"Disgruntled" (?) ex-employee
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At what point do you take precautions against a disgruntled ex-employee and what should those precautions be?
We let go an employee last month mainly due to his inability to get along with his supervisor (there was issue after issue that led up to this). A few of his responses were a bit "quirky"--certain things that he said. We eventually ended up terminating him citing, "things just aren't going to work out."
His behavior since then has not quite been enough to call it harassing, but certainly odd. I won't get into specifics unless it would help, but here's the latest--he supposedly just started a new job. Over the weekend, he sent an e-mail out to everyone in the office he worked in (only about 6 people). The e-mail included his written reprimand and then a response to the supervisor. In the response, he mentions that the whole ordeal has bothered him emotionally, to the point that he has had nightmares.
I also just learned that there were times when he stood on a corner outside near the building. He never did anything--other than say hi to a couple of staff members when they went to lunch, but that was it.
Do we need to do anything beyond keeping an eye on this? What if the e-mails keep coming? Should I contact the ex-employee directly about this?
Ay-yi-yi.
We let go an employee last month mainly due to his inability to get along with his supervisor (there was issue after issue that led up to this). A few of his responses were a bit "quirky"--certain things that he said. We eventually ended up terminating him citing, "things just aren't going to work out."
His behavior since then has not quite been enough to call it harassing, but certainly odd. I won't get into specifics unless it would help, but here's the latest--he supposedly just started a new job. Over the weekend, he sent an e-mail out to everyone in the office he worked in (only about 6 people). The e-mail included his written reprimand and then a response to the supervisor. In the response, he mentions that the whole ordeal has bothered him emotionally, to the point that he has had nightmares.
I also just learned that there were times when he stood on a corner outside near the building. He never did anything--other than say hi to a couple of staff members when they went to lunch, but that was it.
Do we need to do anything beyond keeping an eye on this? What if the e-mails keep coming? Should I contact the ex-employee directly about this?
Ay-yi-yi.
Comments
I'm not a lawyer so aside from what's legal to do here, I'd begin by offering to have someone walk the supervisor to his/her car after work. I'm sure others will chime in with bigger ideas. An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.
PORK
One of the lawyers can jump in, but I recall that one of ours thought that the continued e-mail contact could be some kind of electronic theft since is was using our business resources for other things. It's probably a stretch.
I bet if you talk with your employees, they think he is "crazy" and ignore him anyway. However, I would ask them not to reply or do anything that would continue this type of behavior and hope it will stop.
It doesn't sound as if he is dangerous, just wants to cause trouble. Ignore him.
E Wart
Good luck.
Gene
"Don't shoot innocent employees"
My $0.02 worth...
The Balloonman
To everyone else--thank you. We blocked his e-mail address from our system and I sent a note to everyone who received the e-mail letting them know we were handling the situation. Hopefully, he's said his peace and he will move on.
Thanks for the advice! (You, too, Baloonman!)
I have on two occassions considered doing the above based on work situations. Either a termed employee or one that was disciplined. Have even had two terminations that before leaving the building at night for a week or two, I went an looked out the windows, even scanned the adjacent parking lots........... just to make sure I did not walk out into a bad situation. In all of those situations, I made sure that I stayed alert, though no firearms in the car did keep a bat or something that would be effective if needed.
Be alert, and don't think that it can't happen to you or where you work and you should be fine.
My $0.02 worth,
The Balloonman
Your description immediately raises my "wacko alert"! Anyone who would copy his reprimand/response to former co-workers, talking about "nightmares" sounds like a wacko to me.
Unfortunately, if he really IS a wacko, it's probably a risky matter to respond to him or in any way do anything that might further provoke him.
He can e-mail whomever he wants, so you can't ban him from e-mailing your staff. But I agree with the good advice re: having your IT block his e-mail address(es).
If he continues to loiter near your building, you can issue him a letter banning his physical person from your premises, on threat of charging him for trespassing-- and you don't even need a lawyer for that. You can't ban him from the street/sidewalk, but you can ban him from your building/ofc suite. We had to do this in the case of 1 former EE... and it seems to have worked to keep him out of our building in that case. But sending such a letter to this guy might serve to escalate his hostility to the next level.
If I were in your situation, I think I would block his e-mails for now, but take no further action, and hope he gets tired of his own antics and goes away of his own accord.
Good luck!
Fyi, it is true that you can take legal action against someone who sends to many emails to the company for monopolizing the employer's equipment and there was a successful case of that happening within the last year against a former employee in a situation similar to yours, but with considerably more email traffic. Can't remember where...
We blocked the e-mails and made sure people knew not to respond to him--that all went fine.
He has now taken it upon himself to mail a letter to his former supervisor's house addressed to the supervisor's wife. The wife hasn't opened it.
This is getting creepy--if I send a letter asking him to stop, that could upset him; if we ignore him, he'll either 1)stop, or 2)keep doing things.
Do I involve an attorney at this point?
You did the right thing by blocking emails, and basically ingnoring him, but now it's time to sit up and take notice. By that I mean involve the law.
Good luck!
See my original post the this #8. x:D
The Balloonman