New York Long Island Railroad conductor Jerrold picked up a passenger’s bag on the train that he forgot to take with him and opened it to find it contained 36 diamond rings. (Video screenshot)
The United States New York Long Island Railroad conductor Yellold (Jonathan Yellowday), recently picked up a passenger on the train forgot to take the bag, open to find that it contained 36 diamond rings, the market value of about 100,000 U.S. dollars, and then personally handed the diamonds to the police, the owner has successfully come to retrieve, and the production of a piece of jewelry to reward Yellold’s behavior of picking up money.
The incident occurred in the train from Pennsylvania Station to Port Washington, as the conductor has been 8 years Yellold found an unattended bag in the aisle of the compartment. Jerrold casually checked the bag and found a small box inside, which he opened to see 36 sparkling diamond rings.
Jerrold revealed that the whole thing felt super surreal to him. “I had to do a double take because I couldn’t believe what I was seeing,” he told the New York Daily News, “and I actually thought they were fake until I saw the price tag.”
Jerrold said he wanted to “hand it over to the police personally to make sure it didn’t get lost in transit …… that’s someone’s livelihood.” So he delivered the bag to the Metropolitan Transportation Authority Police Department for processing.
The jeweler who lost the diamond said that in his rush to get off the train, he forgot the bag in which he had put the ring. When he found the entire bag of rings missing, he thought he had brought home just forgot where to put it, and realized what had happened when he was shocked to realize it was left on the train and not taken away.
The next morning, the jeweler rushed to Penn Station, where the station manager assured him that his diamonds were safe.
After retrieving the diamond, the jeweler decided to make a piece of jewelry for Jerrold as a token of his appreciation for finding the money, and the president of the Long Island Railroad, Phillip Eng, also commended Jerrold for his righteous act.
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