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Minnesota Waitress Stacy Knutson Left $12,000 Tip?

By DINESH RAMDE 04/ 4/12 05:50 PM ET AP

Money

-- A Minnesota waitress who says a customer told her she could keep a box containing $12,000 has sued after police impounded the cash as suspected drug money.

Stacy Knutson of Moorhead, Minn., filed a lawsuit asking that the cash be returned to her. She said she believes the money was meant as an anonymous gift from someone who knew that she, her husband and five children were struggling with severe financial difficulties.

"I do know that the person gave me what was in that to-go bag," Knutson wrote in the lawsuit filed in March. "Thus as I understand it, it is mine."

A message left at Knutson's home Wednesday was returned by her attorney, Craig Richie, who said his client is "overwhelmed" and didn't want to speak to a reporter.

The lawsuit says Knutson was working at the Fry'n Pan restaurant when a customer left behind a takeout box from another restaurant. She followed the diner to her car and tried to return the box but the lady said, "No, I am good, you keep it," the lawsuit said.

When Knutson went back into the kitchen and opened the box, she found three wads of bills – $100s, $50s, $20s and $10s – wrapped in rubber bands, Richie said.

Even though she really needed the money, she decided to call police, her attorney said.

Officers told her to wait 90 days in case someone claimed the money. No one did but police still refused to return the cash, saying it was being held in a drug investigation because it smelled of marijuana, Richie said.

But if Knutson believed the diner was the rightful owner of the cash, and that the diner gave her explicit permission to keep the money, why would Knutson even bother going to police?

"She's saying, hey, this is a lot of money," Richie said. "She doesn't want to be in a position where she's doing something wrong."

After no one claimed the money, that confirmed for her that the money was truly a gift, Richie said.

Moorhead police Lt. Tory Jacobson said when money is usually found and turned over to police, the finder can keep it if no one claims it in 90 days. But in a narcotics case, the money goes to the county attorney's office unless the finder persuades a judge to award the cash to them, he said.

"That doesn't mean she can't raise the issue with the judge," Jacobson said of Knutson. "It's just not the police department's decision to make."

Richie said police told him they smelled marijuana on the bills and that a police dog confirmed their suspicions. Jacobson acknowledged that a police dog detected an unspecified drug.

But Richie said at least one of Knutson's co-workers took a deep whiff of the bills to jokingly see what that much money smells like, and the man didn't detect any scent of marijuana.

And even if the bills did smell of drugs, Richie said that doesn't give police the right to keep them. Jacobson declined to comment, citing the ongoing investigation.

The lawsuit says Knutson is not being accused of having anything to do with drugs herself.

Knutson said she was convinced about what really happened: that the windfall was God's way of answering her family's prayers.

"It is a complete miracle to see our prayers answered," she wrote, "but then difficult to face the reality of the struggle it is to obtain it (the money) from the Moorhead Police Department."

___

Dinesh Ramde can be reached at dramde(at)ap.org.

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-- A Minnesota waitress who says a customer told her she could keep a box containing $12,000 has sued after police impounded the cash as suspected drug money. Stacy Knutson of Moorhead, Minn., filed...
-- A Minnesota waitress who says a customer told her she could keep a box containing $12,000 has sued after police impounded the cash as suspected drug money. Stacy Knutson of Moorhead, Minn., filed...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dharken ODale
04:29 AM on 04/09/2012
Being a police officer is tough. The money 'smells' of marijuana, is that code?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Gerald OHare
Retired guy living in the great state of N.J.
03:57 AM on 04/09/2012
Never ever tell the police about cash. Simply take the money home and keep your mouth shut. The police are just as bad as the drug dealers. She will never see this money again and no judge is going to decide in her favor. Even if the judge did decide in her favor then she would have to pay taxes on the money. Also lets say that it is drug money and she gets to keep the money if the judge decides in her favor. Don't you think the drug dealer would go after the money and now everyone knows who she is. CASH is always secret.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DMSmith
12:21 AM on 04/09/2012
The police are trying to keep the money. Period.
It was a tip, regardless of where the tipper got it, or what it smelled like.
She should never have called the police - it's what she gets for being honest and going to the police who too often aren't. Sad, but true.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Brautigan
11:20 PM on 04/08/2012
Once again, we learn the valuable lesson:

Don't call the cops.
02:27 PM on 04/09/2012
stop snitchin!!
01:33 PM on 04/08/2012
So... pot dealers keep their money in the same bag with their pot? Why would they do that?
I could see the bills having traces of cocaine, but not pot. Something smells fishy, to me.
11:47 AM on 04/08/2012
I just don't understand why people call the police when they find cash.  Where do they think it goes eventually?  To some amazing public project?  To the "rightful owner"?  IT GOES TO THE POLICE!  They have no incentive to make sure it gets anywhere but in their pockets.  In some municipalities, they put a thin veil between the money and the policeman's pocket by holding that the more "illegal" cash a PD confiscates the higher their budget awards are in the following year..or other jargon that means "WE get this cash now."  Any way you cut it, the increasing confiscation of cash by the police is motivated by the fact that they get to keep it.  All that confiscated cash, if it isn't just flat out divided up and pocketed, may well go to the purchase of a private car for an officer, or even houses.  Incidentally folks, you know how it used to be that banks had to report 10K in cash deposits to the FBI?  Well Eliot Spitzer got caught buying pros because a bank reported the 6K in cash he paid and the service deposited.  Law enforcement wants our cash.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PatTheHat
Hey hey my my rock & roll will never die
07:19 PM on 04/07/2012
Oh that whacky The Constabulary Gang, why they're the biggest bunch of kleptos, shake down artists, plain ol' thieves, and out & out strong arm robbers, there is.
05:18 PM on 04/07/2012
If you just take her word for it we know the money was left as a tip. The police only have a hypothesis because a dog alerted to marijuana smell, but then all currency out there has assorted residues including drugs on the bills. If people knew how many of their paper money had drug residue on it they would be aghast. Someone in authority should make a decision on this promptly as all the facts are in.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tawnya Coomer
4th year Criminal Justice Student
03:21 PM on 04/07/2012
I guess they gave it back to her after all. YAY!!!.. Here is the link, unless of course it is wrong, and gee what a shocker that would be right?
http://abcnews.go.com/US/waitress-12000-tip-back-police/story?id=16087809#.T4CTNpmXTdc
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tawnya Coomer
4th year Criminal Justice Student
03:16 PM on 04/07/2012
Dang. Give me a tip like that. It is funny. Celebrities tip like this all the time and I bet anything that most of the bills smell of cocaine. I don't know what the big deal is. She did the right thing. She tried to return it. He told her to keep it. She was uncomfortable with the amount so she contacted the police. I bet I have money on me right now that has some kind of drug trace or residue on it along with most of the money circulating around the U.S-- This is bull. I bet they kept to to themselves!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
X Williams
34 yrs old, college educated, african american. Re
01:08 PM on 04/07/2012
Good for her. I have never understood the people who find money and rush to the police. No way would I ever do that. Yeah.. Like the cops (and anyone else) wont look for a reason to keep it. Lolol
11:54 AM on 04/08/2012
I am on the same page.  What do they think happens if they don't call the police and just start spending it?  At worst, the police come to them and say:  You spent some marked bills from a bank robbery, where did you get it?  The answer to that question is:  I don't know.  There is no way you CAN know where money comes from and if these cases in which money is "confiscated as evidence" ever did go to trial, some not-even-very-clever attorney would point out that the third party recipient of cash can't say where it came from.  So it can't be used as evidence if it's has changed hands.  The government has us scared of our own shadows.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
X Williams
34 yrs old, college educated, african american. Re
09:40 PM on 04/08/2012
lol.. you are exactly correct. I wouldn't do the cops job for them. I remember something my brother once said. We were having a conversation about how the recruiters at various companies ask a lot of personal sensitive information about criminal history, etc. He stated this. He said he never volunteers "ANY" information. He said they would need to tell him what he had and not the other way around and that they would need to "earn" their money. I found it funny. But it kind of relates to this case. If a bill is marked as you stated then I would deal with the cops then. But if it isn't, oh well....
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
X Williams
34 yrs old, college educated, african american. Re
01:07 PM on 04/07/2012
Test
12:58 AM on 04/07/2012
DRUG MONEY not a tip!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tawnya Coomer
4th year Criminal Justice Student
03:17 PM on 04/07/2012
Why because it smelled of pot? So what? There was no drug deal. She should be able to keep it.
04:02 PM on 04/07/2012
I am not against this waitress keeping the money but the IRS will make sure she claims it on her taxes!
12:05 PM on 04/06/2012
It smelled like Marijuana? They'd really be in business if they tested for cocaine.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tawnya Coomer
4th year Criminal Justice Student
03:17 PM on 04/07/2012
HAHAHAHA- When my first post comes through read it. I said the same thing!
11:33 AM on 04/06/2012
The Police forces in that area of the state are being starved for funds by the counties and state this is just legalized theft by the government. Another ramification of the starve government movement of the tea party.