Assisted Dying, Here's Where It...
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.You pay a cheque into Bank A on day 1. Overnight, this cheque and all the paid into Bank A on that day are collected by a courier or whoever and taken to the Clearing Dept in London. On day 2, all the cheques are sorted into whichever bank/branch (Bank B) they are drawn on and are then delivered back to Bank B on the morning of day 3. The cheques are then checked to ensure they are signed, in date, that the words and figures match, checked for suffiecient funds in the account and checked that they have not been 'stopped'. They are then paid or 'Returned to Drawer' as appropriate. The ones that are paid are stored in a box for that particular 'days work' and kept for 6 years. You can get a copy or even the original cheque if you want it although your Bank will make a charge for this.
I worked for a bank for 17 years so can assure you that original cheques are not 'photocopied and destroyed'. the originals are kept. Sometimes businesses have their paid cheques back, sometimes they are required by the Police (in fraud cases they are fingerprinted) and so they are definitely NOT destroyed.
If you ask your Bank for a cheque and they send you a photocopy it is probably because the cqs are stored at some warehouse miles from anywhere and a person at the warehouse has faxed over a copy of it rather than posted the original.