The state of Minnesota is holding lost money for Prince, U.S. Sen. Amy Klobuchar, state Human Services Commissioner Lucinda Jesson and a sports columnist so legendary there's a statue of him outside the Target Field in Minneapolis.
They and 50,000 other Minnesotans are due a piece of the growing mass of unclaimed property held by the state Department of Commerce. The stash includes funds from dormant bank accounts, uncashed death benefits, untouched shares of stock, old utility deposits and treasures from inactive safe-deposit boxes, all of which companies were required to turn over to the state. And, partly because of Commerce's increased efforts to get companies to turn over inactive assets, the mysterious lost and found has more than doubled since 2005 to a record $606 million.
Most of the money goes directly into the state's general fund with no strings attached, save for the responsibility to return it if owners are found.
Klobuchar can't be too hard to find. Jesson works a few blocks away from Commerce in downtown St. Paul. Sports personality Sid Hartman regularly shuffles into the Star Tribune.
So why can't Commerce find them? It's not really looking.
"We don't, as a matter of normal course, go through a list of people that we have and try to find them," said Emily Johnson Piper, Commerce's chief of staff and deputy commissioner. "Presumably, people have already tried to find these people and they can't."
In a later interview, Johnson Piper said the state is trying to find owners via publicity about unclaimed property and through the website MissingMoney.com.
Notification rules changed
Not everyone thinks that's enough; in fact, the Legislature has pressed Commerce to do more. William Palmer, a Sacramento attorney who specializes in unclaimed property, thinks states improperly use unclaimed property to prop up their budgets, while violating the due process rights of unknowing owners.