Good Samaritan returns $4K in cash left in Walmart parking lot
'It's OK to do something right,' he said
ANTELOPE, Calif. (KCRA) —What would you do if you found thousands of dollars in cash at a Walmart parking lot?
It happened to Paul Williams. He was leaving work last Thursday at a Walmart in Antelope when he stumbled upon a wallet in a shopping cart. Inside the wallet was $4,000 in cash, a $1,000 check and multiple credit cards.
"I was surprised to see that much money and no ID, no phone number. But there was a check in there with a phone number, so at least I had something to go on," Williams told KCRA 3.
He looked for a manager, but couldn’t find one, and had to catch the bus home.
His wife, Debra, was shocked when he told her about what he found.
"All I could say was, 'Wow!' And then I told him, 'Baby, you know we got to do the right thing,'" she said.
He agreed.
"Nowadays, people are losing their homes, not being able to pay. I wouldn’t want to be responsible for someone trying to pay a mortgage and had to miss it," Williams said.
The money belonged to Lynn Andries, who said it was to pay off her second mortgage. She had been planning to go to the bank while running other errands, and was in a rush while shopping at Walmart.
"I was just sick. I thought there was no point to even go back to the store. Lori, my sister said, 'You have to,'" Andries said.
She came back about an hour later, but couldn’t find the wallet. While she was in the parking lot, however, two Walmart employees told her a call came into the store regarding the wallet.
It was Williams on the other end of the line. He verified that it was indeed the person whose name was on the check. Andries arranged to meet with Williams and his wife.
"I looked at her right in the eyes and I asked, 'Is the money still there?' She said, 'Every single penny.' I just started crying and hugging them," Andries said. "It was absolutely awesome."
Andries said it gives her faith in humanity, in kindness from strangers like Williams.
Williams said he couldn’t live with himself if he didn’t return the money to its rightful owner.
"This is just to show people that there are some good people in the world that do the right thing. And it’s OK to do something right," he said.
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