Stranger helps reunite couple with stolen 300-pound griffin statue - Action News
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Calgary

Stranger helps reunite couple with stolen 300-pound griffin statue

A Calgary couple who were frantically searching for a 300-pound griffin statue stolen from their yard has been reunited with their treasured possession.

'I wanna put it back in the front,' says Calgary statue owner

A close-up of a griffin statue on a front lawn.
A griffin that weighs 300 pounds was stolen from a couple's home in Calgary on Sunday. It has now been found. (Submitted by Michelle Cheverie)

A Calgary couple who were frantically searching for a 300-pound griffin statue stolen from their front yardhave been reunited with their treasured possession, thanks to thekindness of a stranger.

Someone found the ornament lying abandoned in a bin nearly a block away from the couple's northwest home and reached out to them, hoping to help them retrieve it.

Chris Lewis and Michelle Cheverie, who live in the Capitol Hill neighbourhood, are glad to have the hefty statue back in their midst. The statue is a cherished wedding gift from their best friends.

According to Lewis, thefigure is extra special because it symbolizes his family shield, which has a griffin on it.

While the couple wasn't sure whether they'd ever get the statue back, they received a pleasant surprise on Thursday when a stranger reached out to Cheverie on social media.

"I got a Facebook message from somebody that said, 'I know where your statue is. Call me right away,'" Cheverie told The Calgary Eyeopener.

"And so I gave this person a call and they said that they had found it in an alley in a blue bin and thought that maybe somebody had just discarded it."

According to Cheverie, the person who originally found the griffin didn't know what it was and took it home.

They showed their daughter the large piece andshe recognized it immediately from thenews. The daughter explained that it was a sentimentalpiece that needed to be returned.

Without further ado, they reached out to Cheverie, who made arrangements to pick up the statue.

Accidental discovery

Cheverie thinksshe and her husband got lucky because the griffin piece had been abandoned in analley.

"Somebody happened to look inside [the bin]," she said. "I think it was just an abandoned blue bin. And somebody looked inside and found it."

While Cheveriedoesn't knowwhat happened and why someone decided to discard the stolen statue, she thinks it was probably because they felt overwhelmed by the attention it received.

A man in a white hat and blue shirt next to a lady in white, are shown smiling in this photo.
Chris Lewis and Michelle Cheverie are glad to have their treasured griffin statue back. (Submitted by Michelle Cheverie)

"Maybe they saw it on the news and thought, 'Gosh, we've got to unload this and put it in a blue bin,'" she said.

There's another possibility, according to Cheverie, who noted that the statue is quite heavy and perhaps it was "too much of a nuisance" to carry around.

While the griffin statue has been located in one piece, it has been slightly modified.

"The person that picked it up thought that they would add some colour to it," she said.

A brown griffin statue outside a home in Calgary.
Michelle Cheverie and her husband are trying to figure out how to restore the painted griffin statue to its original condition. (Submitted by Michelle Cheverie)

"The eyes are painted. I mean, it doesn't look terrible, but it's been painted.So we need to figure out how to remove the paint off of it."

A neighborhood favourite

Now that it's back, Cheverie doesn't want to storethe statue away in a corner.

"I wanna put it back in the front," she said. "I don't think anyone's going tobe brave enough to take it again."

However, the friends who gifted the griffin statue to Cheverie and Lewis suggested it might be safer in the backyard.

"It's just so beautiful. I love sharing it with people," Cheverie said.

"Children from the daycare down the street walk by and there's one little boy that likes to come up and give it a pat. The neighborhood enjoys it."

With files from The Calgary Eyeopener