Doing An Unclaimed Property Search Right
There was a news report recently about a man who’d lost his college ring while on a fishing trip and got it back after two decades. There was nothing special about the story except where the ring was the whole time and how he got it back. A fellow fisherman apparently found the $200 memento while gutting a large fish he caught 21 years after the owner lost it. The finder who opted to stay anonymous tracked-down the surprised owner Joe Richardson using the internet.
The story stuck in my mind because of the slim chances of the man’s ring winding-up in a fish a decade after and how effective the internet can be used in reuniting people with their lost stuff. Not many people are aware of the latter however if the estimated $33 BILLION worth of unclaimed property in the State Treasuries is any indication.
Doing a simple unclaimed property search can tie people up with substantial amounts of unclaimedmoney and any unclaimed property they may have lost track of. These can be valuable mementos and jewelry from safe deposit boxes turned over to the government as state unclaimedproperty, or cash from forgotten bank accounts or insurance and retirement benefits.
Besides lack of public awareness, another reason for the build-up of unclaimed property are the numerous unclaimedmoney finder sites on the web that more often than not cause many a disgruntled unclaimed property searcher to give-up looking for his lost money and assets. Learning the proper methods on going about an unclaimedmoney search can help you avoid the pitfalls and scam sites so prevalent on the web right now.








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