Cash Back Guarantee: The U.S. Redeems Damaged Bills Because The Dollar Depends On It
The Treasury reviews some 24,000 cases a year and reimburses around $30 million to people whose money has burn burned, flooded or otherwise damaged. This service helps underpin the dollar's integrity.
by Josh Axelrod
Aug 11, 2019
4 minutes
Confettied scraps of shredded money blanket a table as a federal employee inspects each piece beneath a magnifying glass. A sliver containing Benjamin Franklin's face is examined before being placed in a pile with matching fragments.
Meticulously, workers piece together bills, as if solving a jigsaw puzzle. Noting the serial numbers, they deem that this pile of shreds contains value and move on to the next task, peeling apart water-logged bills congealed in a sodden slab, probably recovered from a flood-hit home.
These bills are among about 24,000 claims annually the U.S. Treasury reviews from people seeking reimbursement for their mutilated currency. It redeems an average $30 million a
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