Lisa, et. al., A brief continuation of my reply to Wim. One might be able to just "say nothing" in the case of contraband. I suggest that if one found a customers hidden jewelry in a piano, the customer should be contacted immediately with the findings. What if the jewelry is stolen months after you've been there to tune? You were the last known person to be granted access to the piano. Can a tuner prove s/he didn't steal it months (or even days) after the fact? It was there when you were given access to the piano, it's not there now. A worse case scenario - a household resident is a thief and thought the piano was a good place to stash the loot. After all, nobody ever has pianos tuned do they? A point of view from 15 years in the insurance business. Danny Occasionally Serious Moore Lwellerrpt wrote: > Unless you just can't live with yourself knowing that stuff is there.... say > nothing. Just like you would say nothing when you find the customer's hidden > jewelry.
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