Stupid Florida: Rare stamp may be sealed in Florida ballot box |
| Posted by: Whidden | | POSTED: 5:56 p.m. EST, November 11, 2006
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FORT LAUDERDALE, Florida (AP) -- An absentee ballot was mailed with what may have been a rare stamp worth as much as $200,000 -- the famous Inverted Jenny -- but the envelope is in a box that by law can't be opened.
Broward County Commissioner John Rodstrom discovered the stamp while reviewing absentee ballots. There was no name on the envelope, so the vote didn't count.
What looked like a small stamp collection on one envelope caught Rodstrom's eye about 8 p.m. Tuesday. At least one was from 1936, Rodstrom said. Then he noticed one had an upside-down World War I-era airplane -- the hallmark of an Inverted Jenny.
"I was a stamp collector when I was little," Rodstrom told The Miami Herald. "I recognized it."
Rodstrom discussed the stamp with other members of the canvassing board, and a stamp-collecting Broward County sheriff's deputy overheard them talking about the possible Jenny.
He said the stamp would be very valuable if it was real. But it was too late.
"By that time we had already sealed the box. And once you seal the box, under the election law you can't unseal it," Broward County Court Judge Eric Beller said.
Elections officials will retain the ballot for 22 months, Jenny Nash, a spokeswoman for the Florida secretary of state's office, told The Associated Press. After that, any action is up to the county elections supervisor.
A telephone message left with Fred Bellis, the executive assistant to Broward County Supervisor of Elections Brenda Snipes, was not immediately returned Saturday.
Snipes' spokeswoman, Mary Cooney, said the supervisor is too busy with balloting to focus on the stamp. Cooney said ballots and materials are usually destroyed after the 22-month holding period.
"She's (Snipes) not going to be able to take any time to even look at it until after the (ballot) certification on Monday," Cooney told the South Florida Sun-Sentinel.
Maynard Guss, president of the Sunrise Stamp Club, said an Inverted Jenny, if authentic, could be worth $200,000. But when the ballot was mailed the stamp was canceled, reducing its value. Guss estimated a canceled Jenny would likely sell for $20,000 to $100,000.
The 24-cent Jenny stamps were printed in 1918. Sheets were run through presses twice to process all the colors and on one pass, four went through backward. Inspectors caught the errors on three sheets and destroyed them, but somehow, a sheet of 100 stamps got through.
Stamp collectors have spent 88 years trying to find them all. | | Reply To this Message
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| Posted by: Viper1 | | That's amazing that someone would use that stamp! I wonder if that voter has any more of those stamps? Guess they won't know who it was for at least 22 months from now.
I saw a woman one time use 5 Zeppelin stamps on a package to her grandchild. The stamps were worth over $100,000 total if she had sold them to a stamp collector first. Once they were cancelled, their worth reduced drastically. The Postmaster urged her to take them before he cancelled them, but the woman was adamant about using them. Oh, well.... | | Reply To this Message
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| Posted by: mystic | | Does it matter if it is sealed in a box. I mean if it were mailed, then the post office would have stamped over it thus making it worthless anyhow.
I dont really pay attention to the mail...but dont they still make a stamp over the stamps so people cant reuse them?
Anyways the letter didnt have a name on it...so I guess we will never know who the idiot was that mailed it. | | Reply To this Message
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| Posted by: Viper1 | |
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mystic said this in post #3 :
Does it matter if it is sealed in a box. I mean if it were mailed, then the post office would have stamped over it thus making it worthless anyhow.
I dont really pay attention to the mail...but dont they still make a stamp over the stamps so people cant reuse them?
Anyways the letter didnt have a name on it...so I guess we will never know who the idiot was that mailed it. |
In this case, even a cancelled "inverted Jenny" could be worth $20,000 to $100,000 depending on how clean the cancellation was and the condition of the stamp.
As for the sender, the cancellation may point to post office that could define the area.
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| Posted by: mystic | |
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Viper1 said this in post #4 :
In this case, even a cancelled "inverted Jenny" could be worth $20,000 to $100,000 depending on how clean the cancellation was and the condition of the stamp.
As for the sender, the cancellation may point to post office that could define the area. |
Yeah....I read that in an article after I wrote my first post....Ill quote it since you did not.
Maynard Guss, president of the Sunrise Stamp Club, said an Inverted Jenny, if authentic, could be worth $200,000. But when the ballot was mailed the stamp was cancelled, reducing its value. Guss estimated a canceled Jenny would likely sell for $20,000 to $100,000.
http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNe...?hub=TopStories
Still however, with no name, a specific place does not mean much if a person cannot prove he/she mailed it. Unless it was an odd envelope that he had that half the county did not have.
If someone knew that it was worth anything, they would not have stupidly mailed it so the odds are against the person coming forward if they didnt know they had something to begin with. If they did know then they just lost a TON of money and they had better hope that they could prove it was theirs in the first place.
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Culture & Society Forum: Stupid Florida: Rare stamp may be sealed in Florida ballot box
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