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Last Sunday, a Washington-based bride-to-be (her name was withheld for privacy) was inside her home preparing for her ceremony on the morning of her wedding, when someone broke into her car and stole her wedding dress, among other belongings.
Panicked, the woman called 911 to report the crime and Candice (she declined to provide her last name), a dispatcher at Valley Communications, the local 911 center, answered the call. “We deal with theft calls every day but this one really touched me,” Candice, 28, told Yahoo! Shine. “I handled the situation as I normally would, but inside, I really sympathized. I couldn’t imagine someone stealing my wedding dress. All I kept thinking was, ‘I have a wedding dress. Maybe she could wear that.’”
By the time Candice had gotten off the phone, she had made her decision: “I wanted her to wear my wedding dress.” So, after getting her supervisor's approval (and with no idea of the woman’s weight, height, or personal taste), Candice asked the responding officer to offer the woman the dress that Candice had worn on her own wedding day 18 months earlier.
After Brandon located the bride’s fiancĂ©, he delivered the dress to their home shortly before the ceremony was set to begin. “I’m so happy that I was able to help this woman,” Candice said. “She was very grateful and texted me a photo of her wearing the dress. I would do it all over again, if I could.”
“I’m so proud of Candice — what she did was extraordinary," Vonnie Mayer, operations manager at Valley Communications and Candice's manager, told Yahoo! Shine. "More people should be like her.”
The dress will soon be returned, but Candice said she's in no rush to get it back. "I just want to let them enjoy their wedding week. I’m happy it worked out. I believe that there’s a reason I picked up the phone that day.
Panicked, the woman called 911 to report the crime and Candice (she declined to provide her last name), a dispatcher at Valley Communications, the local 911 center, answered the call. “We deal with theft calls every day but this one really touched me,” Candice, 28, told Yahoo! Shine. “I handled the situation as I normally would, but inside, I really sympathized. I couldn’t imagine someone stealing my wedding dress. All I kept thinking was, ‘I have a wedding dress. Maybe she could wear that.’”
By the time Candice had gotten off the phone, she had made her decision: “I wanted her to wear my wedding dress.” So, after getting her supervisor's approval (and with no idea of the woman’s weight, height, or personal taste), Candice asked the responding officer to offer the woman the dress that Candice had worn on her own wedding day 18 months earlier.
After Brandon located the bride’s fiancĂ©, he delivered the dress to their home shortly before the ceremony was set to begin. “I’m so happy that I was able to help this woman,” Candice said. “She was very grateful and texted me a photo of her wearing the dress. I would do it all over again, if I could.”
“I’m so proud of Candice — what she did was extraordinary," Vonnie Mayer, operations manager at Valley Communications and Candice's manager, told Yahoo! Shine. "More people should be like her.”
The dress will soon be returned, but Candice said she's in no rush to get it back. "I just want to let them enjoy their wedding week. I’m happy it worked out. I believe that there’s a reason I picked up the phone that day.



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