Wednesday, July 6, 2016

Back $eat Driver

"Cab driver returns $187,000 in cash left in the back seat" by Nestor Ramos Globe Staff  July 05, 2016

A lot of people have left things in Raymond “Buzzy” MacCausland’s cab over his 50 years of driving in and around Boston — keys, wallets, cellphones. A guy once left a briefcase with $10,000.

MacCausland gave it all back.

So when a homeless man abandoned his backpack on the back seat early Saturday afternoon, MacCausland, 72, headed over to the hotel where the man had said he was staying. At the front desk, he unzipped the bag in search of the owner’s name. Instead, spilling out of the top were three thick stacks of cash — the tip of a $187,786.75 iceberg.

“I said, ‘Is it drug money? Is it stolen money? Is it Whitey Bulger money?’” MacCausland said. “I made a U-turn and went right to the police station.” There, a sergeant turned over the bag. Onto the table spilled tattered clothes and papers, a few prescription bottles — and pile after pile of $20, $50, and $100 bills.

Within hours, police found the owner at the hotel — a homeless man who had cashed a sizable inheritance check and tucked it away in his backpack. Police reviewed documents that proved the man’s story — his sudden wealth was not ill-gotten — and just like that, MacCausland had given back almost two hundred grand.

The 47-year-old heir, who asked that his name not be printed because he is embarrassed about the incident, described leaving the cab to run a quick errand and promising to return, but then losing track of time.

Recovering from drug addiction and living at the Pine Street Inn for the last six months, the man had learned just days earlier that his recently deceased parents had unexpectedly left him hundreds of thousands of dollars. No bank would cash the check, he said, so he went to a check-cashing store and stuffed the money into his backpack.

Outside, on the corner of Massachusetts Avenue and Tremont Street, he waved to the first cab he saw, a late-model Toyota Camry hybrid with MacCausland behind the wheel.

Not every cab driver would have picked up the fare — a tall, tattooed character with one leg in a cast in an area thick with homeless people, but MacCausland said he always picks up homeless people.

MacCausland admitted that the thought of keeping the money had indeed crossed his mind. “But in the end, he made the right decision,” Larry Meister, president of Independent Taxi, said.

Good deeds aren’t done for monetary gain, but it’s worth noting that MacCausland also has a commendation from Boston Police Commissioner William Evans coming, a spokeswoman said.

“This hackney driver exhibited exemplary behavior and his honest deed should be recognized,” Evans said in a statement. “His actions represent the high standards that our department has for our drivers.”

Standing outside his hotel on Tuesday, the heir said he was going to take a year to recover from many months of homelessness and decades of hard living. He checked into a hotel and was still getting used to not having to hide his meager things from overnight thieves.

After that, he wasn’t sure: He’d been trying to find an apartment, but his credit is disastrous. He says he has more inheritance money coming in the years ahead, but said, “I’m going to do what I always said I’m going to do: Die in Prague.”

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Too bad Uber is putting Bo$ton taxis out of bu$ine$$.

Eric Holder weighs in for Uber against fingerprint checks

He's against spying, yup!

Wal-Mart to test grocery delivery with Uber, Lyft

Uber, Lyft praise new ride-for-hire regulations bill, while taxi drivers fume

Police chiefs say ride-for-hire proposal does not protect public

Uber proves profitable for at least one group — lobbyists

Senate passes ride-for-hire bill that adds new regulations

Lyft expects the same, or fewer, rides in June

Blind man sues for right to be served at drive-through without a car

What's the gimmick?

NDU: Cab driver gets free cruise after returning $187,000 to passenger

FURTHER UPDATES:

Uber allowed to operate in Philadelphia during Democratic convention

Taxi drivers protest as ex-Uber driver arraigned

"A California man who told the police that “Google was watching him” has been charged in a series of attacks on the company after he was accused of firebombing two Street View cars and shooting at the windows of a building."

Better stay off the roads then.