By Eliza Murphy | ABC News Blogs – Tue, Jan 15, 2013 5:34 PM EST
The old saying, "Better late than never," rang particularly true for the Riphagen family of suburban Chicago.
The Riphagens had four gold rings returned to them, along with an
anonymous letter of apology, 15 years after they had been stolen.
Margot Riphagen, 31, who now lives in Portland, Ore., recalls exactly
when the rings were stolen. She was only 16 years old when she had a
party that got a bit out of hand. A few items were stolen, most notably
those four rings.
The anonymous note, signed by a sincerely regretful "dumb kid who wants to right a wrong," was sent to Riphagen's mother at her place of work. The family was astonished to have the rings returned, and Margot said she doesn't even care who stole them. The only thing that matters now is that they're back.
"We don't care who it was. I was stupid when I was 16 and I'm sure they were too. Somebody did it for the thrill of it, not for money," Ripenhagen said.
For this surprised family, the four rings had more sentimental value than anything else.
"The first ring is my mother's actual wedding band, that she was not
wearing because she was going to get it re-sized. The second is a ring
with a small diamond that my father gave my mother when my sister was
born, who is a year older than I am," said Riphagen.
"And then the other two, I actually didn't know existed until we got
them back, but they are my grandparents' wedding bands. They had small
diamond chips put into them for me and my sister when we got older. So
it was a pretty big deal. I'm now actually wearing my grandfather's
wedding band."Riphagen said she's felt badly about the missing rings for 15 years now, and finally with the help of this letter, has some closure.
"We never thought we would get any of the stuff back. It's completely
amazing and wonderful and we're all thrilled about it. It's a
super-positive thing and a great way to start the New Year," she said.
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