Considering framing it and putting up on the wall.
It does have "Donald J. Trump" printed on it, ya know.
A neighbor of mine received a stimulus check in the amount of $2,400.
$1,200 for himself, and $1,200 for his (deceased) wife.
He checked the box on the front of the envelope which indicates "deceased."
He then mailed the check (in the amount of $2,400) back to the return address, indicated on the upper left hand corner of the envelope.
As I understand it, to do otherwise is (technically) against federal law, and entails a hefty fine, or prison time, due to it being considered "fraud."
Now, I don't know that I would have done the same (faced with the identical circumstances), but I applaud his reasoning, for having done so.
He consulted with a relative of his who works for the IRS, in Washington D.C.
And she instructed him to follow the aforementioned course of action.
She recommended he mail it back via "certified mail," so that it required a signature (verifying that the check was signed by an employee of the IRS).
However, his primary motivation for following through on her advice was because to do otherwise would have violated his conscience.
Given that was his reasoning for doing so, I applaud his (reasoned) decision.