Charity shops often receive the quiet overflow of everyday life—bags filled with clothes no longer worn, books once read, and household items passed on in the hope that they might find new use. Volunteers sort through these donations with patient care, each item a small story of its own.
But occasionally, something unexpected arrives among the usual offerings.
At a charity shop in New Zealand, staff sorting through donated items discovered a bag containing cannabis and cash left in the store’s designated donation area. The unusual find prompted workers to contact authorities after realizing the contents were far from the typical second-hand goods that pass through their hands.
The bag had been left among other donations awaiting sorting. When volunteers began going through the items, they found the cannabis along with a quantity of money inside.
Staff reported the discovery to police, and officers from New Zealand Police later attended to collect the items. Authorities are now handling the matter as they work to determine how the bag came to be left at the charity shop.
Charity stores across the country rely heavily on public donations to fund community programs and services. Volunteers and workers often spend hours sorting through bags of items dropped off at storefront collection points or after-hours donation bins.
While most donations are straightforward, staff occasionally encounter unusual or misplaced items among them—ranging from personal documents to objects left accidentally in pockets or containers.
Discoveries involving illegal substances, however, are rare and typically require immediate reporting to authorities.
For the volunteers who came across the bag, the moment would have stood out from the ordinary routine of sorting clothes and household goods. A simple act of unpacking donations turned briefly into a situation requiring police involvement.
After the items were handed over, the shop was able to return to its usual rhythm—sorting, pricing, and preparing goods for the shelves.
Yet the strange donation remains a reminder that the bags left at charity doors sometimes carry surprises far beyond what anyone expects.
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Sources
Radio New Zealand
New Zealand Herald
Stuff
1News
New Zealand Police

