Would this seem unscrupulous?

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by pennsteve, Mar 28, 2012.

  1. pennsteve

    pennsteve Well-Known Member

    Would it be unscrupulous to ask a store clerk to watch out for any 1988 or 1988-D pennies and tell them I'll come by now and then to check them and if they find the one I want, I'll give them $20 for it? Of course, most of you know that I'm looking for the 88 with the 89 reverse. Do these even have any kind of set premium yet? They aren't even listed as an error yet, are they? Tell me what you think. I don't find very many 88's in rolls. I'd say I find 1 or 2 in every other roll.
     
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  3. Johnvan

    Johnvan Member

    Do coin collectors have a certain "moral value" they live by.
    This is a good question, I haven't a clue.---John
     
  4. pennsteve

    pennsteve Well-Known Member

    Well if I knew the coin had a set value for a certain grade, say $2,000 for an MS 67, I wouldn't offer them only $20 for it. But since it's not even listed yet, there is no way to know for certain what they will be worth. If I found one through a clerk who was saving them for me, I'd give him/her the $20 but if I later found out the coin was worth, say $1,500 I'd sell it and go back and give them a 10% finders fee or something.
     
  5. TheCoinGeezer

    TheCoinGeezer Senex Bombulum

    I think it unlikely that the clerk would have either the time or the inclination to sort pennies for you.
     
  6. pennsteve

    pennsteve Well-Known Member

    I used to work in retail years ago. It doesn't take long to look at the pennies in the drawer.
     
  7. Everyone has their own moral compass. IMO, as long as it is ok with the store clerk's employer and the clerk knows that you are looking for a valuable variety and agrees to the $20 up front, then no harm done. Suggestion: Go to the bank and get $25 boxes of cents and roll search. You probably have a much better chance finding varieties that way. Good luck! TC
     
  8. DrunkNumismatic

    DrunkNumismatic New Member

    I dont think its immoral. The penny is not owned by the clerk, the clerk would just be a transporter, tranfering the penny from the store itself to you. That would be like spotting a 1988 penny and just asking someone to hand it to you. Now if the clerk owned the penny, if it was in her private pocket, and you told her you'd give her 20. That i'd feel guilty about.
     
  9. pennsteve

    pennsteve Well-Known Member

    I already do that. Don't find a lot of 88's.
     
  10. coinhead63

    coinhead63 Not slabbed yet

    Where do you think the '88s (and others) come from? The penny fairy?:yes:
     
  11. Cherd

    Cherd Junior Member

    If we find out that they are worth $1500 then mine is definitely up for sale! ;)
     
  12. 19Lyds

    19Lyds Member of the United States of Confusion

    Agree.
     
  13. snapsalot

    snapsalot Member

    I dont see anything wrong with it. If he wants to spendhis time looking for a certain penny for your $20 then go for it.
     
  14. Snowman

    Snowman Senior Member

    i would 2nd this motion

    FYI - The 88/89 have been given a variety cherrypickers number of FS-901 just as of last year
     
  15. ikandiggit

    ikandiggit Currency Error Collector

    Clerks (unless they are coin collectors) could care less about the coins in their till. I have a staff of forty and not one of them looks twice at the coins. Every couple of days I'll find a silver dime or quarter, or a foreign coin in the till. I've asked repeatedly for them to watch for old banknotes, coins etc. and I've only had one come to me with a banknote.

    You can ask all you want but don't get your hopes up.
     
  16. medoraman

    medoraman Supporter! Supporter

    Any clerk who is looking at the dates of all of the pennies coming into and out of their drawer sounds like someone without enough to do. If I saw someone doing that the first time I would warn them and give them more to do, the second time I would probably send them home for the day. I think it could be dangerous to their jobs to do this for you.

    Have you tried going to coin stores or shows and asking to go through their 88 cents, or buying rolls of 88 cents? That is quickest.
     
  17. TheCoinGeezer

    TheCoinGeezer Senex Bombulum

    I agree completely.
     
  18. saltysam-1

    saltysam-1 Junior Member

    If it is a one clerk store and there is a lot of down time on that persons schedule, it might happen. However, if it's a department store or such, the clerk is told not to remove money from the register (other than to issue change) and that is usually monitored by security.
     
  19. BooksB4Coins

    BooksB4Coins Newbieus Sempiterna

    Unscrupulous? No, but is asking a lot. Asking a bank teller to keep an eye out for silver or old notes is one thing, but a store clerk digging through common modern cents is a different ballgame. It would be in your best interest to pick up a few cent boxes from a bank and dig through yourself. This way you will find more of whatever date in a few hours than a store clerk would in a month.
     
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