! Divorce, death, clerical errors, and moving without leaving a forwarding address are some of the more common reasons that money is abandoned, and it is shocking how often tiny things can allow huge amounts of cash to slip through the cracks.

Even though there are a number of of people who do know about unclaimed funds, the vast majority of them don’t know where to begin their search. Some people will tell you that you can simply put your name in to any old site claiming to have a found money database one time and get a yes or no answer. Not true. First of all, you need to be sure the list of records comes from the state you intend to search. Next, you have to be aware that every type of unclaimed funds has its own unique “dormancy period”, or time which must pass before it must be handed over to the state. Because of this, assets are turned over constantly, so it’s necessary to search often, as we can never be certain when the state’s official records will be updated.

The best way to be sure you’re completely educated about how to perform a thorough unclaimed funds search is to learn how the pros do it, and then put those tactics to work for you in your own search.

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Veterans’ remains go
The men were homeless or indigent when they died, and their remains sat

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Utah may be known as the Beehive State, but the UT State Treasurer’s Office is holding a treasure that is sweeter than any honey. Each year millions of dollars in forgotten funds are turned over to the state treasury dept. in the form of Utah unclaimed money. As of 2005, the state treasury held more than 100 million dollars, waiting for the rightful owners to come forward and take back what is owed to them.

Though it’s tough for most people to believe that this money is real, because it’s almost inconceivable that people could simple “forget” about such large sums of money, but in fact unclaimed money comes from accounts and assets most of us have and use throughout our lives. Though there are a lot of different types, the UT State Treasury’s website lists the following as the most common types of lost money: checking accounts, certificates of deposit, overpayments, gift certificates, paid-up life insurance policies, unpaid wages, commissions, uncashed checks, death benefits, dividends, insurance payments, money orders, refunds, savings accounts, stocks and contents of safe deposit boxes.

While locating missing money can be easy for those that know what they are doing, there a lot of obstacles that can and often do get in the way of people trying to find their cash. Most of these obstacles amount to being uneducated about how to perform thorough searches to make certain that all possible claims have been found. When getting started, it’s often easy to fall in to the trap of just searching one time and accepting the search results as the final answer in our quest. The next biggest mistake is believing that all search sites are the same.

What the majority of people do not realize, even once they are aware of the reality of unclaimed money, is that there are actually very few sites that offer the official state records. To start with, most of these sites are unreliable to the point that a resident would be completely wasting their time to try to use them. But even the official state databases are often not complete for a variety of reasons. For one, each kind of asset has its own unique dormancy period, or the amount of time that must go by before law requires a holder to hand the asset over to the state. Even after monies are turned over to the state, someone has to manually add the record to UT’s unclaimed money listings. For this reason, search results showing no claims may be misleading if the property just hasn’t been turned over or the state hasn’t added it to their system.

Despite these issues, and many others that plague beginners, people can learn the search tactics of expert searchers and implement them in their own searches. Quite often, citizens jump in to the found money game without knowing where to begin and they spoil their own potential for finding lost treasure. If everyone would spend just a bit of time educating themselves on where they need to search, and how often they ought to search, everyone would have a better chance of taking back money that is technically already theirs, instead of allowing it to collect dust in some government government building.

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How to Find Your Missing Money
Is there money out there that's yours, just waiting for you to claim it? It's possible.

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The bottom slice of bread in the Dakota sandwich is well known as the home to Mt. Rushmore, but SD is holding something just as valuable but much less known. The Office of the State Treasurer is currently holding tens of millions of dollars in South Dakota unclaimed money that belongs to people living in the state. With one of the lowest state populations in the nation, SD residents have great odds of discovering money owed to them, if they learn where they should look.

Increased efforts by the state to reunite lost money with the actual owners have led to the giving back of about $2.2 million annually in recent years, but the vast majority still doesn’t get returned, as an average of $6.7 million is turned over to the state each year. This basically means that the state’s total grows by about $5 million annually. So while the State Treasury Department gives no solid total, it’s reasonable to assume that they’re holding at least tens of millions.

After first hearing about unclaimed funds, the main question many people have is - How is it possible that people abandon that much money? There are a number of reasons, but believe it or not there actually are tens of billions up for grabs across the nation. Most of the time, though, it’s as simple as not providing everyone with the right forwarding address. Once a check of some type is sent back to a property holder, or a holder simply loses contact with the rightful owner, a “dormancy period” begins. The dormancy period is a time period which must go by before the cash is determined to be abandoned or “unclaimed”, and then handed over to the state for safekeeping.

There are a number of kinds of properties that can become unclaimed funds if left inactive for a long enough period of time, but the State Treasury’s site lists the following as the more common: checking accounts, savings accounts, stocks, unpaid wages or commissions, un-cashed dividends, underlying shares, certificates of deposit, customer deposits or overpayments, refunds, credit balances, paid-up life insurance policies, money orders, gift certificates, and un-cashed benefits checks. Each of these account types has its own individual dormancy period. In SD, these periods range from 1 year to 15 years, depending on what type of asset is being discussed.

While most citizens are completely in the dark about forgotten funds owed to people by the government, a few are aware of these funds. But even those that are aware usually have no idea how to correctly locate them and claim what belongs to them. For starters, just a few unclaimed search sites have real records in their databases, and even fewer have somewhat recently updated records. With millions being turned over each year, spread out over thousands of accounts, the state simply can’t update their listings in real time, leaving residents searching listings that are often not complete. This problem is multiplied when we factor in the varying dormancy periods which means that showing no results on a given day might be misleading if a certain property isn’t due to be handed over to the state for another year, or number of years.

The best way to ensure all possible lost assets has been located is to learn what expert searchers do to sidestep these, and quite a few other issues, and then use their tips in your own searches.

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WV Treasurer's Office educating Nitro residents about Unclaimed Property account
Nitro's mayor, Rusty Casto, said there are more than $300,000 dollars in unclaimed money due the people in Nitro.

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Wisconsin is home to a lot more American treasures than just milk and cheese. The Badger State is also home to Harley Davidson Motorcycles, the Green Bay Packers, and catfish (Potosi, WI). A fun fact I just found out about Green Bay that few know about is that it is also the toilet paper capital of the world. There’s another type of paper that can be found piled up in Wisconsin’s Treasury Dept. though - the good-smelling kind, green. Yep, Wisconsin unclaimed money totaling almost $400 million is in the State Treasury’s hands and they are hoping to give it back to over one million people who are owed their fair share.

Unclaimed funds are handed over to the Treasurer’s Office when lost assets aren’t given back to the rightful owners after a specified period. The ‘dormancy period’ for Wisconsin abandoned funds is 5 years. Lost money can come from several sources - uncashed savings and salary checks, lost or unused gift checks, stock dividends, lost traveler’s checks, forgotten bank accounts, and other monies that have been forgotten about or otherwise abandoned. The only tangible assets covered in the Wisconsin Unclaimed Property Law are the contents of safe deposit boxes that have been classified abandoned. The State Treasurer’s Office tries to find the owners of coins, jewelry, family heirlooms, pocket watches, sports cards, etc. but ultimately resorts to auctioning them off at eBay after three years. “There are a lot of safety deposit boxes that get turned over to us which a lot of people don’t tell their kids, ‘Hey we have a safety deposit box.’ So we actively search for those owners for three years and if we can’t find them we auction off the contents of the boxes. We do that on eBay,” said State Treasurer Dawn Marie Sass.

According to Wisconsin’s State Treasurer in a recent interview on a report by the Wisconsin Radio Network, they simply run out of space to store all the unclaimed assets as they keep piling up each year. “We do actively search for people for up to three years and then after that time, because we don’t have a lot of space, we do have these auctions”, she stated in a report recently. The proceeds from these items are then held on to by the state like other types of forgotten monetary assets and are used by the state until their owners come to claim them. “Until we can find an owner or an heir, yes, we do use the profits to support our office…”, says Sass. The money from auctioned unclaimed items in Wisconsin may still be claimed at any time in the future though. “You know there are people who, you know, may be in the service and are stationed over seas for five, six, seven years and then they come back and realize that their, you know, mother’s safety deposit box was turned over. So, you know, they had no way of knowing that before they came back year, so we always keep the money earmarked for whoever that belonged to, so they never lose out.” Sass adds. The interest that is earned on these assets helps fund things like Wisconsin low-interest loans to municipalities and school libraries.

The State Treasurer has stated that one of the largest checks for Wisconsin unclaimed property handled by her office was in the amount of 750 thousand dollars. All the more reason that Wisconsinites should do an unclaimed funds search and learn if they have some Wisconsin ‘cheddar’ being held by the State Treasurer.

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New Jersey Could Lose $64 to $94 million in Sales Tax Revenue
Analysis shows potential revenue loss due to

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Of the literally tens of billions of dollars in unclaimed money across the country, over one billion of it is in the state Mass. alone. Massachusetts unclaimed money keeps on rolling in at an average of more than $200 million each year, which far exceeds the amount of money returned to its owners, so it is clear that the $1 billion will only continue to grow.

Although there have been recent efforts to reunite the citizens with their money, the Mass. Dept. of the State Treasurer continues to take in more abandoned assets than it returns every year. What’s the reason? There are a number of them, but the primary reason is because most people still haven’t accepted that these monies are real. For starters, many have never even heard of unclaimed money, and a large portion of those who have often quickly dismiss the phenomenon as some type of scam because they can’t believe that their fellow citizens could actually forget about tens of billions of dollars. Of the select few who are aware that this cash is out there, only a small percentage are informed enough to perform a full search and reclaim all of what is owed to them.

The folks who have never even heard of unclaimed money will eventually figure things out, but for now they are on their own. For those people who take the “too good to be true” position, and assume this is all a scam, all they have to do is contact their state’s treasury dept. to get confirmation. They’ll be pleasantly surprised and anxious to start searching. Those who are ready to get their unclaimed property search started should study tips from a professional before spending a lot of time and potentially not getting anywhere.

Mass. residents often try to find Mass. unclaimed money by just searching their name on the first website they stumble upon. Operating this way could not be more incorrect. For starters, a lot of these sites are claiming to have a “database” when in fact they are using bogus databases stuffed with name combinations to give results showing a claim is owed for just about every name, even when there is not. Aside from these bogus databases, even the state’s unclaimed listings can be very out of date.

The State Treasurer has stated that unclaimed money in Mass. can come from the following sources: savings accounts, checking accounts, unpaid wages or commissions, underlying shares, stocks, customer deposits or overpayments, refunds, uncashed dividends, credit balances, certificates of deposit, money orders, paid-up life insurance policies, safe deposit boxes, uncashed benefit checks, and gift certificates. These are considered abandoned after a certain number of years of inactivity (usually 3, but up to fifteen depending on the type).

Until an asset is deemed “abandoned”, it is not passed along to the state, and that is why a search might not turn up any records in your name. Further, the state does not instantly add records in the database the minute they take control of them. It all depends on when the state gets around to having an employee physically add the information to their system. What this means is that you need to search frequently. A single search won’t cut it if you intend to be confident that you have explored all potential claims.

In addition to the issues raised above, there are countless other obstacles that often make the difference in whether a resident of the Bay State locates their missing money or not. It would be a good idea for anyone who is serious about finding real cash to seek the assistance of someone with experience in this area before getting in the game.

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Disabled vet finds he has thousands in
the

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It has been stated by Maryland State Comptroller Peter Franchot, Maryland unclaimed money has surpassed half of $1 billion and is rapidly approaching 600 million dollars. As of May of 2007, the total held at 580 million dollars, and with more unclaimed property that is added consistently outpacing the amount handed back to the citizens, 600 million dollars is just around the corner.

After certain types of assets have been abandoned for three years or more (depending on the type), they are classified “unclaimed property”, and the corporation, insurance company, or financial institution holding them must turn them over to the State Comptroller’s Office. There many different of types of properties that can potentially become unclaimed property, but according to the Comptroller’s web site, the most common in Maryland are: wages, stock dividends, security deposits, contents of safe deposit boxes, bank accounts, insurance benefits.

The residents of Maryland should consider themselves lucky, because they live in what is known as a “custodial state”, which means there is never a time limit for them to claim their abandoned assets, and after a person passes away the rightful heirs may still claim it. But residents do have to act quickly on safe deposit boxes, because their contents will be auctioned off. The rightful owner can still at any time come forward and claim the auction proceeds, but if the item is of personal value, it might be gone forever.

Maryland missing money is not only for current residents, though. American citizens who used to live in Maryland may be due a claim, and even people who have never even been to the state, in some instances. When corporations that have businesses in multiple states across the nation, they are supposed to hand over forgotten funds to the state in which the corporation has its headquarters. So if a citizen has ever worked for a company that calls Maryland it’s home, they could be owed lost property, even if a search of the person’s own home state’s records didn’t turn up anything.

Because of the reasons stated above, Maryland residents should search the records of any other states where they may have lived or held a job or had business interests, even if they did not know it. Each state maintains its own list, so checking the records of just one state does not come close to being a complete search.

On top of searching multiple states, you should search them often. The Reason? Because you don’t know when they last updated the listings. For starters, the wide ranging dormancy periods are coming to an end for thousands of properties all of the time, but until they’ve surpassed this period, the state is not even aware of the money. Even after they’ve taken control of the funds the states often take a while before adding the account to their system. It takes an employee - someone actually adding the record - and we are all aware of how efficient government can be, aren’t we? Searching regularly is rule number one.

There are quite a few tips to help track down lost money that most beginners aren’t aware of, but a seasoned expert can teach people the “ins and outs” of locating funds owed to them to save them time and frustration, which often hinders people in their quest.

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Thousands of new names on
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The state of California’s unclaimed money program takes in approximately $300 million every year. What’s it to you? Well, if you or anyone you know is or ever was a resident of the Golden State (or ever had any type of business dealings, whether you knew it or not), a chunk of that massive pile of Cali missing money could easily be yours!

Under the state of California unclaimed property (or escheat) law, lost money such as forgotten checking and savings accounts, uncashed checks and money orders, mineral deposits, salary checks, cash and stock dividends, state of California unclaimed tax refunds, gift certificates, and other assets are passed along to the Treasury Dept. if their owners don’t locate them within a certain time period. This ‘dormancy period’ varies widely from state to state, but in Cali it is 3 years. These abandoned assets then go to the CA unclaimed property div, where they stay in the state’s general fund until returned to the rightful owners. This is where state officials who handled Cali unclaimed cash were criticized recently. Seems that they have been all to happy to locate and collect the lost funds from the various establishments holding them but showed less interest in contacting the actual owners in the Cali unclaimed money database.

One of the primary reasons for the government’s inability give back forgotten cash to residents, they claim, is that they can’t be tracked down. Problem is, who would think that people like Angelina Jolie, ZsaZsa Gabor, Gerri Halliwell, Victoria Beckham, Keanu Reeves, Brad Pitt, Adam Sandler, Marlon Brando and Jennifer Lopez could be hard to find? Their names and the names of several other famous people are just a few of the names in the Cali missing money list and yet they have not heard from the officials in the California Unclaimed Money Division. They are all owed checks for lost assets by Cali ranging in amount from hundreds to the thousands in Ms. Jolie’s case. This proves once again Cali state employees’ interest in holding this cash in the general fund for them to balance the budget deficit for as long as they possibly can. In fact, there was a recent ruling by a federal judge on CA abandoned assets, saying that the state was not making enough of an effort to locate the rightful owners and for a while halted the ability of the state to take and hold it until a new policy of reuniting it with the rightful owners has been adopted.

The total amount of unclaimed money in California averages five billion dollars annually - imagine the amount of interest that accrues for the state! Sacramento attorney Bill Palmer who has battled in many cases involving CA unclaimed money, said the state’s program was intended to be a lost and found of sorts for Californians. Instead, it has been turned into a profit generating ‘business’ in recent years.

The hold on the seizure of property by California has recently been lifted and the new CA State Controller, John Chiang, is making extra efforts in the form of widespread reforms in improving how his office deals with CA unclaimed money. There’s still a great need though for Californians and residents of all other states across the U.S. to learn about the presence of these monies and on how to do a thorough search for them.

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State to publicize unclaimed property list
State Treasurer Rob McCord announced this week that his department will publish the names of those owed a portion of more than $45 million in unclaimed property in regional newspapers next week.”This money and property belongs to the people, businesses

RI residents owed $3M in
Reed’s office says residents must claim the

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Generally when people think about the state of Idaho, what do they usually think of? Potatoes , obviously. Tons and tons of potatoes. But there is also a huge pile of another item that you could say is “no small potatoes” - Idaho unclaimed money. Idaho’s lost money fund has swollen to a whopping 40 million dollars and counting and all of this money belongs to residents wise enough to locate it and claim it.

Most people find it difficult to believe that regular Idaho residents have somehow just abandoned 40 million dollars, and that citizens across the country have abandoned almost 40 billion dollars (yes, with a “b”, billion), but believe it or not, the chances that any given person is owed unclaimed property are greater than the odds that they are not due a claim. The main reason for this is that these abandoned assets come from so many different sources. According to the website of the Idaho State Tax Commission, the dept. responsible for managing these assets: “These include stocks, bonds, mutual funds, bank accounts, uncashed payroll checks, utility deposits, traveler’s checks, contents from deposit boxes, and more. Most of the assets are ones that people didn’t know they had or just forgot about, and sometimes they are worth thousands of dollars.”

In order for money to be considered abandoned or “unclaimed”, it must lie dormant for a period of time that is specific to each state and type of asset. Idaho considers most types abandoned after five years of dormancy, though some are available for claiming after only one year.

There are a number of reasons why money may go unclaimed, but it is often as simple as forgetting to leave a forwarding address for previous employers or financial institutions. If a piece of mail gets sent back to the sender, and the rightful owner does not contact the holder within the dormancy period, the holder is then required by law to hand the funds over to the state.

The problem Idaho has, like all other states, is reuniting lost money with its true owners. Despite state awareness efforts and popular media coverage, most people are still just not aware of unclaimed property. Even those that are in the know usually don’t have any idea where to start their search. There are a number of people out there searching, but even those people don’t know all the tricks they need to utilize to maximize their odds of finding claims.

For the reasons stated above, Idaho now holds over 40 million dollars in unclaimed property, and that figure will almost certainly grow, because more and more money is turned over to the state all the time and it exceeds the amounts given back to the citizens. For this reason, it’s extremely important that people who are interested in searching for abandoned assets, learn how professional finders find these monies, and then put these same tactics in to action in their own searches. There are wrong ways to search, and right ways to search, and until citizens figure out the difference there are a number of obstacles that can stand between them and their money.

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RI residents owed $3M in
Reed’s office says residents must claim the

Thousands of new names on
The


Q: My mother passed away several months ago, and I was the executor. A firm called “Keane” contacted me about the possibility of some

California holding $6 billion in unclaimed money
Could you use a little cash? The state of California is holding $6 billion in unclaimed money, even celebrities' money.

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Is there money out there that's yours, just waiting for you to claim it? It's possible.

More than $6.6 million in unclaimed funds waiting for Taylor County residents
Taylor County residents who think — or hope — they might have some money waiting in the state's Unclaimed Property database can search the list at an event hosted by the Texas Comptroller's office and Taylor County Treasurer Lesa Crosswhite.

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