An 18-year-old boy whose bank account was mistakenly flooded with millions of dollars planned to buy a Porsche before the error was corrected.
Dane Gillespie, from Belfast in Northern Ireland, noticed he had £8.9 million ($11.5 million) in his Nationwide bank account last week.
He had previously cashed a check from his grandmother worth £8,900 ($11,500) — but several extra zeroes were added to the deposit by mistake.
His mother, Caroline Gillespie, told Belfast Live her son had been shocked by the blunder.
“We couldn’t believe it,” she told the publication.
“My son thought he was a millionaire for a few hours.”
“ … My husband messaged me with the photograph of his bank account details. It took me a wee while to click.”
“He’s going to me, ‘I’m gonna order a Porsche’ and I said, ‘Don’t be daft, that’s not our money, we need to get this sorted.’”
The bewildered mom said her son had enjoyed being a millionaire while it lasted.
“It was like that for a good few hours. For an 18-year-old being a millionaire for the day, he just can’t believe it,” Caroline said.
“He just wanted to go out and spend, but if you do, then you have to pay it back.”
“He thought all his birthdays came at once this morning. It’s mad.”
However, it didn’t take long for Nationwide to fix the error.
In a statement provided to the Daily Mail, a bank spokeswoman said Dane wouldn’t have been able to purchase a Porsche as the funds had never actually made it into the teen’s account.
“The customer paid the check in at the branch and unfortunately the wrong amount was keyed,” the spokeswoman said.
”The error was noticed straightaway and the balance was corrected in a matter of seconds.”
”While the amount was shown on his balance, checks do not clear straightaway, so the funds were never in his account.”