A couple from Seattle left all they had, nearly $1 million, “to the
government of the United States of America" in their identical wills, the
lawyer who administered the estate said.
A cashier's check for $847,215.57 was
received and deposited into the U.S. Department of the Treasury's general funds
on May 13, according to U.S. assistant attorney Peter Winn, who told ABC News
today that he was the one who worked with the Treasury Department to accept the
money on behalf of the government.
Though Peter Petrasek and Joan Petrasek
never indicated why they wanted to donate all of their money to the U.S.
government, Winn believes the money is a "thank you" to the country
that took in the couple after they fled from Nazi-controlled eastern Europe in
World War II.
The entire process of fulfilling the
Petrasek's wishes on their wills took a little more than three years. Peter
Petrasek died on May 20, 2012, at 85, attorney Carrie Balkema told ABC News
today, adding that his wife, Joan Petrasek, died of breast cancer in 1998.
Balkema said she was contacted by the
Peter Petrasek's next-door neighbor, Ronald Wright, shortly after Petrasek's
death in 2013. Wright was assigned to be the will's executor because the couple
had no living relatives or children, and Wright hired Balkema to help him, she
said.
Wright did not immediately return ABC
News' voicemails requesting additional comment.
Balkema said she helped sell the house,
and proceeds of the sale became a part of the $847,215.57 check to the
government. Other money came from the couple's existing bank accounts, which
contained the money from the stocks Peter owned that he liquidated.
Though not much is known about the
couple, Balkema said Peter Petrasek escaped to Ottawa, Canada, from
Czechoslovakia, where he met his wife Joan, who was Irish, according to their
neighbor.
At some point in the late 1950s, the
couple moved to the United States, she said, adding that Peter Petrasek seemed
to have lived a solitary life after the death of his wife.
She added that, from the looks of the
house, he hadn't done any substantial housekeeping in quite some time.
"He was a quite frugal man," Balkema said. "He had jugs of
recycled oil that he used to ... power his oil furnace." |
Source: Yahoo News
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