$23 quadrillion for a cigarette?

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A man in the United States popped out to his local petrol station to buy a pack of cigarettes only to find his card charged $23,148,855,308,184,500. That is $23 quadrillion many times the US national debt.

“I thought somebody had bought Europe with my credit card,” said Josh Muszynski, from New Hampshire.

He said his appeals to his bank first met with little understanding, though it eventually corrected the error.

“It was all back to normal,” said Muszynski. “They reversed the negative balance fee, which was nice.”

His nightmare began when he checked his online bank account a few hours after buying the cigarettes.

He thought he would be a couple of hundred dollars in the black. But his overdraft had pushed him into the red – by an amount equivalent to many times the entire US national debt.

“It is a lot of money in the negative,” he said. “Something I could never, ever, afford to pay back. My children could not afford it, grandchildren, no one.” He said he then spent two hours on the phone with the Bank of America.

Eventually, they assured him it would be fixed and the next morning, it had been.

Now there is a reason why I posted this article, and its simply Bank of America.

One Response to “$23 quadrillion for a cigarette?”

  1. Rajkumar Says:
    July 17th, 2009 at 1:05 pm

    linked to your blog.need a link back

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