Toronto Star

Snow globe heartbreak ends well

Couple find man forced to toss keepsake in airport trash

- TAMARA LUSH THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

ST. PETERSBURG, FLA.— When a man was forced to throw away a liquid-filled snow globe before going through security at a Florida airport, he was heartbroke­n: it had been a gift from his mother to celebrate his and his wife’s adoption of a five-year-old girl.

Acouple who picked up on Michael Moore’s distress retrieved the sparkling, silver orb that played the song “Greensleev­es” and yelled after him as he ran for his plane to Ohio that they would get it back to him somehow. That was in February. On Wednesday, Ivelise Amarri Hernandez personally handed the keepsake over to Moore’s emotional mother, Linda Modry.

Modry bought the globe and engraved it with the message “We love you, Katie. Nana and Papa.” She also decorated it with photos of the couple, their new daughter and the couple’s dog, and gave it to Moore when he was visiting her. But when her son tried to carry it with him onto the plane, security at the St. Pete-Clearwater Internatio­nal Airport told him he would have to throw it out because it was filled with liquid.

Hernandez and her boyfriend, waiting for a flight to Pittsburgh, retrieved the globe from the trash. They posted a photo of the treasured gift on Facebook.

“We felt bad about the situation and want to find out who these people are so we can return their gift out of the kindness of our hearts,” Hernandez wrote in the post. Shared 40,000 times, the message eventually caught the attention of executives at Things Remembered, the company that made the globe. Company employees were able to identify Modry as the buyer. On Wednesday, Modry and Hernandez met in Tampa, and the snow globe was returned. Said Modry: “It was raining when I picked it up. A good thing, because we were all crying.”

 ?? IVELISE AMARRI HERNANDEZ/FACEBOOK ?? A Facebook post searching for the owner was shared 40,000 times.
IVELISE AMARRI HERNANDEZ/FACEBOOK A Facebook post searching for the owner was shared 40,000 times.

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