By Myzyri - 08/06/2010 07:11 - United States
Myzyri tells us more.
I am the original poster. Several people (not from this website) suggested I sue. For $250, I got a lawyer to write a threatening letter to my previous employer. By the way, I worked in the accounting department for a beer distributor with about 80 locations in the midwest. The lawyer kept it vague since my employment was "at will," but did mention the Civil Rights Act hoping it might scare them a little since Civil Rights violations are bad for business reputations. Basically, I'd heard my old boss telling jokes about blacks, Hispanics, Polish people, etc. With me being Polish (half-Polish, but with a "ski" name), my attorney said it was the only possibility we had so long as we could get other people to say they'd heard him tell these jokes. It would show that he was prejudiced by nationality (national origin). I knew several of my co-workers had heard his jokes before and thought they were distasteful, but I wasn't sure they'd come forward since they were still employed there. We knew it was a long-shot, but for $250, I figured we'd try anyway and maybe they'd settle quickly and easily just to make me go away. I doubted that would happen, but I was thinking it was worth it if I could at least get a little money out of them to help my family make it through if I couldn't get another job for awhile. Anyway, the VP (the owner's son) actually called me to get details on what happened. I basically told him that my boss was always snotty with me and based on his jokes, it might be because I'm a "Pollack." Apparently, when my old boss filled out the paperwork for my termination, he wrote down that he fired me because of excessive tardiness (I have NEVER been late and, in fact, I was ALWAYS 30-45 minutes early even though I was salaried). I explained the situation from my perspective and the VP said he'd get back to me. Three days later, he called me and said that he personally looked into it. The electronic access cards we use to get into the building have a database that records when people come and go. It proved I had been EARLY and hadn't missed a day of work in the last 6 months (that's as far back as the records went). He said he also talked to my co-workers about my "level of character" and my old boss. Based on everything he found out, he fired my old boss for falsifying company documents (my termination papers). In the end, since I met all the qualifications for my boss's job, the VP offered it to me. It comes with a five year contract instead of "at will" employment and even better, it's a 20% pay increase. Finally, to seal the deal, they gave me an $8,000 signing bonus. I've decided not to sue and I start again on Monday! FML Rescinded.
Top comments
Comments
105- you tell me that like, every post. get creative. be original. 108- Thank you. :D expressing yourself is healthy besides the narrow minded pricks that find it 'offensive' that someone is different. 109- part of the douche community, eh? well I don't care. and I didn't totally copy from a band. I combined. so shut your mouth. :) 119- oh, thank you. :D you brighten my day. :D jgood8- you're probably a 'stoner douche' yourself. how about you shut the hell up and let people be the way they want. use some grammar, too. you'll sound less like a drunk prick and more like a human. now shut the **** up.
Wrong. What is it with you people? Did somebody promise you the world was sugar and light? Maybe that's the person you should sue. You can't sue your job for firing you* any more than you can sue your bf for dumping you. (*Unless there was obvious and proveable discrimination.)
you could sue if he has no legitmate reason for firing you.
Illinois is an at-will employment state. Unless the OP can prove they were fired because of age, race, gender, religion, national origin, disability or pregnancy, there's no wrongful termination. You can be fired for any or no reason and it's perfectly legal. http://research.lawyers.com/Illinois/Employment-Law-in-Illinois.html
you should sue the company unless your an at will employ he cant just fire you for no reason.
Keywords
you can sue. they cant just fire you for no reason.
Dude, if you're for real... Then that was a win of epic proportions. Congrats on the promotion and showing that douche what happens when you mess with the wrong model employee.