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Funny Like a $2 Bill

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retarded pilot said:
link doesn't work avalible only to registred users


I'm not a registered user and I can get to it fine... i will cut and paste.

PUT YOURSELF in Mike Bolesta's place. On the morning of Feb. 20, he buys a new radio-CD player for his 17-year-old son Christopher's car. He pays the $114 installation charge with 57 crisp new $2 bills, which, when last observed, were still considered legitimate currency in the United States proper. The $2 bills are Bolesta's idea of payment, and his little comic protest, too.

For this, Bolesta, Baltimore County resident, innocent citizen, owner of Capital City Student Tours, finds himself under arrest.

Finds himself, in front of a store full of customers at the Best Buy on York Road in Lutherville, locked into handcuffs and leg irons.

Finds himself transported to the Baltimore County lockup in Cockeysville, where he's handcuffed to a pole for three hours while the U.S. Secret Service is called into the case.

Have a nice day, Mike.

"Humiliating," the 57-year old Bolesta was saying now. "I am 6 feet 5 inches tall, and I felt like 8 inches high. To be handcuffed, to have all those people looking on, to be cuffed to a pole -- and to know you haven't done anything wrong. And me, with a brother, Joe, who spent 33 years on the city police force. It was humiliating."

What we have here, besides humiliation, is a sense of caution resulting in screw-ups all around.

"When I bought the stereo player," Bolesta explains, "the technician said it'd fit perfectly into my son's dashboard. But it didn't. So they called back and said they had another model that would fit perfectly, and it was cheaper. We got a $67 refund, which was fine. As long as it fit, that's all.

"So we go back and pay for it, and they tell us to go around front with our receipt and pick up the difference in the cost. I ask about installation charges. They said, 'No installation charge, because of the mix-up. Our mistake, no charge.' Swell.

"But then, the next day, I get a call at home. They're telling me, 'If you don't come in and pay the installation fee, we're calling the police.' Jeez, where did we go from them admitting a mistake to suddenly calling the police? So I say, 'Fine, I'll be in tomorrow.' But, overnight, I'm starting to steam a little. It's not the money -- it's the threat. So I thought, I'll count out a few $2 bills."

He has lots and lots of them.

With his Capital City Student Tours, he arranges class trips for school kids around the country traveling to large East Coast cities, including Baltimore. He's been doing this for the last 18 years. He makes all the arrangements: hotels, meals, entertainment. And it's part of his schtick that, when Bolesta hands out meal money to students, he does it in $2 bills, which he picks up from his regular bank, Sun Trust.

"The kids don't see that many $2 bills, so they think this is the greatest thing in the world," Bolesta says. "They don't want to spend 'em. They want to save 'em. I've been doing this since I started the company. So I'm thinking, 'I'll stage my little comic protest. I'll pay the $114 with $2 bills.'"

At Best Buy, they may have perceived the protest -- but did not sense the comic aspect of 57 $2 bills.

"I'm just here to pay the bill," Bolesta says he told a cashier. "She looked at the $2 bills and told me, 'I don't have to take these if I don't want to.' I said, 'If you don't, I'm leaving. I've tried to pay my bill twice. You don't want these bills, you can sue me.' So she took the money. Like she's doing me a favor."

He remembers the cashier marking each bill with a pen. Then other store personnel began to gather, a few of them asking, "Are these real?"

"Of course they are," Bolesta said. "They're legal tender."

A Best Buy manager refused comment last week. But, according to a Baltimore County police arrest report, suspicions were roused when an employee noticed some smearing of ink. So the cops were called in. One officer noticed the bills ran in sequential order.

"I told them, 'I'm a tour operator. I've got thousands of these bills. I get them from my bank. You got a problem, call the bank,'" Bolesta says. "I'm sitting there in a chair. The store's full of people watching this. All of a sudden, he's standing me up and handcuffing me behind my back, telling me, 'We have to do this until we get it straightened out.'

"Meanwhile, everybody's looking at me. I've lived here 18 years. I'm hoping my kids don't walk in and see this. And I'm saying, 'I can't believe you're doing this. I'm paying with legal American money.'"

Bolesta was then taken to the county police lockup in Cockeysville, where he sat handcuffed to a pole and in leg irons while the Secret Service was called in.

"At this point," he says, "I'm a mass murderer."

Finally, Secret Service agent Leigh Turner arrived, examined the bills and said they were legitimate, adding, according to the police report, "Sometimes ink on money can smear."

This will be important news to all concerned.

For Baltimore County police, said spokesman Bill Toohey, "It's a sign that we're all a little nervous in the post-9/11 world."

The other day, one of Bolesta's sons needed a few bucks. Bolesta pulled out his wallet and "whipped out a couple of $2 bills. But my son turned away. He said he doesn't want 'em any more."

He's seen where such money can lead.
 
if i were that man, would be sueing the pants off of best buy and that police dept. the pen used to check for fakes told them the bills were real.
 
I'm not one for filing bullshit lawsuits but that was ridiculous......If I were the Best Buy CEO I'd be calling him personally and offering him a full electronics remake of everything in his house/car/camera/office just to make up for a very humiliating experience that you had no way out of.....
 
And being CEO, I'd run a public article in the local paper stating an apology.

But then again, we're just little guys saying what we'd do if we were the "big" guy...
 
And of course the abuse of a suspects rights chaining him to a pole while not offering/prohibiting him an attorney under his Miranda rights. You are allowed to question someone, but to not allow him access to an attorney, hmmmm, can the city and Feds spell complaint?!?!?

I would ask Best Buy to pick up my attorney costs NOT to sue them and pay the attorney for my civil suit against the overzealous so-called enforcers of the law.
 
To be fair,the local cops were just tring to do their job.BUT the leg irons????? Just a bit over the top. And yes if the marker they use to see if the $$$ is real works, it should not be a problem, but since they were in numarical order was just too strange to let it go,they could have been stolen?
 
well the money pen don't mean squat the way they do the funny muney now anyway...I watched another 48hrs episode where they showed you how to make it using real $1dollar bills for the paper....so it fooled the pens and the tellers for the "feel" of the paper...the freakin show gave you everything but the color code of the green......anyway the store or the police had no right in ANY way shape or form to hold him like that in public.....my brother was detained like that in sebring and had to move away cause everybody that saw him just gave him some BS attitude about what happened....he did nothing wrong but people perceived him as bad because they saw him in handcuffs in front of a state building....I'm sure this guy from Best buy is going to have some of those issues now too when someone sees him in another store they might give him a hard time, maybe just thinking they're being funny....I'd be suprememly pissed about this situation if I were him....and I'm sure all of us would....it shows the disreguard for the law the police can have....Innocent until proven guilty????? didn't seem that way from this story......
 
first, I got 21 dollar bills for my 21st b-day they were in PERFECT order FROM THE BANK, some one in the retail business should not think aynything of this, seccond that BITCH that checked him out should lose her job, PERIOD, since when has the customer not been always right.
I would just love to know on what condition they held this man or arrested him in the first place. they had NOTHING from the start
 
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