rSlash - r/Maliciouscompliance I Got My Toxic Boss Fired By Obeying His Instructions
Episode Date: December 7, 2020r/Maliciouscompliance What happens when a boss asks an employee to do something obviously unethical, and possibly illegal? Sure thing boss, but only after you sign the document to prove that you appro...ved it! The idiotic and toxic boss in today's video basically signed his own death warrant by telling a worker to do something illegal, and the worker was more than happy to maliciously comply Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Welcome to R-slash, a podcast where I read
the best post from a cross-reddit.
Today's subreddit is R-slash malicious compliance
where a company's new policy causes them to save a few bucks,
but then weighs thousands of dollars.
Our next Reddit post is from Sada Meister.
One day at work for my lunch break,
I decided to run around the corner to McDonald's.
The drive-through was packed, so I decided to just go inside.
There was a homeless guy out of front who wasn't asking for money, but some food.
I could tell that he was legitimately in a bad way, so I told him, yeah, no problem
man, sit tight and I'll bring you a couple of McDonald's.
I ordered two for me and two for him, and as I'm waiting for our order to be called, I
notice an employee had gone outside to pester him and tell him that he can't be there
and he has to leave.
I go out and explain that he was waiting for me and that I was going to bring him some
food.
The worker adamantly stated that he could not stand out front because it's bothering
some other customers.
Well, I wasn't about to let them run him off because he's hungry and actually about
to get some food.
So I decided instead of taking my food back to my office, I'd go ahead and eat in the
restaurant with my new friend as company.
Like two minutes later our order was called and while we ate we had a nice chat.
He told me about why he's homeless and why he doesn't trust the shelters here etc.
After we finished eating, we both left the restaurant and we parted ways.
I never saw him again but he seemed like an alright guy. Our next reddit post is from Tandy
Angie. I work in accounting, and my assistant is out on this particular day, so I'm working
on invoicing. While doing the invoicing, I came across a work order that has a higher
expense amount than the invoice amount. Realizing that we'd be losing 100 bucks on the job
instead of at least breaking even, I decided to question the project manager Chad about it.
Hey, I noticed this job hasn't anomaly.
Can you explain it to me?
What are you talking about?
See the expenses?
They reach a higher amount than the amount that you want me to bill for.
I want to see if that was a mistake or...
No, it's right.
If that's right, then we're gonna lose money on this job. You won't get a commission end. I'm telling you it's right. If that's right, then we're gonna lose money on this job.
You won't get a commission end.
I'm telling you, it's right.
Chad then rips the papers from my hand.
See, we charge a 20% markup right here.
He points to the wrong spot and has the audacity to look smug.
See, it's fine.
I calmly take the papers back and show them the two amounts side by side.
I see that, but you didn't account for that over here for the billing amount.
The total billing amount is less than that.
Look, it's right, and I don't have time to explain it to you.
Just do it and stop bothering me.
No problem.
Can you just initially hear so when our boss asks me why this job is invoice so low, I can?
Sure, fine, whatever.
He signs his name next to the billing amount.
Now get out of my space.
I go back to my office and invoice the too low amount.
I send it off, fully knowing that this was gonna backfire
and kept all backups and copies handy for when it did.
Next Monday, I have the boss in my office
and the invoicing question is in his hand.
Hey, you did this invoice wrong.
He shows me the invoice.
Actually, if you look at the backup, Chad told me that was the invoice amount.
I show him where Chad signed the document.
I'll be right back.
He left my office, and roughly an hour later, I get called to the boss's office.
Chad is there, looking uncomfortable, and my boss is on the phone.
He waved me inside and I sat down.
Alright, we're here now.
Now, OP, please explain this to me.
I notice that the expenses on this invoice were higher than the billing amount.
Chad told me the numbers were fine and to just do the invoice.
Hear that text?
Text is the subcontractor we used in this job.
Yup, so what are we gonna do?
Only thing to do is fire them.
They're either incompetent or cheating us.
Either way, it's bad for business.
I am now very concerned for my job, but I sit silently.
I know I don't have the whole story yet.
I reckon you're right. Good luck.
And don't worry about the park job.
I got an opening up tomorrow I can squeeze in.
Thanks, text.
My boss hangs up the phone and turns to Chad.
Chad has gone from nervous to mad.
It's not my fault you can't do her job.
You signed your name right next to the wrong amount.
Now, you're either working with someone
and accounting over in Texas Company to steal from me
or you're too stupid to work here.
Which is it?
Chad stands, as does my boss. I stood
as well, not liking being the only person sitting. Chad says nothing. You're fired, get
your computer and leave. My boss turns to me. Go ahead and fill out the paperwork for his
leave, make sure to add that he attempted to embezzle money. I nod and leave. Chad stays there.
As soon as I leave, the office explodes and screaming.
I stayed in my office doing the paperwork my boss asked me to fill out. I saw Chad leave later
with his stuff thrown haphazardly into his bag. That was the last time that I saw Chad.
A friend saw him working at a cash register at a buffet place about a month later. Turns out,
both my boss and techs had agreed to lower their markups for the jobs so the invoice number was still too high, not too low.
But I didn't know that until after the fact when my boss had me redo the paperwork for
the entire job. Someone from Accounting in Texas Company had altered the invoices into
Chad, and they were planning on splitting the difference after we paid the altered bill.
Alright, if you're going to commit a felony, at least don't be a moron about it.
Excuse me, sir, there's something really fishy going on with these invoices, possibly
something legal.
Would you be willing to sign this document to confirm that you're the one responsible
for it?
Of course I'll sign your silly document now, get out of my office.
And when this inevitably comes back to bite me in my butt
I'll be sure to get angry at you for this malicious compliance and then down in the comments we have a
similar story from Shadow East. I had a person get his whole department busted over 23 cents.
I was auditing compliance with internal documentation policies. This guy put in a ticket that his
paycheck was 23 cents short. Some bone hit just
automatically reversed the direct deposit and reissued with the additional 23 cents.
This was at the end of May. When I looked up his history, I saw over a thousand hours of
overtime paid a time and a half so far for this year. Well, there's only two thousand
eighty regular hours in a year. This would have meant that he was working over 80 hours every week.
Their boss had left and they hadn't been moved under a new boss.
It turns out that this resulted in their time sheets auto-approving because the approval
chain was broken.
His group found the bug and at first they just added a few hours a week.
They ramped that up to over 100 hours a week when they didn't get caught.
They would have been able to continue if it wasn't for that 23 cents.
We reversed as many direct deposits as we could, and this sent the whole mess to the
fraud department.
So let me clarify what's actually happening here.
These people realized that they could basically build a company whatever they wanted and
then get automatically approved.
So these people were literally submitting double their time sheets. Instead of working 40 hours,
they were saying they were working for 80 hours. So at time and a half, that meant that they were
getting paid 250% of their normal salary. So if they normally made 100K a year, with this scam,
they were making 250K a year. And then after embezzling on a massive scale,
someone's paycheck was 23 cents short,
so they reported it.
Then that report got audited
and the entire scam got discovered.
And then they lost it all over 23 cents.
This is just the beginning.
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Our next reddit post is from Rocky 3e.
I worked for a company that provides a utility truck, and one of the analytics they monitor
is how long the truck stays in place with the motor on.
The target number was something like 3%.
I was consistently stuck in traffic because my area was changed to the downtown area of
my city and naturally my idle percent increased.
My supervisor began constantly badgering me over the rays of my idle percent about 10-12%
higher now.
After they decided to give me an official warning, I became the most efficient truck driver
ever.
I brought my idle percentage down to 0.00% by shutting the truck off at every stop sign,
red light, bumper to bumper traffic, in drive-thrues, and instantly off when I got to where
I was going.
Now, remember that this is a utility truck that's charging my two phones, laptop, tablet,
and my various other rechargeable batteries.
Now if you drain the truck's battery without running
the motor, this causes the truck's battery to die a lot. The company rules forbade me from jump
starting the truck myself, so I had to call the company and they sent out a tow truck to jump
start it for me. I could do it myself anyway, and probably would have, but they were writing people
up for stupid things. And every time I call this tow truck, it takes a minimum
of two hours for it to show up. I began doing this multiple times a day, every day until
he decided that my truck was broken. It goes to the shop, gets checked out, and they give
it back. And I kill it again. They end up giving me an entirely new truck, and I start killing
that too. I repeated this process until they gave me a third truck
and the manager calls me to ask what my daily routine is. I go through the basics and
mention that I turn off the engine every time my truck stops. My manager goes, why the
effort you're doing this? I said, my supervisor wrote me up for my idle time being too high.
This is completely ridiculous. He threw away my right up, and I'm guessing
you talked to my supervisor because I never heard a word about idle time again, and I
quit caring about it. Down in the comments, we have this post from Liz Lo, dude. This
month, we saved $3 in gas used while idling, and spent $3,000 in towing and jumpstart fees.
Great job, team! Our next reddit post is from Lone Wolf Wee.
My grandmother and mother were both extremely strict about them not being interrupted while
they were on the phone.
One year while visiting my grandmother, I decided to climb a large tree in her yard.
I don't remember how high it was, but I was almost at the top.
Now me being 11, I of course climbed into a dead branch and it snapped.
I fall, plummeting to the ground.
As soon as I realize I'm alive, I notice I can't quite move my left arm.
I tell my brother to go inside and tell our grandmother.
Now my brother has asked burgers and was two years younger than me.
He goes into the house, sits down, and waits.
I'm sure it was only a few minutes, but for me it seemed like an eternity. Finally,
my grandmother hangs up the phone and asks my brother what's the matter. That's when
he told her that I fell out of the tree. At the hospital, somebody, the nurse, the doctor,
I don't remember, asked me about the details. I told him that I was laying on the ground
for a while, and when I was asked why, my brother, who was in the office with us, said that
he had to wait until grandma got off her in the office with us said that he had to
wait until grandma got off her phone called a teller. My grandmother had to explain to them what was
going on. I do remember a social worker ushering them out of the room and asking some questions.
After that, both my grandmother and mother explained to us that if it's an emergency, we need to tell
them right away. Down in the comments, we have this story from throw away. I've
mentioned this before. Teach your kids when it's okay to be loud and interrupt and scream
before you wind up in situations like these. A little girl that I babysat was stuck in
a plaything for who knows how long. She was always quiet and sweet, but one day it had
been a little too long so I went looking for her. I found her stuck and crying. I asked her why she didn't
tell me and she said that she didn't want to interrupt me. I told her that when she's
hurt she's allowed to interrupt her even scream but she didn't believe me. I told her
even if she's just really scared and needs help then she can scream or be rude or interrupt.
I could tell that she wasn't going to accept this from me so I had to talk with her dad
when he picked her up. Please teach your kids that sometimes it't going to accept this from me, so I had to talk with her dad when he picked her up.
Please teach your kids that sometimes it's okay to yell, scream, or be rude, or not listen
to adults.
Our next reddit postage from Gedploxy.
I work at a place where many people are salary, but there are also people on a time clock.
Most of the time clock employees have a factory worker kind of position, so that makes a lot
of sense.
Then there are mainly office workers like me who are on a punch clock due to our positions.
Office workers on the time clock generally had their time checked by supervisors who don't
really care about some over time.
Anyway, we used to have a pay service which also provided the time clock that would log
the minute you use the machine.
It could calculate your time based on the minute you punch general.
I thought this was a pretty good idea, it made sense to me. Then this was no longer the case. Our company switched to a different payroll service
it had a different time clock. This new service began to round my time to the nearest quarter hour.
It took me a couple of paychecks to finally figure out what was happening.
I saw that it clearly rounded to the nearest quarter hour, but I assumed at first that it was
counting every minute and rounding. No, it was rounding up or down from the minute that you used the
clock. I was annoyed by this at first. I was especially annoyed that there was another
rule where the clock would always round up to the next quarter hour during the first
clock end of the day. I saw no reason for the clock to round. It's a computer and the
math is easy. Eventually, I realize that the new rules
were made for the dozens of production workers. They have to begin working at and start being paid
for a certain time, so they have to clock in a little early. They also take their lunches all
around the same time, so the new clock in rules make a lot of sense, for them. I work in the office
and I don't have a strict schedule. If I wanted to blow through lunch and leave early, I'm allowed. I can take lunch at 11 or 12 or whenever. Nobody cares.
I have work to do, and I do it. I know that I'm very lucky to be in this situation, but
my relationship with HR regarding this time clock started on the wrong foot. Cue malicious
compliance. Knowing that it makes no difference to my pay-up
I clock in at 801 or 815, I'm running a little late in the morning. I'll just calm down
and take an extra minute. For lunch, I'll usually now clock out at something like 1208 and
then clock back at like 1251. That's 43 minutes to eat, but it only counts as 30 minutes
as far as the time clock cares. Then when I leave, if I'm leaving at 5 for example,
I'll clock out at 508, which counts as 515.
I gently express my dissatisfaction
with the rounding clock when I first learned about it,
so I don't really feel on the hook for this.
They can come and tell me outright
if they want me to change these practices.
I usually squeeze a little bit of overtime out
every week because of this system.
Our next reddit post is from Dusty Bronco.
When I was a kid, my dad could really be a dick sometimes.
He broke rules all of his life, but he would swiftly and gleefully punish me if I didn't
do exactly what he wanted without question.
Well, one Christmas season we went out shopping for my mom and spent the whole day crawling
them all.
When we got home, he told me that I would be wrapping their presents all by myself.
I said, you're not going to help me?
No, I paid for them, you can wrap them.
I was 12 years old, was I expected to buy presents?
I knew better than to fight with him though, so I did exactly what he asked.
And when it came time to sign the fromline on each presents tag, I wrote my name and
my name alone.
After all, if he was here, he could sign it.
Heck, if he checked the presents before Christmas, he could sign them.
But of course, he didn't.
And when we unwrapped presents, my mom wondered out loud why every gift to her was from me.
He got so mad and tried to make me feel bad about it.
But when I explained it in front of both of them,
he got quiet and stopped.
From that point on, I had help wrapping each year.
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rslash.
That was our slash malicious compliance.
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