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nobby
December 17th, 2006, 10:55 PM
Theater patron's Hollywood ending: worker returns lost $24,000
BY ERIK GERMAN
Newsday Staff Writer

December 17, 2006

Imagine stumbling upon $24,000 cash. What would you do with the money?

The untraceable wad of $100 bills, rubber-banded together inside a zippered bank pouch, tumbled unnoticed from the purse of RoseMarie Limoncelli, 39, as she sat Friday inside the AMC Fantasy theater in Rockville Centre.

Christopher Montgomery, 19, found the money as he was cleaning between seats.

The Lynbrook student returned it. Every dollar.

"I was shocked," Limoncelli said. "It's so commendable to see a teenager do something so wonderful for someone else. My life could have been flipped upside down."

Montgomery, a liberal arts student at Nassau Community College, yesterday was reluctant to talk about his choice.

"He won't come out; he's not the type of kid that likes attention," said his mother, Donna Montgomery, 49, outside the family's Lynbrook home. "He said, 'It's no big deal.' I think he's embarrassed."

But for the Hewlett woman who nearly lost the $24,000, it was a very big deal indeed. Before recovering the cash, Limoncelli endured what amounted to a brief waking nightmare.

Limoncelli runs a business, and like many this time of year, she's been a bit harried lately.

"It's the holidays and I'm running in all different directions and trying to do my shopping in between," she said.

On Friday, she still hadn't made it to the bank when it came time to accompany her 8-year-old daughter, Sabrina, to see "Happy Feet" at 7:15 p.m.

Halfway through the film, Sabrina climbed onto Limoncelli's lap. To make room for her daughter, Limoncelli slid the purse under her seat, where it tipped over. The bank pouch must have fallen out in the dark, she said.

On the way home, mother and daughter stopped for ice cream. In line at the cash register, pint of Häagen-Dazs in hand, Limoncelli made the the blood-chilling discovery. The deposit bag was gone.

"My heart stopped," she said. "My whole body was shaking."

Frantic, she called her husband at home. The money wasn't there. She dialed information for the movie theater's number - and was apoplectic when they placed her on hold.

"It was like the longest two minutes of my life," she said. "I screamed at the operator when she tried to give me the address and I said, 'I don't care, just give me the number!' ... I was hysterical, crying."

When she called the theater, Limoncelli experienced the holiday miracle she will likely recount for years to come.

After examining the cash, Christopher Montgomery had handed the pouch over to his manager.

Limoncelli said he refused a cash reward, but she hopes he'll at least accept a gift certificate to P.C. Richard & Son.

"I always tell my kids, 'I believe: a good deed - you do one, you get one in return,'" Donna Montgomery said.

http://www.newsday.com/news/local/longisland/ny-licash175019270dec17,0,2678968.story

mousdrvr
December 17th, 2006, 11:08 PM
Thanks for posting this!

Cosmic Pig
December 17th, 2006, 11:32 PM
Nice! I would have had a hard time doing it, but I'd have given it back too. A very very very hard time, with years of regret, but there isn't really any other option. Stupid parents.

Cos.

Slipperman
December 17th, 2006, 11:40 PM
What a chump.


















































KIDDING!!! KIDDING!!!

SM.

Mixerman
December 18th, 2006, 12:22 AM
What a chump.

Prescisely.

Mixerman



















































KIDDING!!! KIDDING!!!

SM.

Me too!

Mixerman

E. Shaun
December 18th, 2006, 12:31 AM
It's funny, because I bet about 95% of all people would do this. It's one of those strange and endearing qualities that is hard-wired into humanity, I think...on a deeper level than religion, politics etc.

I, for one, am glad for it.

volthause
December 18th, 2006, 12:45 AM
Keeping that money would be baaad ju-ju.

Good for that kid.

seagate
December 18th, 2006, 01:00 AM
Keeping that money would be baaad ju-ju.

Indeed...

jerryskid
December 18th, 2006, 01:09 AM
And Karma will smile down on that lad.......

pounce
December 18th, 2006, 01:24 AM
i am happy to hear some good news like this. excellent.

lebouche
December 18th, 2006, 01:37 AM
Karma is one of the most important things in life....
even if you strip it of its spiritual meanings it seems common sense that kindness is contagious.
If you get in a taxi and the last guy has been a wanker he is likely to be less kind.
If despite his wankerness you treat him well he may well pass it on and as there are only a few degrees of seperation it is very likely that we may well make each others lives happier.
A good example would be that the kindness people have shown me here has made me happier.

6x2
December 18th, 2006, 01:56 AM
Goes to show that everybody's not Mr. Potter.

http://images.usatoday.com/money/_photos/2004/09/15/ceo-villains-potter-wonderf.jpg

:Thumbsup:

6x2

blackieC
December 18th, 2006, 04:21 AM
I guess I'm pretty damn cynical.


If being cynical were an olympic event I would have to store my medals in a wharehouse.

If cynicism were currency, I would buy Australia just because I think koala bears are "cute".

And then cook one just to see if it tasted like chicken.


If cynicism was sexy, Johnny Depp would be calling me asking for pointers on getting laid.







My first thought was that the poor theater schlub assumed only a drug dealer would be toting a roll of 24K and that if he didn't give it back tout suite, his very brief future would include having a Glock unloaded up his ass.







































Oh come the fuck on.



I'm joking.



Even a theater usher could figure out that a hardcore gangsta wouldn't be watching "Happy Feet".


At least not in public.

mousdrvr
December 18th, 2006, 06:17 AM
It's funny, because I bet about 95% of all people would do this. It's one of those strange and endearing qualities that is hard-wired into humanity, I think...on a deeper level than religion, politics etc.

I, for one, am glad for it.

I absolutely agree, good is more prevalent. It has to be. I mean say this Kid actually does get shot by some thug in a few years. ( don't worry he pulls through OK and goes on to win a Nobel Prize in literature ) Just imagine the odds in favor of the destructive force. On one hand We have 1 Thug and a Glock taking mere minutes out of their precious time to do the shooting, on the other an entire surgical team, support staff and a multi million dollar facility, spending man-weeks perhaps to pull the kid through. Sure a Glock represents a lot of technology and manufacturing effort but stack that up against the hospital which treats the Kid and it's nothing. Eduction required to shoot someone? Education required to pull the bullet out of his chest? Creating and preserving are just harder work. I love it when sometimes it's easy and we get to see that most people really are decent.