Family paid $250,000 after cashing in bonds left tattered by Hurricane Katrina
A man kept the bonds in a bank vault that was flooded during Katrina. He put the damaged paper in his attic, where they were found by his his family after he died.
NEW ORLEANS – One family is a quarter-of-a-million-dollars richer after finding Hurricane Katrina "survivors" stuffed in an attic – bearer bonds.
They took the tattered documents to the Louisiana Treasurer’s office, where officials pieced them together 18 years later.
"You never know what could be unclaimed property," Louisiana Treasurer John Schroder said in a news release.
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"So a bearer bond is a bond like municipal bond or anything else that was issued before there were computers," he added. "In order for a person or an entity to get paid the interest on the bond that they purchased, there were these coupons attached to the bond certificate, and literally you would clip the coupon and the coupon had a date and an amount, and you would go to the bank with your coupon on the date that was specified, and they would pay you the amount specified. That's how you got paid your interest on bonds."
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Before and after Hurricane Katrina
A Louisiana man bought bonds and stored them in a safe deposit box at the Whitney Bank in New Orleans. Hurricane Katrina ravaged the city in 2005, and the floods put the bank, all safety deposit boxes and bearer bonds underwater.
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Once the water subsided, the man collected his soggy bonds and put them in his attic and apparently forgot about them.
The man recently died, and his family found the bonds while cleaning out his house. They were in shreds after being underwater and then stored in attic heat.
"They had sort of, I think, given up on being able to collect on all of them, because when they went looking for the original paying agent and the paying agent no longer existed, and they were at a loss as to what to do and someone suggested they contact our office," John Broussard, the Louisiana Treasury Chief Investment Officer, said in the release.
Officials of the Unclaimed Property department researched the bonds and found that the paying agent had reported the coupons and interest unclaimed before going under. The state still had the money and told the family to bring in the rotten paper.
"This is a very rare case where we received all deteriorated paper bonds," Broussard said. "We scattered the torn and wrinkled bonds across the conference table. In the end, we were able to successfully match the physical bonds with our treasury records, and the significant claim was paid out to the heirs of those bonds."
Costliest U.S. hurricane ever
Hurricane Katrina was the costliest U.S. hurricane ever to make landfall. The Category 3 cyclone blew sustained winds of 125 mph, which helped push a storm surge upwards of 30 feet ashore, but breaches of levees around New Orleans caused devastating floods in the city.
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Surveys estimated damage topped $191.3 billion, based on 2023 Consumer Price Index values.
In addition to the loss of property, nearly 1,400 people were reported to have been killed by the storm.