It wasn't until a store manager and others helped a man round up money blowing around an auto parts store parking that something started to seem fishy.
"We were all joking with him, 'Where's the dye packs?'" said Amy McCaulley, manager of the AutoZone store in Boulder City, told the Las Vegas Sun for a Wednesday report. She referred to devices that banks bundle with cash in a robbery to mark bills as stolen.
When the man gunned his Jeep Commander out of the AutoZone parking lot without even a thank you, McCaulley noted the Arizona license plate number and called authorities.
Boulder City police stopped the vehicle on U.S. 93 heading toward Hoover Dam, questioned the 49-year-old driver and a female passenger, and confiscated a stash of cash they found hidden in the spare tire beneath the rear of the vehicle.
Police tallied the haul at $538,780.
"You got to love the criminal mind," Boulder City Police Chief Thomas Finn said of the Friday seizure, which investigators believe was drug proceeds. "Sometimes they make it easy."
Police did not release the names of the driver or passenger, both Mexican citizens whom authorities said were not arrested. The man told officers he had no idea there was money in the spare tire under the vehicle, which he said he and the passenger borrowed from a Phoenix resident to go on vacation.
First of all, when the cops stopped them, they had to have known that they had this cash (but maybe not just how much) in the vehicle, since they'd been chasing some of it around the parking lot earlier.
Secondly, who knowingly lends a car with more than half a million dollars on board to someone so they can drive it around on vacation? Either the owner didn't know the cash was there, or he/she was counting on them to get it somewhere, where someone else would then get it. Whatever it was, I guess their story checked out, since the cops let them go.
Like I said, weird.
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