Ohio Team Finds $25,000 Thrown in Trash


Thanks to our team in Oberlin, OH, a local family recovered an envelope with $25,000 that was accidentally thrown out in the trash. Here’s the story …

Operations Supervisor Gary Capan got a frantic call from a customer saying she lost something important in the garbage.

“It turned out to be $25,000,” said Capan. “They were cleaning out their house for their grandmother and they cleaned out the refrigerator, threw out all the garbage, grabbed all the freezer stuff and put it in a bag, and then the grandma was like, ‘Hey, there's an envelope with $25,000 in there, don't lose that,’ and she's like, “Grandma, I already lost that, it's in the garbage!”

Capan said they immediately got to work to find the missing money.

“One team was trying to track down the driver and find out exactly what his location was and if he made it to the landfill yet,” said Capan.

He said once trash hits the landfill, it's game over.

“What happens when they get to the landfill is, they will come in, they'll drop off their load of garbage, the bulldozers will immediately start smoothing it out, pushing it into the hill, dropping dirt on it and start covering up the process of the landfill. And we do that in a nonstop process,” said Capan. “If it got dropped there, there's no finding it anymore.”

Fortunately, the truck driver had not dropped his load at the landfill yet, so Capan and his team made arrangements to have the truck driver drop off his six-ton load at a recycling center in Oberlin.

As soon as it was dumped out, it was all hands on deck to find the cash.

“I told the girls, if it’s in there, we’ll find it for you, because they were pretty upset,” said Dan Schoewe, the operations manager at the recycling center.

Schoewe was one of the 10 workers who jumped in to search for the money and was the lucky one who spotted the bag it was inside.

“Couldn't believe it took 10 minutes and actually, I said, ‘Man, it looks just like that,’ pulled it off, opened it up and there was the package inside with the money. They were so happy, they were tearing up,” said Schoewe.

Schoewe said over the years the Republic Services team has found live checks, jewelry and cash for customers, but it isn’t easy.

“It can be very, very difficult. It's rare that we can find something for somebody. So this is like the biggest one I've seen in 30 years,” said Schoewe.

Fast action and incredible teamwork resulted in a happy ending for the Lorain County family.

“Makes us feel good here. Made myself feel good. I was like, 'yeah, that's awesome.' What a great story. And we're just glad to help,” said Capan.

This story was originally published by Jade Jarvis on Scripps station WEWS in Cleveland.