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Bizarre but true stories about real people collected by syndicated columnist Chuck Shepherd. Police in Twin Falls, Idaho, confiscated almost $1 billion in counterfeit money in October in a doomed scheme in which the loot consisted only of bills of the denomination of $1 million (which does not legally exist); a man from Buhl, Idaho, had tried to give a bank that amount as collateral for a loan.
According to police in Lafayette, Ind., in September, Earl Devine's counterfeit money was not much better: Though a popular name for $100 bills is "Benjamins" (for the face of Benjamin Franklin), Devine's $100 bills still had the face of Abraham Lincoln from the $5 bill he allegedly used as a model.
Bryan Perley, who apparently held a grudge against a
child-support caseworker, was charged in Orlando, Fla., with
several felony counts when he tried to arrest her by impersonating
a military officer and holding a fake, handwritten arrest warrant.
When the woman's colleagues would not cooperate with him, Perley
actually called for police backup, according to a report by
WFTV-TV. He told the dispatcher, "(The colleagues) don't understand
the chain of command in government. I've warned them."
(Send your Weird News to Chuck Shepherd, P.O. Box 18737, Tampa
FL 33679 or WeirdNews@earthlink.net or go to www.NewsoftheWeird.com.)
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