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Teen girl on finding ex-national footballer’s purse: Don’t let people’s money, luxurious items burn your eyes.

(Trinidad Guardian) An act of honesty has earned a young lady high praise and has gone viral as more people learn about it.

“Don’t let anyone’s money and luxurious items burn your eyes. Work hard for what you want in life!”

That was the advice which Isha recalled from her mother while growing up.

The advice paid off on Saturday for Isha, 17, an employee of McDonald’s Cipriani Boulevard branch, when she stumbled upon a wallet belonging to former T&T national footballer Ricarda Nelson in the restaurant’s washroom which held with a significant amount of US currency, TT dollars and bank cards.

The teenager handed her manager the wallet and when Nelson, 51, showed up at the restaurant hours later to find out if it was there, surprisingly it was handed over to her with everything intact.

“I didn’t open the wallet. I just wanted the owner to collect it because I know when I lost something that is valuable to me, it pains,” Isha said in an interview at the family’s home in Diego Martin yesterday.

Nelson refused to disclose to the T&T Guardian the amount of money the wallet contained, stating it was quite a lot of US and T&T currency, including a number of credit cards and her national ID.

Isha’s honesty led to Nelson posting on her Facebook page on Saturday about the young lady’s good deed, stating that there are still young people in T&T that “we can trust and she should serve as a positive role model to others in society.”

Up to late yesterday, Nelson’s post attracted 15,000 likes, 9,000 shares and 2,900 positive and congratulatory comments.

Many people praised and commended Isha for a “job well done” and even recommended that she be given McDonald’s employee of the year award for her honesty.

“I am sending a warning to McDonald’s that I will be competing with them for Isha to join my company which is expected to get off the ground soon. That is no idle boast,” Nelson said yesterday.

“Isha is like a rare gem. You hardly find people like her,” Nelson said.

Nelson said she also has a surprise in store for Isha, who has far to go in life for her principles and integrity.

Yesterday, Isha credited her 51- year-old mother, Debra Clarke, a single parent of four, for inculcating in her the right values and teachings as a child.

“Everyday my mother would pound into my head not to let other people’s money and luxurious items burn my eyes and to work hard for what I want in life. If I didn’t grow up listening to her motherly advice, chances are, I might have been tempted to steal the money in the wallet,” Isha said.

 

Debra admitted that her daughter has a big heart, even though she grew up without a father’s love, care and attention.

“Her father plays no role in her life. As a mother, I try my best even though things are tough. I have not been paid my salary by CEPEP and my $1,800 monthly rent is way overdue. Isha could have easily swiped the money from the wallet to assist in the payment of the rent, but it would have been against her conscience to do that because I always showed her right from wrong. As difficult as things might be, she knows better. I for one would not encourage any dishonesty and stealing in this house,” Debra interjected.

Debra said many parents encourage and support their children to steal and rob, which has been breaking down society.

Two months ago, Clarke left her sales clerk job and joined McDonald’s as a cashier, stating she wanted to try something new.

Having graduated last year with three O’level passes at her Mucurapo West Secondary School, Clarke enrolled in the Polytechnic Institute in St James where she began pursuing O’ Level Mathematics and Social Studies.

In her quest to further her daughter’s education, Debra admitted that she took half of her $2,600 monthly salary to get her daughter enrolled at the institute.

The salary Isha’s earns, Debra said, is barely enough to travel to and from work.

“After I put out that money for her classes we barely had anything to eat in the house, but we pulled through,” Debra said.

Debra’s two elder children live on their own, while Isha’s older brother is pursuing a course.

Four days a week, Isha juggles school and work, which she described as hectic and time consuming.

She admitted to having trouble coping with Maths.

Next month Isha will be writing exams.

Thereafter, she wants to pursue O’ Level human and social biology, as she has her heart set on becoming a nurse but is unable to buy her books and pay for her tuition.

“Being a nurse is my long life dream …I always wanted to become a health care provider. This passion came after attending to my mother who suffers with a slip disc in her back. I don’t like seeing people in pain.”

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When Prashad was a boy in Guyana he went to a bakery to buy bread. A woman wallet filled with money fell out of her very large bra on to the floor of the bakery. Prashad picked it up and gave it back to her. She said that the money was from her GDF soldier man. So those things happen in Guyana also.

 

 

Prashad
Last edited by Prashad

Mother turns in son who escaped from Cove and John Police Station.

April 9 2018

Source

“I couldn’t hesitate because I don’t encourage certain things. If you do a crime you have to face the time,” the mother of a 16-year-old boy who escaped from the Cove and John Police Station yesterday said after returning him to custody.

The 16-year-old, who cannot be named for legal reasons,  was arrested a few days ago in ‘B’ Field, Sophia after he was found with an unlicensed gun and ammunition and was being held at the Cove and John Police station. However, yesterday morning the boy escaped from the station but was subsequently returned by his mother who found him after a thorough search.

Speaking to Stabroek News last night, the boy’s mother said that she did not hesitate to turn her son in to the police since she does not encourage “certain things.”

“I speaking to that child all the time. I want to sleep good at night. I don’t want police to beat me for children. The best thing I think was to turn he back where he gotto go. I tell he that you have to go to court and face the consequences for the things you doing on the road. I am a businesswoman and I wouldn’t like if somebody come and rob me,” the woman said.

She explained that on Saturday night she visited the Police Station to take dinner for her son when an officer explained to her that the Sophia teen was asking frequently to be taken to the washroom.

“I said I’m his mother and what you should do is give him a plastic bag, a box or a bottle and let him remain in the cell,” she said.

After delivering his dinner the woman explained that she left the police station but subsequently turned back after she realized she had left something there. After she returned to the police station she said she noticed a young constable at the door and after engaging him in a conversation she warned him to be wary of her son.

“I explain to he that he’s a young police and I like that he doing his job and not to let nobody put he in it. I seh you see that lil boy that want to go to the toilet, tell your fellow workers that working tonight to watch this boy properly, don’t let him go in the toilet,” Johnson said.

She explained that she left and returned home and it wasn’t until yesterday morning when a van load of police stopped at her shop and started to cross the dam in the direction of where her other son was that she realized something was wrong. She said that a scuffle started between her other son and a police officer. After the situation was contained, the police requested to search their house again but found nothing. After the police finished searching the house they took her other son to the Sparendaam police station.

The woman explained that while she was on her way to the police station she saw another van rushing towards where she lives and her suspicions grew even more. She then decided to turn the car around and followed the police and was stopped half way through ‘B’ Field.

“They stop me car halfway and they call me and when I go over the road he said ‘muds where your son’ so I explain that he was taken to the police station but they said not that one. Since they said he get away I blackout and fall down on the road and when I catch meself I notice the same [young] police I talk to at the station and I asked he to tell the one in charge what I tell he last night [Saturday] and he did,” she said.

The woman said that after she was done talking to the police she returned home where she was told by one of her friends that the boy was spotted around Stabroek Square. She said she then jumped into a car and sped away to the location but figured that he might not be there anymore and might have gone to his father’s residence in Albouystown.

After checking Stabroek Square and Albouystown the woman was unable to find her son. However, that did not deter her search and she continued.

“I tell he grandmother and so and we go by Big Market (Stabroek Market) and I search all over. I didn’t see he and when I de coming back home I see this boy limping on the road and I tell the car man to hold on and when I see it was he I grabble he and I push he in the car,” she said.

After she returned with the boy home she explained that she was able to get some assistance in organizing for the Commander of ‘C’ Division Edmond Cooper and Crime Chief Paul Williams to visit the house and take him back into custody.

“When the Crime Chief come they come in and I show them he and a police lift he out and I talk to the police,” the woman said, while stating that even though it was hard for her to do, it was the right thing since she does not condone criminal activities, even if her own son is involved.

The Sophia teen has since been taken back into police custody and is expected to appear in court to answer a charge of armed robbery.


 

Here is another that's worth mentioning.

Django

My uncle was a porter at JFK, and a Chinese guy dropped a package containing $5,000. My uncle opened the package and when he saw the contents, he took it to the front desk; they contacted the guy and returned the envelope. When he told us, we said he was nuts, that we would have kept it. He was an honest soul; he said the cameras probably captured everything. His supervisor gave him an award and told him they wished they had more honest workers like him.  

FM

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