Trustworthy Tokyo-ites handed in US$28 million of lost
cash last year, police said Monday, with three quarters of it returned to its
rightful owner, in the latest example of Japan's startling honesty.
RT.com reports upstanding citizens who had chanced upon wallets full
of money took a total 3.34 billion yen to their local police officers, a
spokeswoman for Tokyo Metropolitan Police told AFP.
They included one seemingly incorruptible person who,
according to the Sports Nippon, found a sports bag stuffed with notes worth US$155,000
-- enough to buy a Maserati GranTurismo MC, or a small apartment in the
Japanese capital.
Nearly 74 percent of the total cash found in the year
was eventually returned to the people who lost it, the spokeswoman said --
including the holdall full of money.
Under Japanese law, if something is not claimed after
three months, the person who handed it in is allowed to keep it.
But astonishingly, 390 million yen in cash went into
Tokyo's city coffers after finders relinquished that right.
Local media played up the story as further proof of
how safe Japan is, a point Tokyo hammered home during its successful bid to
host the 2020 Olympic Games.
The
country's relative security -- something many Japanese are proud of -- is often
remarked upon by visiting foreigners, who swap tales of wallets or passports accidentally abandoned in bars or taxis that invariably get returned.
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