Embezzlement???
eagle1
11 Posts
We have just refused a job applicant due to a guilty plea for embezzlement on the criminal background check. The applicant just called and told me several years ago while going through a divorce they did not turn a rental car back in on time and was charged for embezzlement because of this. Has anyone ever heard of this?? This is not what I think of when I hear embezzlement.
Comments
Since embezzlement is one of the crimes that prevents us from hiring according to our company policy and customer contracts, I would pass on this hire. What does your policy state?
Did the applicant disclose his conviction before you learned of it via the criminal background check??
I agree that you should pass on this person. A conviction for embezzlement would not result from keeping a rental a day late and paying up then. The man is also a liar. But, alas, you are in Mississippi, not encumbered by a State Department of Labor and there is no law or regulation prohibiting you from exercising whatever judgement you like in your situation. Do not discuss your decision with the applicant beyond telling him "Your application has not been advanced to the finalist level."
I am very disappointed in your response. First your opinion is correct (as always), but you (and others) are referring to this applicant as a male. I don't this referrence in the original post. Please don't tell that you too are stereo typing all criminals as men. Say it aint so.
Rob S.
Thanks for your responces
Why don't you enable your profile on the forum and we Mississippian's can help you privately from time to time.
If I am PORK where should I visualize EAGLE1 to be associated in this business world of Mississippi? Eagle Lake or Harley Davison.
PORK
PORK
Rental car companies do swear out warrants for people who don't return cars on time.
Normally, you think of embezzlement as theft from an employer, usually involving someone who is entrusted with money or goods. But in some states -- and I think Mississippi is one of them -- it's broad enough to include fraudulent appropriation of anything entrusted to someone under a promise to deliver it back to its owner in the future. Failure to return a car on time could fit that definition. And even if it's not the statute usually used for such a situation, it could still happen in a plea bargain.
Not sure how the divorce figures into this. But we had a case here in Tennessee where a former Tennessee Titan was arrested in possession of a "stolen car" that turned out to be his ex-girlfriend's lease car on which she had stopped making payments.
It may be simpler just to avoid this mess by refusing the job applicant. But if you want to delve into it further, the applicant probably has some paperwork that could substantiate or disprove his/her claims.
Brad Forrister
Director of Publishing
M. Lee Smith Publishers
Thanks for all the responses
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