why sako ang gibutangan?money should be kept in a safe place....ing-ana jud na ang mahitabo kung naa kay maid...so better wla ky maid ky basin malabay ang mga dli dapat ilabay....tsk...tsk...tsk...
why sako ang gibutangan?money should be kept in a safe place....ing-ana jud na ang mahitabo kung naa kay maid...so better wla ky maid ky basin malabay ang mga dli dapat ilabay....tsk...tsk...tsk...
murag malabo na mauli tong kwataha oi sa panahon karon...
kalooy sad sa maid na promote to lifetime in service.
nindot manang butangan ang sako. kay dili ma ilhan. ang2x sa bag. bunlot dayun .hahahah!
whahahhha.. sako d i ang gibutang.ahahahaha
ky ngano!hahaha..
Nabawi nya ang uban pero gamay nalang kaau.
Dollars owner gets money back | Sun.Star Network Online
THE businessman who claimed ownership of P2.9 million worth of US dollar bills dumped and later partially recovered at the Inaya-wan landfill yesterday got what remained of his cash.
Emiliano Tanpin Jr., together with Rossana Tanpin-Poraque, went to the National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) 7 headquarters yesterday and presented an affidavit of ownership executed before lawyer Noelo Bacalla, a notary public.
They attached documents like a 2006 certificate of registration issued by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas to their foreign exchange business, the Cebu Twin Dragon Marketing Corp.
They also submitted a certificate from the Department of Trade and Industry and a mayor’s permit issued by City Hall.
The recovery of the cash was largely because of Julie Compisto, half-brother of the scavenger who found most of the money, and Victoria Can-dido, who turned over the cash through Inayawan Barangay Captain Roque Ignacio.
Turnover
Compisto went to the NBI 7 last Nov. 28 and turned over 170 pieces of $100 bills, or some P827,900 (at P48.7 to the dollar), to Supervising Agent Renan Oliva.
Hours later, Candido, who is Compisto’s cousin, returned 35 pieces of the $100 bills, worth P170,450, to Ignacio who asked the NBI 7 to pick it up.
Some P1,935,500 could no longer be found, with Candido saying much of it was used to fund the early Christmas at White Road, the name people call that shanty-lined strip of land leading to the Inayawan landfill.
Candido said some of the money paid for the rice that she gave away to people in the neighborhood.
When the rice ran out, she gave out cash instead.
“This is how life is like in the dumpsite. When somebody finds something valuable in the garbage, it is shared,” she had said in an earlier interview.
Candido said Compisto gave her 60 $100 bills.
And before doing so, Compisto’s younger half-brother, Napoleon Ursabia, the person who actually found the money, already gave some away.
Likewise, she said, Ursabia wasn’t the only one present when the dollar bills, placed inside a plastic sack, were uncovered.
Both were compelled to return the money after it became the subject of media coverage.
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