Man finds $92,233,720,368,547,800 in his PayPal account
Posted by: Timothy Tibbetts on 07/17/2013 07:41 AM
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Some people would be happy with a windfall of a few bucks, but 92 quadrillion?
Delaware County resident Chris Reynolds received just such a shocking delivery from PayPal on Friday, when he opened his monthly statement from the online money-transfer company via email and saw that his ending balance was $92,233,720,368,547,800.

This guy has a great sense of humor. "I'm just feeling like a million bucks," Reynolds told the Daily News yesterday. "At first I thought that I owed quadrillions. It was quite a big surprise."
Shortly afterwards his account was back to zero. Too bad, he could have started his own car company just like a well-known PayPal founder.
Still, Reynolds said, the imaginary epic windfall left him feeling charitable. After opening the email, he donated $30 to the Democratic slate for Delaware County Council.
"I'm a very responsible guy," he said. "I would pay the national debt down first. Then I would buy the Phillies, if I could get a great price."
I think he should be a comedian. He was loaded with one-liners here.
In case you thought it was over, he had one more; "The sad part is that I got word that they still need me to renew the credit card that's attached to this account," he said. "So, even though I have 90 quadrillion dollars, they still don't trust me."
Wait, 90? He blew 2 quadrillion already?

This guy has a great sense of humor. "I'm just feeling like a million bucks," Reynolds told the Daily News yesterday. "At first I thought that I owed quadrillions. It was quite a big surprise."
Shortly afterwards his account was back to zero. Too bad, he could have started his own car company just like a well-known PayPal founder.
Still, Reynolds said, the imaginary epic windfall left him feeling charitable. After opening the email, he donated $30 to the Democratic slate for Delaware County Council.
"I'm a very responsible guy," he said. "I would pay the national debt down first. Then I would buy the Phillies, if I could get a great price."
I think he should be a comedian. He was loaded with one-liners here.
In case you thought it was over, he had one more; "The sad part is that I got word that they still need me to renew the credit card that's attached to this account," he said. "So, even though I have 90 quadrillion dollars, they still don't trust me."
Wait, 90? He blew 2 quadrillion already?
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