Lodging cash from sale of car? (£12k)
Discussion
£20 notes used to be the most forged note.
I recently saw a forgery of the new polymer note - there were some blatant errors however, but the person concerned got caught out by them.
I find it odd that someone would carry £12k around in £20 notes - the first thing I'd do would convert them to a higher denomination.
£12k in £20 notes is 600 notes!?
Hopefully they're not forgeries OP....
I recently saw a forgery of the new polymer note - there were some blatant errors however, but the person concerned got caught out by them.
I find it odd that someone would carry £12k around in £20 notes - the first thing I'd do would convert them to a higher denomination.
£12k in £20 notes is 600 notes!?
Hopefully they're not forgeries OP....
TonyRPH said:
£20 notes used to be the most forged note.
I recently saw a forgery of the new polymer note - there were some blatant errors however, but the person concerned got caught out by them.
I find it odd that someone would carry £12k around in £20 notes - the first thing I'd do would convert them to a higher denomination.
£12k in £20 notes is 600 notes!?
Hopefully they're not forgeries OP....
Yes it did cross my mind too.I recently saw a forgery of the new polymer note - there were some blatant errors however, but the person concerned got caught out by them.
I find it odd that someone would carry £12k around in £20 notes - the first thing I'd do would convert them to a higher denomination.
£12k in £20 notes is 600 notes!?
Hopefully they're not forgeries OP....
£20 x 50 notes, all neatly bundled up in to thousands.
I have his name, address, where he works, etc. He seems legit and the notes all look legit but i guess we'll find out soon....
Spevs said:
If your that concerned you could split it into three and pay it in over a few weeks.
I have found that certain banks, HSBC & Santander have more rigorous policies on cash deposits than say Nat West, so I don't think you can draw a general rule of thumb. Good Luck.
Doing that is more likely to raise suspicion.I have found that certain banks, HSBC & Santander have more rigorous policies on cash deposits than say Nat West, so I don't think you can draw a general rule of thumb. Good Luck.
The AML training for banking staff (I had to do it last week) teaches staff that regular cash deposits of round sums of money is a red flag. A single lump sum of cash of a believable value for a car is far less suspicious.
Simpo Two said:
anonymous said:
[redacted]
I think he meant the seller of the jetski would change them to £50s so he had less volume to carry when he went to buy the car. Still doesn't make sense though.Well thats the money lodged.
As a precaution i'd the V5C with the blokes address on it and i'd the facebook chat referencing the agreed price etc, but when i got to the cashier she just said "i assume you've just sold your car, given you've the V5C with you" and i replied yes and that was it.
All counted and lodged.
Not sure if they subsequently check for counterfeit notes but its in the bank anyway, so thats as much as i can do really.
As a precaution i'd the V5C with the blokes address on it and i'd the facebook chat referencing the agreed price etc, but when i got to the cashier she just said "i assume you've just sold your car, given you've the V5C with you" and i replied yes and that was it.
All counted and lodged.
Not sure if they subsequently check for counterfeit notes but its in the bank anyway, so thats as much as i can do really.
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