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  2. 'It's been a nightmare': Beware, this seemingly innocent act ...

    www.aol.com/finance/nightmare-beware-seemingly...

    Nevada Revised Statute, section 205.0832(d), defines the offense of theft to include coming "into control of lost, mislaid or misdelivered property of another person" and taking the property ...

  3. Lost Your Wallet? Here’s What To Do Next - AOL

    www.aol.com/lost-wallet-next-203152501.html

    Your driver’s license, ID card, work ID and several credit cards are likely in your wallet, and if it goes missing, you become easily susceptible to identity fraud. Your very first step should ...

  4. Lost, mislaid, and abandoned property - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lost,_mislaid,_and...

    A wallet left on the counter in a bar would be considered mislaid rather than lost. Property is generally deemed to have been mislaid or misplaced if it is found in a place where the true owner likely did intend to set it, but then simply forgot to pick it up again.

  5. Find a lost wallet? Keeping mislaid property can get you in ...

    www.aol.com/news/lost-wallet-keeping-mislaid...

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  6. Theft by finding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theft_by_finding

    In criminal and property law, theft by finding occurs when someone chances upon an object which seems abandoned and takes possession of the object, but fails to take steps to establish whether the object is genuinely abandoned and not merely lost or unattended before taking it for themselves. [1]

  7. Three-card monte - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Three-card_Monte

    Three-card monte – also known as find the lady and three-card trick – is a confidence game in which the victims, or "marks", are tricked into betting a sum of money, on the assumption that they can find the "money card" among three face-down playing cards. It is very similar to the shell game except that cards are used instead of shells. [1]

  8. Adverse possession - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adverse_possession

    Adverse possession in common law, and the related civil law concept of usucaption (also acquisitive prescription or prescriptive acquisition), are legal mechanisms under which a person who does not have legal title to a piece of property, usually real property, may acquire legal ownership based on continuous possession or occupation without the permission of its legal owner.

  9. A mother lost her wallet in the 1950s. 65 years later, a ...

    www.aol.com/mother-lost-her-wallet-1950s...

    A raffle ticket to win a new 1959 Chevrolet; credit cards with no magnetic strip; family photos in black and white: All tucked away behind a bathroom wall in the Plaza Theatre, untouched for decades.