Topper, 80, had bought two drinks from a coffee shop in San Rafael, Calif., last month, but when she got home that day, her wallet was nowhere to be found.
“In this little wallet was everything,” she told local news outlet KNTV. “Every credit, debit, medicare card. Everything I own. I was distraught.”
What Topper didn’t know was that it had made its way to a nearby dumpster, where Sean Currey found it.
Currey, 57, has been homeless off and on for the last five years, according to KNTV. He told The Washington Post that he has been living in his car for most of the pandemic because finding shelter has been more difficult this year than in the last several years.
Currey was looking through the dumpster behind the coffee shop when he saw Topper’s wallet. He found her contact information inside and gave her a call.
“I would want someone to do the same thing for me if I lost my wallet,” Currey told The Post.
Though he did, just briefly, consider using the credit cards in the wallet, he decided against it.
“I would rather be cold and hungry and know I did the right thing,” he told The Post.
“I couldn’t believe it,” she said.
Topper called her daughter and granddaughter to tell them what had happened.
That’s when Topper’s granddaughter, Mikayla Gounard, decided she wanted to repay Currey’s kindness.
Even before Topper lost her wallet, Gounard had been planning to ask her friends and family to donate to a charity for her upcoming 12th birthday instead of giving her presents, according to KNTV.
Once she heard about how Currey returned her grandmother’s wallet — and that he was in need of shelter — Gounard decided to use her birthday donations to support him.
“I wanted to give to somebody who really needed something,” Gounard told KNTV.
So during her drive-by birthday party on Dec. 22, Gounard and her mom raised $475 for Currey and gave him the money the next day.
“I was just so touched,” Currey told The Post. “It was refreshing, knowing that people her age want to help.”
On Tuesday, Gounard’s mom Vanessa decided to set up a crowdfunding account to continue to support Currey during the pandemic. As of Friday night, the Gounards had raised $32,935.
“This isn’t about charity,” the page adds. “It’s about Compassion, the highest form of LOVE.”
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