The thanks I get...

I understand why you wouldn't have gone to management right away. You, as a good person, want to keep the faith that another person will change when faced with exposure of their activities or just because of the shame that they were discovered stealing or whatever, because that's what you would do. You want to believe that everyone out there has that bit of goodness/virtue in them that can come out if they are just pushed a certain way. It's hard to understand people like that, who don't care at all that they are stealing from the very people giving them a job, who have no remorse for their activities, and obviously no compunction about screwing you over if you get in the way. It's also hard to realize how these kind of people affect you - they make *you* a harder and more suspicious person, because eventually you realize the only way to get around those people is to play their game better than they do. We're all taught about helping others and giving second chances, which is what makes something like this difficult - if you had gone straight to management you probably would have felt bad about the 'what ifs' of the situation. Judging by the way they acted, though, maybe you are better off overall/long-term not being there. They obviously don't care enough about themselves and their business to catch the money loss, and so they wouldn't have cared about you as a quality employee either. I know it totally sucks right now, though.
 
I understand why you wouldn't have gone to management right away. You, as a good person, want to keep the faith that another person will change when faced with exposure of their activities or just because of the shame that they were discovered stealing or whatever, because that's what you would do. You want to believe that everyone out there has that bit of goodness/virtue in them that can come out if they are just pushed a certain way. It's hard to understand people like that, who don't care at all that they are stealing from the very people giving them a job, who have no remorse for their activities, and obviously no compunction about screwing you over if you get in the way. It's also hard to realize how these kind of people affect you - they make *you* a harder and more suspicious person, because eventually you realize the only way to get around those people is to play their game better than they do. We're all taught about helping others and giving second chances, which is what makes something like this difficult - if you had gone straight to management you probably would have felt bad about the 'what ifs' of the situation. Judging by the way they acted, though, maybe you are better off overall/long-term not being there. They obviously don't care enough about themselves and their business to catch the money loss, and so they wouldn't have cared about you as a quality employee either. I know it totally sucks right now, though.

Well, by default, I don't trust people. However, I had worked with this girl for months and months and we'd become friends and I would've hated to see her lose her job, so I just wanted to let her know she needed to get sneakier or clean up her act. I really think something bigger is going on though. I'm pretty sure the general manager of the store was getting his cut too because I told him about this and he acted like he didn't care at all, like he already knew. He wouldn't lose from it either. The only people losing from this operation would the the corporation. Basically here's how it works

It's a pizza delivery place. You answer the phone, take an order, but don't put it in the computer, so it doesn't get recorded as a sale and the money from it is not expected to be in the till at the end of the night. You deliver the pizza, collect the money, and that's that. The day after I figured this out and mentioned it to this girl I closed the store with the general manager, and he made a hHUGE deal of showing me the inventory numbers, which were right on, within a percent. However, we had been using WAY less toppings and cheese than we were supposed to all day, so we should have had excess inventory at the end of the day. The day after I found this out, another driver and I were outside on a smoke break and he said to me "Now you've only got two weeks before you move, right?" "Yeah" "Well when I was in the military some ****ed up stuff was happening just before I was about to get discharged so I started acting like a jerk and they said 'you know we can take that honorable discharge away' so my advice to you is this. Keep it smooth sailing, don't rock the boat, yknow?" and looked me straight in the eye. I think there's more corruption in that store than I realized and when I began to figure it out they got rid of me. I think it's time to write a letter to the district manager. Maybe ask him for my last week's pay for bringing it to his attention :-p
 
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