Dollar hoard discovered in local dump. Residents frantically scrabble through trash to try and find the US dollar bills believed to have been discarded inside a cupboard.

Hundred dollar bills drifting in the air and buried under trash: a “green fever” has struck an Argentine town where residents have gathered a small fortune believed to have been hidden in a cupboard discarded at the local dump.
Unconfirmed reports of more than US$75,000 collected at the dump at Las Parejas in central Argentina in recent days have piqued such frenetic interest that authorities have had to close the facility.
“A friend got out of his truck and saw a crisp US$100 bill on the ground. It struck us because it was in impeccable condition,” said Federico Báez, one of the greenback beneficiaries.
“We each started to grab a share. It was like a game, to see who could grab the most bills. We got about US$10,000 between the six of us,” Báez told AFP.
“Then another kid came along and found US$25,000, he was luckier. I think there must be much more buried,” he added.
It is not known whether the finders will be allowed to keep their loot.
A popular theory doing the rounds on social media is that the money was hidden in a secret compartment of a cupboard that was thrown out after its owner died without heirs.
In Argentina, which has long been wracked by high inflation and where there is deep distrust in the banking system, it is common for people to keep cash savings in dollars in their homes.
Las Parejas mayor Horacio Compagnucci said his town had been struck by what he called “green madness.”
“In a context in which the country is having a difficult time from an economic point of view, the word ‘dollar’ is on everyone’s lips,” he told AFP.
Argentines have been living under exchange controls since 2019 as the government seeks to shore up foreign reserves.
The rules have become increasingly strict, to the point where each individual is allowed to buy no more than US$200 a month.
The unusual find in Las Parejas has also given rise to numerous memes, including one of President Alberto Fernández and his deputy Cristina Kirchner digging in the rubbish for cash. 

– TIMES/AFP
Ads Space
Ads Space
Ads Space
Ads Space
batimes.perfil.com – Editorial Perfil S.A. | © Perfil.com 2006-2022 – All rights reserved
Intellectual Property Registry Number 5346433

Address: California 2715, C1289ABI, CABA, Argentina | Phone: (+5411) 7091-4921 / (+5411) 7091-4922 | E-mail: [email protected]

source