‘This is Cecil. The dog has never done anything bad in his life until he ate $4,000.’

‘This is Cecil. The dog has never done anything bad in his life until he ate $4,000.’

 


“We looked at each other and said, ‘What are we going to do?’” said Clayton Law about his goldendoodle, who chewed up a stack of cash

Source: https://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/2024/01/03/cecil-dog-eat-money-cash/?fbclid=IwAR1JJesrGbwYhf3Y6T6NHz7M4VE78tysHM9vJc60v4BqeMEMsdqd6v4CKME
Cecil the goldendoodle ate $4,000 in cash. (Clayton and Carrie Law )
5 min

Clayton Law pulled $4,000 out of his joint savings account last month. He and his wife were having a fence installed at their home in Pittsburgh, and the workers asked to be paid in cash.


After returning from the bank with a sealed envelope full of $100 and $50 bills, he set the money on a kitchen counter, intending to stash it away. But he never got the chance.


Thirty minutes later, Law was stunned to find tiny pieces of chewed-up bills strewn across the floor. In a panic, he hollered for his wife, Carrie Law.

Some of the cash that Cecil chewed up. (Clayton and Carrie Law)

“He was shouting, ‘Cecil ate $4,000!’” Carrie recalled about that Dec. 8 afternoon.


“I ran in, thinking I had to have heard him wrong, but when I saw the mess, there was no doubt,” she said. “I thought I was going to have a heart attack. Cecil had really done it.”


Cecil is a 7-year-old goldendoodle that has lived with the Laws since he was a puppy. For five years, he had the run of the house until the arrival of the Laws’ son, Rory, now 2.


Cecil during his puppy days. (Clayton and Carrie Law)

“Cecil’s a goofy guy and he’s very particular — you could leave a steak on the table, and he wouldn’t touch it because he’s not food motivated,” said Carrie, 33. “But apparently he is money motivated.”


Cecil had not been interested in things on the counter in the past, nor had he torn up items that were up there.


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“He has never really done anything bad before, so we were more shocked than angry,” added Clayton, 34. “We couldn’t believe it. We looked at each other and said, ‘What are we going to do?’”


While Cecil skulked away to take a nap on the living room sofa, the Laws called their vet to see if they should bring him in to be checked out for eating the stack of cash.


Cecil lounges on his favorite sofa at home in Pittsburgh. (Clayton and Carrie Law)

“Given his size of 100 pounds, we were told as long he was eating and drinking and going to the bathroom, he should be fine,” Clayton said. “If he were a small dog, it would have been a different story.”


He and Carrie then decided to salvage what they could.


They gathered up the torn bills and were able to piece together about $1,500, Carrie said. She then called the bank and told a manager what had happened.


Some of the money that was retrieved from the Laws' kitchen floor. (Clayton and Carrie Law)

“I felt like a kid who says, ‘The dog ate my homework,’” she said. “I was surprised when they said they’d seen similar things happen multiple times — that maybe dogs liked the particular smells on money.”


The manager explained that the bank would take back any bills that had been taped together with the full serial numbers visible on the front and back, Carrie added. The Bureau of Engraving and Printing also 

generally requires that at least half of each bill is salvageable.


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“Cecil was sitting on the sofa full of $2,500, and we knew there was only one way to get that money back,” Carrie said.



Late that first night, Cecil vomited up a couple of torn hundreds, Clayton said, but he and Carrie would have to be patient and summon their humor to retrieve the rest of the bills.


Clayton Law, with Cecil, said he and his wife found humor in their goldendoodle's antics. (Carrie Law)

Clayton intrepidly donned a mask and gloves, grabbed a bunch of plastic bags and accompanied Cecil on his backyard rounds over the next two days as the dog relieved himself.


He and Carrie then sifted through the dog’s droppings and washed the torn bits of bills with dish soap in a utility sink.


Clayton Law washes the torn up bills in a utility sink. (Carrie Law)

“I never thought I’d be able to say I’ve laundered money, but there is apparently a first time for everything,” Carrie said.


“Here we were, waiting for the dog to go to the bathroom so we could get the rest,” Clayton added. “We had to laugh at the absurdity of it.”


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He and Carrie decided that if they could find humor in the situation, others would, too.


The Laws made a video with the photos they’d snapped of their dog’s $4,000 meal, then posted it on Instagram.


“This is Cecil,” it begins. “He has never done anything bad in his life until he ate $4,000.”


The video of them washing money and patiently piecing it together like a jigsaw puzzle has been liked more than 175,000 times.


Carrie and Clayton Law pieced the money together like a jigsaw puzzle. (Clayton and Carrie Law)

After the Pittsburgh City Paper wrote about what happened, Carrie said she snuggled up next to Cecil and read the piece to him as a bedtime story.


“We couldn’t be mad at him — he’s a very lovable dog,” she said. “People often tell us there’s a human trapped inside our dog.”


Carrie Law with Cecil at home in Pittsburgh in 2019. (Clayton Law)

She and Clayton were able to retrieve about $1,800 from Cecil’s backyard deposits, boosting their total to $3,550.


Carrie said she plans to send the washed remnants they couldn’t piece together to the Treasury Department, in the hope they might get some of it back.


If not, the Laws said it’s the price they must pay for a family story they can pass down to their son.


Cecil, at home in Pittsburgh, wouldn't touch a steak left alone on the kitchen table, said Carrie Law. But money was another matter. (Clayton and Carrie Law)

“We’ve kept at least one of the torn-up bills so we can do a piece of artwork and frame it to commemorate the entire situation,” Carrie said.

“Not that we’d ever forget,” she quickly added.


Source: https://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/2024/01/03/cecil-dog-eat-money-cash/?fbclid=IwAR1JJesrGbwYhf3Y6T6NHz7M4VE78tysHM9vJc60v4BqeMEMsdqd6v4CKME

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