Sarah Darling speaks to Billy Ray Harris in this undated
image taken from video courtesy of KCTV5, in Kansas City
Missouri. REUTERS/KCTV5/Handout
A homeless Kansas City man's decision to return a diamond
engagement ring that had accidentally fallen into a cup has
prompted a flood of donations from people impressed with his
honesty.
More than $US167,000 in contributions has poured in for Billy
Ray Harris, who found the diamond and platinum ring in a
handful of change a woman gave him earlier this month.
Harris' decision to hold onto the ring until the woman, Sarah
Darling, came looking for it the next day has generated
worldwide praise and publicity over the Internet.
"It's unreal," said Darling's husband, Bill Krejci, who gave
her the ring when they got engaged about four years ago.
"At first, it was just us and some friends who put money into
it, and then it went national and snowballed from there."
Harris, who has received about 7,200 donations, could not be
contacted for comment.
Krejci organized the fundraiser, affiliated with the
organization GiveForward.
Money will be collected for another 78 days before it is
given to Harris, according to the GiveForward website, which
says the homeless man will also receive financial and legal
advice. GiveForward uses a small part of donations to cover
costs such as handling credit card transactions.
Harris, 55, has slept under bridges, said Krejci. He is a
regular panhandler in Kansas City's upscale Country Club
Plaza shopping district but is living in a friend's apartment
this week.
In a recent interview on NBC's "Today Show," Harris said he
considered keeping the ring. "In my heart, I just couldn't do
it," he said. "I'm no saint, but I'm no devil, either."
Darling had removed the ring the day she inadvertently gave
it to Harris because it sometimes irritates her finger,
Krejci said. She accidentally included it with some coins.
"She was excited and surprised to get it back," Krejci said.
He gave his wife's age as in the early 30s.
A name, residential address, and (preferably residential) telephone number is required from readers who comment on ODT Online. These details will not be visible to site visitors.