Returning items to their rightful owners: Inside Salt Lake City airport's lost and found

Gustavo Lugo gets reunited with a Nintendo Switch he got in Japan at the lost and found at the Salt Lake City International Airport in Salt Lake City on Dec. 4.

Gustavo Lugo gets reunited with a Nintendo Switch he got in Japan at the lost and found at the Salt Lake City International Airport in Salt Lake City on Dec. 4. (Kristin Murphy, Deseret News)


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KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • Salt Lake City airport's lost and found handled 29,594 items from January to November this year.
  • Melissa Royle oversees the process, managing 400-600 items weekly, including unique finds.
  • Unclaimed items are destroyed, donated or auctioned after 30 days plus an eight-day grace period.

SALT LAKE CITY — Gustavo Ougo, on a recent trip to Japan, purchased a special edition Nintendo Switch that cannot be found in the U.S.

While traveling through the Salt Lake City International Airport last week, Ougo lost the device.

"I didn't have space to put it in the suitcase, so I was carrying it in my hands. I had to go to the bathroom, and then I totally put it down and forgot about it," he said.

The next day, he decided to check at the large international airport lost and found to see "if there's still good people" who may have turned it in.

And there it was.

Even though many don't even know it exists, Salt Lake City's busy airport — which has as many as 30,000 daily visitors — has a robust lost and found on the third floor of the main terminal. A staff of three full-time employees keeps the thousands of misplaced items cataloged and ready for reunification.

The lost numbers are astounding.

The found stories are astounding, as well.

Between January and November, the group received 29,594 items, averaging 1,427 claims each month.

"Here in lost and found, we're doing a lot of organizing of all the items that we get in," said customer service supervisor Melissa Royle, adding that 400 to 600 items arrive a week. "It's a lot of processing."

Melissa Royle, Salt Lake City International Airport customer service supervisor, shows one of many instruments that come through the lost and found at the Salt Lake City International Airport in Salt Lake City on Dec. 4.
Melissa Royle, Salt Lake City International Airport customer service supervisor, shows one of many instruments that come through the lost and found at the Salt Lake City International Airport in Salt Lake City on Dec. 4. (Photo: Kristin Murphy, Deseret News)

What is found?

All items that are left in public areas of the airport — shops, lobbies, terminal areas, parking lots, buses and TSA screening — are brought to the lost and found. The items are organized by type and the times at which they are brought in.

Walking into the lost-and-found room, a few sections stand out; one is filled entirely with AirPods.

"We get hundreds and hundreds of AirPods every week," Royle said.

Headphones, glasses and electronics are pictured at the Salt Lake City International Airport lost and found in Salt Lake City on Dec. 4.
Headphones, glasses and electronics are pictured at the Salt Lake City International Airport lost and found in Salt Lake City on Dec. 4. (Photo: Kristin Murphy, Deseret News)

There are areas for books, luggage, clothing, different types of jewelry, glasses and larger items such as strollers.

Items will stay in the lost and found for 30 days, with an eight-day grace period. If an item reaches the time limit without being claimed, then it will be destroyed, donated or sold at auction.

While lots of items in the lost and found aren't surprising — backpacks, IDs and sunglasses — the more unique items draw attention. Some of the more interesting items there now include a full tactical vest, a wooden oar, two "SpongeBob SquarePants" art prints and a Chilean flag.

Melissa Royle, Salt Lake City International Airport customer service supervisor, shows signed prints at the lost and found at the Salt Lake City International Airport in Salt Lake City on Dec. 4.
Melissa Royle, Salt Lake City International Airport customer service supervisor, shows signed prints at the lost and found at the Salt Lake City International Airport in Salt Lake City on Dec. 4. (Photo: Kristin Murphy, Deseret News)

Royle said that a good number of musical instruments lose their owners. There is a violin and a unique type of harp that have been claimed and are ready to be shipped to the owner.

"The other day, we had a bag that had not only an electric guitar; it had a ukulele and an acoustic guitar," she said. "So a lot of merchandise in one package that poor musician was without for quite a while before they realized that they could go online and file the claim with us."

The team also recently had some handcrafted Indigenous regalia worn for dances and powwows that have been returned to the owner.

Is 'airport brain' the cause?

It may seem strange that people can leave behind items of high monetary or sentimental value, but Royle blamed it on what she calls "airport brain."

"You come into an environment that's super hectic, full of lots of people, and you're just in an unfamiliar space, just being rushed through the process. As soon as you start rushing, that's where, unfortunately, people lose things and whatnot," Royle said.

Travelers walk through the Salt Lake City International Airport on Oct. 16.
Travelers walk through the Salt Lake City International Airport on Oct. 16. (Photo: Laura Seitz, Deseret News)

Out of the nearly 30,000 items received by the lost and found between January and November, 2,680 were bags that included 7,193 items of clothing, 6,143 computers and other electronic devices and 2,795 cards or IDs.

"It's a very hectic process. People are taking things out of their pockets, out of their bags, and they're being moved through quite quickly. It's an unusual process," said Royle, who noted that even airport employee possessions often end up in the lost and found.

The investigative process

Once the misplaced belongings arrive, Royle and her employees start processing.

"We'll image each item, we'll inventory it, look through what it is, add notes into our system, and then tag it, and then store it," she said. They work very hard to reunite people with their items, and this includes good old-fashioned investigative work.

Nikki Rasmussen, Salt Lake City International Airport lost and found representative, wraps up a lost laptop to ship back to its owner at the lost and found at the Salt Lake City International Airport in Salt Lake City on Dec. 4.
Nikki Rasmussen, Salt Lake City International Airport lost and found representative, wraps up a lost laptop to ship back to its owner at the lost and found at the Salt Lake City International Airport in Salt Lake City on Dec. 4. (Photo: Kristin Murphy, Deseret News)

With each item, they try to see if they can find a name or contact information on it. If not, the next step includes looking up names on social media, reaching out to airlines, trying to find a phone number online or doing overhead pages at the airport.

Because an airport is a travel hub, oftentimes the misplaced items belong to those who live outside of Utah. Royle and her team ship claimed items both nationally and internationally.

"The job isn't always straightforward. There's a lot of different things can happen throughout the week," Royle said. "There's a lot of helping ease people's minds and hoping and reuniting things. There's a lot of researching that happens, calling people, and just a lot of detective work for the most part."

Once unclaimed items reach the end of the road, the process becomes more final.

"If there's items that needed to be destroyed, like personal documents or just like a journal or what have you, unfortunately, we would shred it to ensure that the personal information isn't out there," she added.

Royle said one thing that makes her job so interesting is learning about strangers through their belongings.

Melissa Royle, Salt Lake City International Airport customer service supervisor, shows an oar at the lost and found at the Salt Lake City International Airport in Salt Lake City on Dec. 4.
Melissa Royle, Salt Lake City International Airport customer service supervisor, shows an oar at the lost and found at the Salt Lake City International Airport in Salt Lake City on Dec. 4. (Photo: Kristin Murphy, Deseret News)

"I'm taking this step into their life," Royle said.

Read the full story at Deseret News.

The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

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Caitlin Keith, Deseret NewsCaitlin Keith
Caitlin is a trending intern for Deseret News. She covers travel, entertainment and other trending topics.

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