Hold on.. they fired people that were ACQUITTED of a crime?  That seems a bit too far :(
If a court can't find them guilty how can an employer?


On Thu, Sep 16, 2010 at 14:38, Tim Bogart <timbogart@yahoo.com> wrote:
I like your response.  At a company with which I worked for many years, many years ago used to send me email on a daily basis listing folks who had been terminated.  Of those, many were terminated because of falsehoods on their applications.  And of those, not nearly, but ALL were due to information omitted regarding some crime that the individual had committed.  And they ran the gambit from robbery to murder.  Yes, murder, believe it or not. But in fairness, of those, they involved folks who had been tried for murder and had been exonerated by some means (found not guilty, thrown out due to mistrial or other reasons) but the point is that they had concealed the facts regarding criminal activities (I mean seriously, how can you forget to list something like that, or how can you think it somehow doesn't qualify as something a potential employer would not be interested?) that are easily checked.

Tim B.

I'm sticking with Grandpa Jones here...
"True is stranger than fact."
Hee-Haw