Theft in the workplace
TeresaBlank
26 Posts
We have had a couple in instances of theft in our office - someone took a new computer monitor and another time someone stole some food that an employee had brought (funding raising items) to distribute to fellow employees. Do I have any obligation to let other employees know about these thefts, or do I just keep silent about it (as my supervisor has told me to do)?
Comments
Also if this has been ongoing maybe you should consider security/surveillance cameras. If you do this notify the employees, check into state laws and let them know it is for their protection. This can be done rather inexpensively and you can be discrete about the cameras.
Theft should not be ignored or tolerated.
My $0.02 worth.
Good Luck!
Once you have done your part in advising your supervisor about the issues, you may want to write a memo to keep, in case this is ever in question later and the supervisor points the finger at you as the reason no one was told.
Good Luck!
Once you know why you were directed not to say anything, you may feel more comfortable or you can offer some suggestions about providing this information in a way not to provide grist for the rumor mill, but still let the employees know there's a problem.
Are you sure it was an employee?
Information/education is power............if it is an employee stealing they might stop, or you might get some info that helps you id the culprit. Like Pork said,why would you want to keep a thief in your office.
Also think about it, you think the employee who had their lunch stolen has not talked about it? You know they have, and you also know that the other employees know that the company is aware of it. So by not talking about it, doing what is percieved to be nothing, what message does that send to the employees? The don't talk about it from the supervisor was probably a knee jerk reaction, when you approach it and put some of these thoughts in front of him, a supervisor with a functioning brain should be able to figure out what is the best cause of action........
My $0.02 for the day!
Usually, a general memo advising employees there has been some "theft" in the building and a reminder to lock up or not bring their valuables into the workplace should be a sufficient "alert" to the thief (if it is inhouse). I like the idea about telling employees "we have taken measures to update our security procedures." Again, another subtle warning to the thief.