/ 27 October 2005

Website lists Californian lost-and-found

Danny de Vito has a $26 cheque waiting for him from All-State Insurance. Reese Witherspoon is owed nearly $100 by Tiffany.

And California first lady Maria Shriver has more than $300 waiting for her in the state’s unclaimed property vault, according to the state controller’s website.

State controller Steve Westly kicked off a campaign on Wednesday to find the owners of $4,8-billion-worth of items in the vault, including cheques, jewellery and antique gold coins.

Once a year, the controller’s office puts out ads listing owners of uncollected assets. Westly is making the process easier by creating a new web link where people can quickly determine if the goods belong to them.

Among the more impressive of the unclaimed items is an 88-carat natural Blue Star sapphire ring worth $25 000.

But before anyone thinks they might have a new bauble, Westly cautioned that most of the gems were turned over by banks from safe deposit boxes. Those claiming them must be listed as the owner or next of kin.

“There’s a real uptick,” Westly said of the number of the unclaimed items. “It happens more often then you’d believe. Someone passes away. Someone moves and doesn’t change the address.”

Last year, the state opened 503 000 new unclaimed accounts, bringing the total number to about 7,6-million, said Garin Casaleggio, a spokesperson for the controller’s office.

Carlos Orellana (32), of Los Angeles, received one for $2 688. The janitorial-supply manufacturer had tucked away money in a bank account for years, but when he finally contacted the bank, he found the money had been turned over to the state.

“I just thought the money was gone” he said. “They told me I could get it back, but it was very complicated.”

Orellana, a native of El Salvador, said he planned to use part of the money to buy his four-year-old daughter, Litzy, a bicycle.

Westly also said his office was working on a Spanish-language version of the website.

Banks, insurance companies and other institutions must forward unclaimed property to the state when an owner cannot be found.

State officials check recent tax records for a more current address. If they find one, they notify people by mail.

But they can’t do much beyond that, and the state holds the assets in perpetuity, earning interest on the money each year.

Laurence Martin, a former adjunct professor at California State University, came to collect a check for more than $14 000 from unclaimed retirement funds, but didn’t get to go home with the money because his cheque was accidentally switched with another recipient.

“It’s good to know the money hadn’t disappeared,” he said. — Sapa-AP

On the net

www.searchthevault.com