Katybug
Senior Member
- Location
- Charlotte, NC
Along with the Gwen story, I want to share my last experience with the beotch of the office, and Linda was a holy terror. I encouraged the boss to hire her as bookkeeper because she was close in age to me, but OMG how I lived to regret that. She came in every morning with a scowl on her face, rarely ever smiled, and was one of the most negative and insulting people you could ever meet. No matter how important any question or comment you had for her may be, you dared not interrupt her 'til she finished her Chick-Fil-A breakfast and read the newspaper cover to cover at her desk every single morning. She would give me and other co-workers snarky & sarcastic comments on a regular basis and acted as if she ran the place. I was office manager and had been there 10 years, but I got no support from the owner boss. I spoke with him many times about it, but he was a very non-confrontational type guy and I think he was afraid to take her on! She was loud, brash and hateful, but he said he had to overlook it as she was the best bookkeeper he'd ever had. He was such a wuss and admitted accounting was his short suit and that he was overly dependent on her knowledge and experience, allowing her to get away with whatever. As he observed her every morning eating & reading the paper, he would look at me and smile and shrug his shoulders, as if "what are ya gonna do?" He never said a word to her about it! And never mind this was always on company time. We had lunch hours, not breakfast hours!
Anyhoo, I was offered another position and left a couple years later, couldn't wait to get away from her. But imagine my surprise when I got a call from a former co-worker at that office who told me Linda had just been led away in handcuffs by 5-6 policemen and the FBI. She had been embezzling since the first month she came to work for the firm, to the tune of over $500,000. And since there were offices in VA and GA, the FBI was called in on the case. The boss trusted her so much he would sign anything she put in front of him and allowed it to go on for almost 8 years. What a dumbo he was, but he would sign checks for payment and she was smart enough to divert them into her personal account. While she was on one of many fabulous vacations that his money allowed her, a creditor called in asking for payment. The boss just happened to answer the phone & remembered paying him in full the month before. Therein began the investigation which ended in 8 years in prison for her and she served 5.
I ran into her after she got out and got my revenge for all the hatefulness she had dealt me...just by saying hello to her and that I was sorry to read in the paper about her misfortune and hoped that she could make a new life for herself. Last words to her were, "I wish you luck." I made my point quite well, but was as nice as could be in letting her know I knew all about it. So I guess I'm a beotch myself.
BTW, she's now driving a bus and has totally "come out of the closet." I had suspected all along, but women's prison must have upped her courage on that.
Anyhoo, I was offered another position and left a couple years later, couldn't wait to get away from her. But imagine my surprise when I got a call from a former co-worker at that office who told me Linda had just been led away in handcuffs by 5-6 policemen and the FBI. She had been embezzling since the first month she came to work for the firm, to the tune of over $500,000. And since there were offices in VA and GA, the FBI was called in on the case. The boss trusted her so much he would sign anything she put in front of him and allowed it to go on for almost 8 years. What a dumbo he was, but he would sign checks for payment and she was smart enough to divert them into her personal account. While she was on one of many fabulous vacations that his money allowed her, a creditor called in asking for payment. The boss just happened to answer the phone & remembered paying him in full the month before. Therein began the investigation which ended in 8 years in prison for her and she served 5.
I ran into her after she got out and got my revenge for all the hatefulness she had dealt me...just by saying hello to her and that I was sorry to read in the paper about her misfortune and hoped that she could make a new life for herself. Last words to her were, "I wish you luck." I made my point quite well, but was as nice as could be in letting her know I knew all about it. So I guess I'm a beotch myself.
BTW, she's now driving a bus and has totally "come out of the closet." I had suspected all along, but women's prison must have upped her courage on that.