A Montana man is hoping the federal government will reimburse him for his dog's expensive taste.
Wayne Klinkel said his golden retriever, Sundance, ate five $100 bills when he was left unattended in the car for a few minutes. Klinkel, left the bills inside a spring-loaded cubbyhole between the car's two front seats as he and his wife made a stop on their drive to visit their daughter. When they returned to their vehicle, there was no trace of the money - aside from half of a $100 bill on the driver's seat.
For the next several days, Klinkel followed Sundance around outside his daughter's Colorado home with a pair of rubber gloves and plastic baggies. From his past experience picking up after the dog, he knew the paper would probably exist the animal undigested.
He ended up retrieving large parts of two bills, and his daughter found additional bill pieces in her backyard one the snow melted. Klinkel said he washed all the remnant with dishsoap, dried and ironed the bills, and taped them together. He then took the pieced-together bills to various local banks to have them replace. Every bank refused, but referred him to the U.S. Treasury Department's Bureau of Engraving and Printing, where his request is apparently less unusual than it sounds.
Klinkel said he feels "very comfortable" that he has enough of each $100 bill to get his money replaced, but he has yet to submit his claim. The bills currently are now sitting under an iron to keep them nice and flat.
Until he gets his money replaced, Klinkel plans to remember two things. First, don't ever put anything of value in his car's cubbyhole. Second: "No more dogs, ever, will be unattended in the car. We normally don't do that, but we were gone for 45 minutes, tops. But Sundance, he never quits surprising me".
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