Home »
Europe
» It's a Christmas miracle! Church keeps £100,000 found in a bin-bag on its doorstep after court rules 'finders, keepers'
It's a Christmas miracle! Church keeps £100,000 found in a bin-bag on its doorstep after court rules 'finders, keepers'
- A bin-bag with £100,000 in cash was left outside a church property
- After police found no criminal link, the money has gone to the church
- It is two-and-a-half times what the York church normally raise in a year
In a good year, when the sun shines on the summer fete and the congregation digs deep, one parish church can hope to collect up to £40,000.
But as the Reverend and his flock rejoiced in the birth of Christ yesterday, they were also celebrating coming into almost three times that in one fell swoop.
A bin bag containing £100,000 was found on the doorstep of a former vicarage owned by the St Thomas with St Maurice Church in York in August.
Blessed gift: The Parish Church of St Thomas with St Maurice, in York, has been awarded £100,000 which was found outside one of its properties earlier this year
Four months later, a court has decided the sum should be given to the church, which plans to spend it on charitable causes.
The
current occupier of the old vicarage building found the bag on bin
collection day and did the honest thing by immediately handing it into
police. Officers launched an investigation into how the money came to be
dumped there and whether the bank notes were linked to criminal
activity.
However, after
being unable to find any evidence of criminality, officers ruled that
the cash couldn’t be claimed as proceeds of crime.
A
hearing was held at York Magistrates’ Court to decide what should
happen to it and its ruling has been announced just in time for
Christmas.
Eleanor Course,
the church diocese spokesman, said there was no dispute over who should
be awarded the funds and the person who found the cash didn’t contest
the church receiving it. She added: ‘It was just a matter of waiting for
the magistrates to decide.’ The award was officially made to the church
council of St Thomas with St Maurice under section one of the 1897
Police Property Act.
The
Act gives the public a route by which they can seek the return of
property and allows for the disposal of unclaimed property. Under the
law, if the owner of the property can’t be established, the magistrates
must decide what to do with it.
Christmas bonus: The money is two-and-a-half times the £40,000 that St Thomas with St Maurice Church usually raises in income each year
Miss Course confirmed that the church was chosen by the court because it owns the property where the bag was left.
Yesterday,
the church’s vicar, the Rev Philip Moore, declined to comment on the
good news and referred inquiries to the York diocese, which has promised
to make sure the funds are used to benefit the local community.
Miss Course said detailed plans have yet to be drawn up.
She
said: ‘No decisions have been taken as to how the money will be spent.
We don’t know if it will go on a single project or not but it will be
used for the church’s work in the community. Clearly it’s great news for
the church.’
Finders, keepers: After York police could find no criminal activity linked to the money, a court awarded it to the local church
And the local residents’ association has already begun discussing which local charities could benefit from the windfall.
Martin
Crosby, chairman of The Groves association, said two worthy causes
include York Arc Light Project, which provides accommodation and support
for the homeless; and Door 84, a youth club which caters for eight to
17-year-olds and also doubles as a broader community centre.
The church hosts children’s play groups and has a vibrant student membership as it is close to York St John University.
A
spokesman for North Yorkshire Police said: ‘An investigation was
carried out to see if the money was linked to crime. No definite link to
crime has been established and there is insufficient evidence for the
money to be forfeited under the Proceeds of Crime Act.’
Earlier
this year a woman who forgot she left a bag containing £5,000 cash in a
church had it returned after six years. A parishioner found the bag on a
peg at the church in Brixham, Devon, and handed it into police. It was
then returned to owner Karen Griggs, 47.
Post a Comment