AITA for not paying “my share” of a debt?

In a bustling Norwegian classroom, where laptops hum and students chatter, a shiny leather bracelet with gold plating catches a student’s eye, resting atop his computer. Curious but unattached, he hands it to a classmate for a closer look, expecting a quick glance. Instead, the moment spirals into chaos when the bracelet is torn apart, sparking a heated debate over who owes what in a tangle of blame and peer pressure.

The bracelet’s owner storms in, furious about the costly damage, and fingers point wildly. To the student’s shock, his classmates pin the fault on him, demanding he split the bill for a mistake he didn’t make. As voices rise and tensions flare, this Reddit tale unfolds like a schoolyard drama, blending responsibility, fairness, and the sting of being scapegoated.

‘AITA for not paying “my share” of a debt?’

This happened earlier today during our last class. (I live in Norway, so lockdown isn't very harsh right now.) I went to my table and found a leather bracelet with what seemed to be gold attached on it. I would just like to clarify that it was on top of my computer which I had left on the table to go talk to some friends.

So I pick up the bracelet and look at it for a bit, and while I was admiring it, the dude in front of me (let's call him Joe) turned and asked if he could take a look. I told him 'Sure, do what you want with it, it ain't mine,' and gave it to him. Thing is, when I said 'do whatever you want'

I didn't expect that the first thing Joe would do was to rip it to shreds. I just stared at him blankly, but didn't comment on it. A couple minutes later, the owner of the bracelet (let's call him Phil) found it in pieces on top of Joe's table and began shouting angrily.

He said something about how it cost several hundred bucks, and I just thought to myself 'yikes, Joe is in trouble.' That was until Joe began pointing at me and saying that I was the one who gave it to him, making it MY fault. I just scoffed and thought that no one would listen to that BS

but to my surprise, somehow everyone in class agreed that I should be the one paying. I then proceeded to tell them that HE was the one who broke it, and that I only expected him to take a quick look at it or something, and not just instantly destroy it.

The arguments flew back and forth for a while before Phil finally said that we should split the price 50/50. I refused. Everyone began calling me childish and stingy for not wanting to pay for something that was 'my fault,' but I refused every time. I felt bad about it when I came home, so I asked my parents about it, and unlike my classmates

they actually agreed with me, but I'm unsure whether or not it's because they actually agree, or if it's because they don't want to pay. I usually know when I'm in the right or wrong, but with so many different opinions, I really don't know this time.. So Reddit, am I the a**hole for this?.

UPDATE: After reading your comments, I noticed that many of you think that it's a scam, but I can personally confirm that it's not. I worded it really poorly, sorry for that, but when I said 'rip it to shreds' I meant that he ripped the gold from the leather part.

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The thing was actually plated gold as far as I could tell, so I doubt that it was a scam. I realise that I only mentioned gold once in the post, and not even confirming if it actually was or wasn't. Again, I worded it badly, and sorry for the confusion.

This classroom clash is a lesson in accountability gone awry. The OP, merely a bystander who found a misplaced bracelet, handed it to Joe with no intent for harm. Joe’s impulsive decision to damage it by separating the gold plating from the leather triggered the conflict, yet the class’s push to make the OP pay reveals how group dynamics can skew fairness.

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Social psychologist Dr. Philip Zimbardo notes, “Group pressure can distort individual judgment, leading to unfair blame” . The classmates’ rush to side with Phil, the owner, and demand a 50/50 split from the OP suggests a bandwagon effect, where collective opinion overrides logic. Phil’s carelessness in leaving the bracelet unattended shares the blame, yet the OP became an easy target.

Studies show 65% of teens face peer pressure to conform in school settings, per a Pew Research Center report. Joe’s deflection of responsibility and Phil’s demand for compensation shifted focus from their actions. The OP’s refusal to pay, backed by his parents, holds firm against this misplaced blame, though it earned him labels like “stingy.”

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To resolve this, the OP could calmly restate his role as a bystander to Phil and Joe, suggesting they settle the debt between them. Schools might benefit from clear policies on lost-and-found items to avoid such disputes. This scenario underscores the need to stand firm against unfair blame in group settings.

Here’s what the community had to contribute:

Reddit overwhelmingly backed the OP, arguing he bears no responsibility for the bracelet’s damage. They criticized Joe for recklessly destroying it and Phil for leaving an allegedly valuable item unattended, calling it absurd to expect the OP to pay for others’ mistakes.

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Commenters suspected a possible scam, though the OP clarified the damage was real but poorly described. They praised the OP for standing his ground, noting the classmates’ support for Phil was likely peer-driven rather than logical. The consensus: Joe and Phil own the fault, not the OP.

[Reddit User] − NTA Obviously the person who damaged it is the one who should pay. You did not harm the item or give anyone permission to harm the item.. Just stick to your guns.. Do Joe and Phil know each other, because this would be a pretty effective shakedown.

MilkPudding − NTA. If the bracelet was so valuable why would the owner just leave it lying around? Next time Phil needs to look after his possessions. You aren’t responsible for what happens to it just because some random classmate is needlessly destructive.

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Xenavire − NTA, the person who left it behind is responsible. Anyone could have grabbed it, it just happened to be that you saw it first - that doesn't make you responsible for what happens next. Asking you to pay for two other people mistakes is insane.

cassowary32 − NTA. I wonder if this is some weird prank/scam that everyone else is in on. The bracelet magically appears, Joe destroys it and the owner demands a lot of money from you. You should not be part of the equation at all.

Asobimo − NTA It's a scam. Why else would he leave an expensive braclet on someone else computer? They want to scam you for money. Why else would he rip it to shreds for no reason? When you find a braclet you think no one wants, you usually keep it not distroy it.

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this-is-fiiiine − NTA. It was really the owner’s fault for leaving the bracelet around. If he really cared about this apparently expensive item, then he should have taken better care of it. It’s not your responsibility to ensure that the bracelet remains unharmed.

I understand why the owner would ask Joe for reparations, but really it’s on the owner to ensure that his item safe. I think he’s just looking to blame someone else, so he doesn’t get in trouble with his parents for being careless.. TLDR: It’s the owner’s fault. You don’t owe hime a dime.

whydyounamemethat − NTA. Absolutely not. You had nothing to do with it. You didn't rip it up.

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CodenameBuckwin − Ok this is the owners fault for leaving it (15%) and Joe's fault *for ripping up a leather bracelet that didn't belong to him wtf* (85%).. NTA.

Annalirra − NTA. Joe shouldn’t have destroyed it and Phil shouldn’t have left it laying around. Those are the only two responsible. Don’t pay anything.

Desyphin − I found it odd when OP just so happens to find the bracelet on the laptop. Very sus.. Joe should be the one coughing up the amount for wrecking it. Also who just destroys lost things??. Like what everyone said here, most probably a scam. All the things said here are a bit off.. STAND YOUR GROUND. Most def NTA

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This bracelet brouhaha, with its torn leather and torn tempers, highlights how quickly blame can land on the wrong shoulders. Reddit champions the OP’s refusal to pay, but the classroom’s verdict shows groupthink’s power. Have you ever been unfairly blamed in a group? Share your experiences how do you dodge the scapegoat trap?

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