Couple Ignores Old "Electric Box" in the Yard for Years - Finds Out It's a Safe Full of Treasure
When deers destroyed a Staten Island couple's line of trees, something shiny became exposed, but they just assumed it was an "electric box" until landscapers were hired. The couple had a hidden treasure sitting in the yard for seven years, and they had no idea!
Matthew Emanuel and his wife, Maria Colonna-Emanuel, lived a quiet life for four years in Todt Hill, Staten Island, until something strange happened. However, in 2018, the first four feet of the arborvitae trees in their yard were destroyed by deer.
When the trees were shortened, the couple noticed something peeking in between on the east side of their yard. What they saw looked like a silver metal box that had been hidden all along by the long and thick trees.
Matthew Emanuel and his wife, Maria Colonna-Emanuel, talking to the press about finding treasure in their Todt Hill, Staten Island, yard on May 15, 2018 | Source: YouTube/CBS New York
Matthew and his wife assumed it was "something to do with electricity or something" or a cable or "electricity box." In May 2018, they decided to replace the ruined trees through Bob "Bamboo Bob" Foley and his company, Touch the Earth Inc.
The item that Matthew Emanuel and his wife, Maria Colonna-Emanuel, thought was an electric box in their Todt Hill, Staten Island, yard on May 15, 2018 | Source: YouTube/CBS New York
The couple opted to have bamboo trees installed because they had a deer-resistant nature. However, when the landscapers started removing the damaged trees and accessing the metal box, everyone realized it wasn't what Matthew and his wife had believed!
What Treasures Did Matthew and Maria Find?
When Foley's team exposed the metal box, they realized it had a dial. After the businessman and his team finished their work on Wooddale Avenue, they offered to force open the box with a pickaxe to see what it had inside.
The trees that used to block the safe Matthew Emanuel and his wife, Maria Colonna-Emanuel, found in their Todt Hill, Staten Island, yard on May 15, 2018 | Source: YouTube/CBS New York
Inside there were several Ziploc bags that held a trove of jewelry. They also found several muddy and misshapen hundred-dollar bills, engagement rings, diamonds, and other gems in what they now realized was a safe, with Matthew stating:
"I thought we found buried treasure."
The weathered safe Matthew Emanuel and his wife, Maria Colonna-Emanuel, found in their Todt Hill, Staten Island, yard on May 15, 2018 | Source: YouTube/CBS New York
Foley and his team couldn't believe what they saw, and he confessed they were "freaked out." Maria and her husband started sifting through their findings and counted the fragile money, which was made up mostly of hundred dollar bills.
However, the couple couldn't salvage some of the money as some were in wet clumps, but they saved $16,300! Besides all the treasure, the safe also held a Brooklyn address.
The monies and jewelry Matthew Emanuel and his wife, Maria Colonna-Emanuel, found in their Todt Hill, Staten Island, yard on May 15, 2018 | Source: YouTube/CBS New York
The address would prove to be the final piece that helped Matthew and Maria solve the mystery of the abandoned safe. It led the duo to someone's house who told them how the safe ended up in their possession.
Who Did the Safe Belong To, and How Did It Land in Matthew's Yard?
When Matthew and Maria checked the address, they realized it belonged to one of their neighbors! Despite not knowing the people well enough except through passing, Matthew walked over and knocked on their door.
Maria revealed how some people asked them why they'd returned the safe and its items.
The ceramic elephant that sits where Matthew Emanuel and his wife, Maria Colonna-Emanuel, found a safe in their Todt Hill, Staten Island, yard on May 15, 2018 | Source: YouTube/CBS New York
The first thing he asked them was if they'd ever been robbed. The neighbors confirmed being robbed in 2011 - nearly seven years before Maria and her husband found the safe - and the thieves had taken their safe with around $52,000 worth of property!
When the family reported the robbery to the New York Police Department (NYPD), homeowners' believed it was the "Ninja Burglar." In May 2017, Robert Costanzo was convicted after being linked to the burglaries, but the office of District Attorney Michael E. McMahon couldn't confirm if the safe was part of the man's robberies.
Matthew told his neighbors, who preferred to remain anonymous, about finding their safe in his yard and took the wife to show her. The woman was so grateful to Maria and her husband that she couldn't stop shaking while hugging him.
Even though the neighbors didn't want to speak to the press, they said they were "surprised and grateful" for discovering their belongings. The findings shocked them because the police told them all those years back that they wouldn't find the safe or the items inside it.
Maria revealed how some people asked them why they'd returned the safe and its items, and she explained that it was a no-brainer because it didn't belong to them. Matthew's wife admits finding a treasure in their house was "exciting."
Now, where the safe used to sit, Maria and her husband placed a ceramic elephant they had bought. It serves as a reminder of their discovery, and they also believe that the spot the safe sat in is a "good luck" one.