• Professorozone@lemmy.world
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    5 days ago

    I worked with a guy who’s wife had just had a baby and the baby was sick. The guy was very good at his job but was working from home without really asking permission. We have some leeway in this matter but technically he didn’t clear it. His supervisor really had it in for him and was trying very hard to get him fired for falsifying his time card. I don’t know why he didn’t like him, but the supervisor was a real ass. It may have been racist motivation, but I’m not sure.

    I should point out that I had asked this guy to do some work for me that I didn’t have the capability to do and this guy approached it in such a unique way that the customer and some universities were really interested in his work. This is a defense contractor environment where every working hour has to be accounted for. Whenever I asked the guy a question whether via email or telephone, he always responded immediately. It was all computer code so I didn’t see a problem with this.

    When he came into work and told me what was going on I immediately contact the manager on his behalf.

    Well bottom line is that management pretty much dropped the subject and the supervisor was walked out of the facility. Turns out he had been falsifying his own time card the whole time. How’s that for hypocrisy?

    Justice served.

    • Zombiepirate@lemmy.world
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      5 days ago

      It was an open secret that he was huffing the nitrous oxide from the whipped cream cans, because he told people about it.

      So I guess not really so much an “open secret” as just a thing he did.