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by plasticbugs 918 days ago
A former co-worker of mine ran nearly this exact same scheme. As an executive for a cable network, he bilked his company out of 8 million dollars. He invoiced the company for video production work that never happened. $25k here, $20k there. He has since served his time of 4+ years in a New York state prison. He lists his role at that cable company on his LinkedIn.

I expect she will do the same and she’ll be back on the market in a few years with her Facebook diversity manager role at the top of her LinkedIn.

3 comments

Thats why you do background checks when hiring staff.

After being caught once, the judgement will show in your record for 7 years. Most employers would be adviaed to steer clear of such fraudulent employees

In this case, it's not clear if the guilty plea was for embezzlement of all the money or got reduced to some minor misdemeanor that looks like a marijuana conviction on a background check. But still somebody will look past it on check, even Anthony Levandowski got investor money after his convictions.
I believe this as well. My co-worker will have no problem getting another high-profile role in tech. His embezzlement will be seen as go-getter material.
And forever on internet.
> He lists his role at that cable company on his LinkedIn.

The kind of detail you wouldn’t put in a movie script because it’s too obviously contrived lol

Google exists, you know.
I was more speaking to the audaciousness of it all. I expect many employers will still do their due diligence and with high profile cases like these it’ll be impossible to hide. So I guess the perpetrator ultimately has to own their actions and maybe including these indiscretions in their LinkedIn is inevitable.
I should add my former co-worker is easily found in Google. He is not a low-profile kind of person. He is best known for owning expensive cars and bankrolling “cannonball run” record attempts.