At the residence, a very proper-looking, 40-something lady welcomed me into her apartment. She apologized profusely for the delay and handed me the wallet, showing me that it was in the condition in which she'd found it. Not wanting me to leave without explaining herself, the woman told me why she delayed returning the wallet.
She said her 16-year-old son was dropping his girlfriend off after a date, in a notorious gang area in another city. Gang members surrounded the car and challenged the young man who was not "from this neighborhood." When the young man denied gang membership, the crowd opened fire, shooting the young man but sparing his girlfriend.
The woman explained that the incident had devastated her. Her son was a student, not a gang member. But he's chosen to fall in love with someone with gang ties. The wallet issue still weighed heavily on her mind, despite the tragedy.
She said that her household had a single car and that her husband and 13-year-old son were out trying to find mortuary services. She said she did not want me to think she was a bad person for delaying the return of the wallet.
I left the apartment in a daze. I was floored by the woman's concerns of civic duty in the face of the loss of her child. I began thinking of the way I'd pre-judged the situation, based on experiences and being "salty." I was humbled into remembering the reasons why I got into law enforcement-the reasons most of us do the job day in, day out. We love people and we want to help people.