A police spokesman said that the recovered money was worth some €100,000 (£72,000; $108,000).
Police said there were no crimes were recorded in the area and that it was not clear where the money originated.
Officers had first believed the money, made up of €500 and €100 notes, was counterfeit, but they now believe the notes to be genuine. They were first alerted when bystanders spotted a boy in the river.
Fearing he was attempting suicide, they called police, only to find he was trying to retrieve the money. Anyone who finds money and hands it to police in Austria is entitled to keep between 5% and 10% of the total. But if the owner is not found within a year, the whole sum will be handed to the boy.
Officers had first believed the money, made up of €500 and €100 notes, was counterfeit, but they now believe the notes to be genuine. They were first alerted when bystanders spotted a boy in the river.
Fearing he was attempting suicide, they called police, only to find he was trying to retrieve the money. Anyone who finds money and hands it to police in Austria is entitled to keep between 5% and 10% of the total. But if the owner is not found within a year, the whole sum will be handed to the boy.
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