Subtitles section Play video Print subtitles Let me see this thing. MAN: Where in the world did you get these? These are wonderful. MAN: Yeah, that's really cool, actually. Sweet. MAN: This is an iconic piece of history. It'll go down in history for hundreds of years. MAN: Hey, how you doing? MAN: Well, I brought in something I thought maybe you'd be interested in. What do you have? I got a $30 bill made by the United States. Let me see thing thing. MAN: Absolutely. MAN: This looks like a $20 bill to me. MAN: It does. MAN: And now it looks like a 10. Now it looks like a $10 bill. So this one's from 1974. MAN: Those were the last ones made. So what happened? There was just an error on the printing press or something? Yeah, exactly. They printed the backs first and they let them dry overnight. And then, instead of printing the front with a 10, they accidentally slipped those in, and they printed the front with a 20. MAN: How much are you looking to get? I guess I'm looking for $35,000 on this. Oh, that's a lot of money for 30 bucks. It is. I'd like to call someone in and kind of get their opinion on what it is and what they think about it. - Sure. Fair enough. Let's do it. This bill is series 1974. When they were discovered, I believe the Fed came in. They heard about them and retrieved as many as they could. But around 2,000, I'd say, maybe 2,600, 2,700 escaped. So how much do you think this is worth? $30,000 and $40,000. How about $27,500. I think if I offer you $22,000, I think there's enough room in there for me to make the profit that I need to make. I just can't go below $25,000. All right. - Thanks so much. - My pleasure. - Thank you. - Thank you. Well, I have some bills that I had in my safe deposit box I'm looking at selling. We have an 1875 $1 bill. This one too. This is an 1883 brown back 5. It's got the brown back. Where in the world did you get these? WOMAN: My Aunt Margaret gave them to me. And my Aunt Margaret was the granddaughter of the treasurer of the United States back in the 1800s. And was he allowed just to be handing out money or-- [LAUGHS] Well, the interesting thing I noticed about this bill is the serial number. Look it, it's number one. MAN: Yeah, that's really cool actually. There is a few condition issues with these. You see the holes in the face? Yeah, I think I probably put it on my bulletin board when I was younger. That's hilarious if that's what you did. So how much are you looking to get? I'm looking for $29,000 for the $1 bill and $16,000 for the $5 bill. I'm going to have to call in somebody who knows a little bit more than I do. OK. I got a-- it like a misprinted or a first-print brownback. And this is serial number 1. These are wonderful. This is an iconic piece of history. This is serial number 1. This was the beginning years of the United States currency as opposed to all of the banks issuing their own separate currency. MAN: What do you think they're worth? The fact that this is serial number 1 is everything. The bill with the number 1 serial number is, in my opinion, worth $15,000 retail. And the Ashland brownback is worth $5,000 retail. You heard what my expert had to say. And I'm comfortable offering $16,000. $22,000? MAN: No, I can't go that high. So that's your final offer, $16,000 for both? $16,500, yeah. Yeah, I can't take that. You want to sell just the $5 bill for $4,000? I will take your offer, $4,000 for the $5 bill. All right, cool. I've got a $5 New Zealand note here signed by Ed Hillary. Sweet. As you probably know, Ed Hillary was the first person to climb Mt. Everest. He's the only live person to actually be put on a New Zealand note. So how much do you want for it? So I'd like $250. I think it's a fair price. Could I give you 2 and 1/4? Could you split the difference? $235? Done. OK, deal. Perfect. Check this out. You have a piece of a $20 bill. It is a piece of a $20 bill from the DB Cooper hijacking. He jumped out of a 727 in November of 1971 with $200,000. This is cool. The only hijacking never solved. It was 1971. There was a plane flight. He gave the stewardess a note saying he had a bomb. He demanded a parachute and $200,000 in cash. They landed, gave him what he wanted, took back off. And he jumped out. Exactly. It's the only unsolved hijacking in world history. No trace of DB Cooper has ever been found. And he could be sitting on a beach someplace. Nobody knows exactly what happened. It'll go down in history for hundreds of years. MAN: How much do you want? I really want $2,000. Some of the larger fragments go for way more money than that. I'm thinking, like, 1,000 bucks. $1,800 was going to be my lowest. MAN: How about 1,500 bucks? I'm really got to have $1,700. MAN: Rick, go ahead and split it at $1,600. MAN: $1,600 is a little low. No, it's not. That's what we can pay. - All right. - All right. You have a deal. All right, I'll meet you right up front. Thank you, much, sir. OK, thank you.
A2 man serial number serial hijacking history hillary Pawn Stars: 3 EXPENSIVE RARE BILLS | History 2 0 林宜悉 posted on 2020/04/26 More Share Save Report Video vocabulary