Catlady
Well-known Member
- Location
- Southern AZ
The other night I watched a repeat of Alfred Hitchcock's episode "Not the running type'' (1960). The ending had a plot twist, very clever and original.
This man was a bookkeeper at a bank. He stole $200,000, was tried and sent to prison for 15 years and he served 13 for good behavior. After release the detective went to visit him and warned him he still owed the $200,000 even though he served prison time for the theft. The man agreed and returned the $$. Later on he was on a cruise and was telling another passenger how you can ''borrow'' some money, invest it for 13 years and keep the interest and then return the money borrowed. He claimed that he earned $154,000 in interest.
That must have been some very high interest percentage, but I do remember in the 1960's some CDs paid like 5%. I know the episode is just fiction, but could the bookkeeper get away with it in real life? Would not the cops find out about it and demand the original money plus the interest since it was earned with stolen money? Any comments?
This man was a bookkeeper at a bank. He stole $200,000, was tried and sent to prison for 15 years and he served 13 for good behavior. After release the detective went to visit him and warned him he still owed the $200,000 even though he served prison time for the theft. The man agreed and returned the $$. Later on he was on a cruise and was telling another passenger how you can ''borrow'' some money, invest it for 13 years and keep the interest and then return the money borrowed. He claimed that he earned $154,000 in interest.
That must have been some very high interest percentage, but I do remember in the 1960's some CDs paid like 5%. I know the episode is just fiction, but could the bookkeeper get away with it in real life? Would not the cops find out about it and demand the original money plus the interest since it was earned with stolen money? Any comments?
Last edited: