Famous Jewelry Store Accused Of Stealing Diamond Ring

Famous Jewelry Store Accused Of Stealing Diamond Ring
Famous Jewelry Store Accused Of Stealing Diamond Ring

Video: Famous Jewelry Store Accused Of Stealing Diamond Ring

Video: Famous Jewelry Store Accused Of Stealing Diamond Ring
Video: Man swaps $28,000 diamond with fake in jewelry store 2024, November
Anonim

They say that diamonds are women's best friends and that is not so far from reality. The truth is that, among many other things, a diamond represents the most important detail when asking a woman for marriage. Diamonds can also be the cause of a great headache and that was exactly what an Illinois woman experienced when she took her own to a famous jewelry store.

It turns out that Requitta Darshae East posted a lengthy complaint on her Facebook page against one of the stores in the famous Kay Jewelers chain of stores that she accuses of wanting to steal her wedding ring.

“I took my wedding ring - my wedding ring and my engagement ring - to Kay Jewelers at River Oaks Mall for maintenance. The employee is supposed to check the diamonds before sending it to be fixed”, wrote the woman in a long post that has already gone viral. “She looked at the diamonds under a microscope and told me they looked good. She said maintenance would take about two weeks."

In her publication Darshae East says that she was called two weeks later and told her that her ring was ready and that she had two damaged diamonds that they had to replace. Darshae East gave them permission to fix them but the problem was that when weeks later she came to the jewelry store and discovered that this was not her ring. The employee realized that it really wasn't and sent it to the repair department to have the real one shipped. But what happened next was worse.

A week after receiving a call saying they had found the ring, Darshae East arrived at the jewelry store where they didn't even know about her case. A week after calling the corporate offices, the woman arrived at the store again.

"I went to the store and you guessed it, the ring was not mine," he wrote. "Not only was it not my ring, but it was the same ring they gave me the first time I went, only this time the names were engraved on it."

For its part, the store said in a statement, “It is our company's policy to do things right when we make a mistake. We are in contact with the client and we are working diligently to resolve her concerns to her satisfaction.”

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