 Mom sells jacket at yard sale, then remembers what she left in the pocket. Three roommates bought a cheap, smelly, old, second-hand couch from their student dorm room. But they had no idea that their new purchase was about to make headlines. When they got home with the outdated couch, the Pails noticed there was something hiding beneath the cushions. When they pulled the couch apart, they couldn't believe what they saw in front of them. Students at the State University of New York, Reese Workhoven, Laura Russo, and their friend Kelly Gousty took a trip to the Salvation Army in search of a couch for their accommodation. However, they were shocked to discover that the couch was hiding the surprise of a lifetime. With their strict student budget, the roommates weren't too fussy with what the couch they picked just as long as the dimensions fit their living room. They didn't just pick any ordinary couch though, unknown to them, they picked one with a very interesting past. Browsing through the thrift shop, the student stumbled upon an ugly, smelly couch. It wasn't the most attractive pick, but it was the only one the students could afford whose size would fit their apartment. The friends bought the aged piece of furniture for an impressive $20, but had no idea of the real bargain they were getting from buying the dusty old thing. They hauled the tired couch home, unaware of what else they were carrying back with them to their quaint student home. When the roommates finally settled the couch down in their living room and began using it, they noticed that although it was a beaten up old couch, it was a lot more uncomfortable than they expected. Taking into account the couch was worn out and not surprisingly uncomfortable, the students let it slide and settled in with their cheap and cheerful new bargain. The day came, however, when one of the roommates had enough of the lumpy bits along the couch. Reese Her- Reese Workoven was relaxing at home on his exhausted old couch when he became pestered by the bulges along the armrest. He found something like plastic bags underneath the embroidery and assumed the couch was pad with them because it came from a second hand store. Workoven decided to inspect the lumpy cushions under the fabric and was prepared to cut the couch open with a knife to have a look inside. To his delight, when he lifted up the armrest, he noticed there was a zipper. He pulled back the zipper, Workoven's curiosity heightened as he realized this couch was more interesting than he thought. By the armrest, he found a plastic envelope. He looked over at his roommates and began to open the mysterious plastic pouch. When Workoven opened the envelope, the lucky student had discovered a stash of $4,000 in the armrest of the couch. I almost peed. The most money I'd ever found in a couch was like 50 cents. Honestly, I'd be ecstatic just to find $5 in a couch, Workoven said in an interview. Filled with excitement and adrenaline, the three roommates began frantically ransacking the cushions in search for more money, ultimately pulling the pull-out couch apart. Digging their arms into every slit and crevice, the three pales were hitting jackpot after jackpot. In a room filled with banknotes, the students were busy counting when one of them discovered more money in another corner of the couch. One of the occupants of the apartment, Kelly Gousty, explained in an interview how she was on the phone with her mother when she had already counted $20,000, but as she stayed on the phone, the money count grew even higher and higher. Like a scene out of a movie, the students found two more cash-filled envelopes and soon found themselves on the floor rolling around in money. They eventually ended their search with $40,000 of cash in their hands. In an interview, Laura Russo explained how she was skeptical about the money. I was a little overwhelmed. I wanted to put it back in the couch and then re-find it in the morning when I could process it better. But what would the broke college students do with their riches? Would they splurge it on beer and food or track down the owner? The giddy trio were baffled by their find and wondered what to do about discovering this much money. They knew it didn't belong to them, but how would they even begin to find the owner? It wouldn't be long, however, before the name of the owner surfaced from the crevices in the couch. Not too long after they reached a total count of $40,000, the students discovered another envelope with a bank statement inside it and a woman's name printed on it. It was clear to them who the money belonged to, but the students were still cautious that cash might have been involved in criminal activities. We all agreed that we had to bring the money back to whoever it belonged to. We didn't earn it, Russo said. After debating the pros that it should be returned to its owner and the cons that it could be dirty money, the roommates came to a decision. The friends went in search of a phone number for the woman and when they dug one up, they gave her a call. When she answered, she was adamant that the money was hers. Oh, I left a lot of money in that couch, she announced. So the roommates hopped in their car and made a trip to the woman's house. Worrying that the couch's owner could be a criminal, the students drove 20 miles to Hudson Valley to return the $40,000 to its rightful owner and to ask her why she used her couch as a bank. When they pulled up to the address, the three friends were greeted by a very excited widow. The woman, who preferred not to be mentioned, invited the three inside her home to explain why she had tens of thousands of dollars hidden away beneath the cushions of her dusty old couch. Every week for years, the woman's husband, who suffered from heart problems, stashed money in their couch for his wife to use after his death. He accumulated quite an impressive amount over the years, but one day his hard-earned savings were gone in a flash, leaving his widow distraught. After her husband's death, the owner of the couch was recovering in a rehabilitation facility following serious heart surgery. During her stay at the rehab center, the woman's daughter sold the couch to make way for a recovery bed. When she got home, she was devastated to find that her and her husband's secret savings were now lost and presumably gone forever. The woman was dumbfounded by her luck that the couch ended up in possession of three ethical students. In an interview, Laura Russo explained that the couch almost didn't end up in their apartment. We almost didn't pick that couch. It's pretty ugly and it smells, but it was the only couch that fit in our living room. The woman, who is a former florist, rewarded the students with $1,000 to show her appreciation. The moral of the story is pretty clear from the ethical decision made by these three roommates. However, it may also be, don't give away your parents' old things without first consulting them. Now that the students are $1,000 richer, perhaps they can finally afford a brand new, nice smelling couch.