HR called an emergency meeting because of one anonymous note… and by the end of the day three people had quit. Monday morning started like any other day. About an hour into the shift, everyone got an email that simply said: **“Mandatory meeting. Conference room. 10:00 AM.”** No explanation. When everyone walked in, HR was already there with our store manager. They looked… nervous. HR held up a folded piece of paper and said, *“Someone left this in the employee suggestion box over the weekend.”* The note wasn’t about pay. It wasn’t about scheduling. It was a list. It had names. Next to each name was a short sentence about things they had supposedly been doing at work. One person was allegedly changing their time punches. Another was taking merchandise without paying. Someone else was accused of having a relationship with a manager. Nobody knew who wrote it. HR said they weren’t accusing anyone of anything, but they had to investigate every claim. The room got awkward...
I still don’t know if I should feel guilty. I started a new job about three months ago. One of my coworkers was everyone’s favorite. Super helpful, always smiling, remembered everyone’s birthday, even brought snacks for the office. I honestly thought they were one of the nicest people I’d ever met. Last week we were assigned to work on the same project. While organizing some shared files, I noticed a folder with multiple versions of documents they had claimed to create alone. The edit history showed several coworkers—including people they constantly criticized—had actually done most of the work. I didn’t think much of it until our manager praised them during a meeting for “always carrying the team.” Without thinking, I said, “Didn’t everyone contribute to that project?” The room went completely silent. The manager opened the file history on the projector. It was obvious I was right. Now everyone is looking at my coworker differently. They haven’t spoken to me since, and some p...