rSlash - r/Maliciouscompliance My Boss Didn't Pay Me, so I Ruined Her Life!
Episode Date: January 21, 2022r/Maliciouscompliance In today's episode, OP works for as a campaign manager for a local candidate. She is incredibly good at her job, so much so that the candidate's entire campaign depends on OP. Th...e candidate does what all Karens do -- she pisses off the wrong person by firing OP and refusing to pay OP her last month's salary. OP gets her revenge by systematically destroying her campaign and exploiting Karen's own stupidity to get a copy of the contract forcing Karen to pay up. Download Honey for free at Joinhoney.com/rslash Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Welcome to our slash malicious compliance where two carons get exactly what they asked for.
Our next credit post is from FlanneryCulp.
I used to work in a restaurant that was mid-range in terms of cost, but we also had a very
reasonably priced set menu.
It offered three set choices, but it cost like 10 pounds.
As such, the set menu was our best selling product, and it was priced exactly by the
kitchen and management. I didn't personally wait on this table, but it was priced exactly by the kitchen and management.
I didn't personally wait on this table, but I heard the story from the server after they
left.
One day, two ladies came in, and after they were seated, they said they wanted to set
menu, but they wanted to substitute the desserts for something else.
The server tells them, I'm afraid that we can't do any amendments, but all the dishes on
the menu are available all a card if you want it to order separately.
The separate desserts would have cost a few pounds more, and that's it.
These ladies didn't want to pay more. They just wanted to substitute the desserts.
We can't have the pie because we're celiacs.
Okay, then we can swap the desserts, but there will be a supplement.
You're discriminating against us because we can't eat gluten.
It's not discrimination. We have to pay against us because we can't eat gluten.
It's not discrimination.
We have to pay extra money because we can't eat gluten.
You get the gist.
So we check with the manager
and they say that we can swap the dessert at no extra cost.
They're smug, but whatever.
But as standard, we give out free bread baskets
when water is served.
We didn't have gluten-free bread,
so the server didn't come over with the bread baskets when water is served. We didn't have gluten-free bread, so the server didn't come
over with the bread baskets. The ladies noticed this, and as their water is being poured, they asked
for the bread baskets. The server said, but we don't have any gluten-free bread I'm afraid.
It's fine, we can have the bread. I'm sorry, but there's gluten in our bread, and you've told me
that you have to have gluten-free dishes.
I can't serve you something that might provoke a bad reaction.
They got up right then and left.
They didn't even touch their waters.
They stormed past the host and said, all we wanted to do was swap the desserts on the menu.
Our next reddit post is from Joke on You.
This last year during COVID has been a tough year for my family.
My husband went from six figures, supporting our family on his salary alone while we pocketed
my entire salary to losing his job for eight months.
I work in political campaigning, which means that I work on short-term contracts as an
independent contractor.
In other words, if we lose an election, I move on to the next race.
I made a pretty good name for myself, working on the lower levels of a campaign
and moving up quickly.
In my state this year, there were statewide elections
and I caught a lucky break
and became the campaign manager on a statewide race.
As a 24 year old woman,
I'm the youngest campaign manager
to run a statewide race in about 20 years.
When the primary came up,
we lost the election by 200 votes. Even though we lost the
campaign, me coming so close to winning at my age made me kind of a superstar in my field.
After we lost, I had offers from all over the state for jobs. The problem was that I had just bought
a house and I wasn't looking to relocate, which you often have to do in politics. Or the positions
just weren't paying enough. I got an offer to doing a local campaign, so no relocate, which you often have to do in politics. Or the positions just weren't paying enough.
I got an offer to doing a local campaign, so no relocation, but the salary was lower than
what I was used to.
I would, however, be the campaign manager again.
However, I quickly learned that my boss had a whole other than that personality.
She made several comments about how real women breastfeed and have natural births.
I would later be able to do neither, and it really screwed with my emotional well-being.
I don't have time to list all the red flags, but I was literally just waiting until my
husband got a job to exit.
The campaign had been built out at all.
There was no one other than the candidate.
I ended up building out our entire team, consultants, fundraisers,
staff, etc. Luckily, I've made a lot of powerful connections in my time. I signed my contract
with the salary that we agreed on, with the stipulation that if we raised enough money
three months down the line, my salary would be raised, but it could not be lowered at any
point. Just a few weeks prior, I had also found out that I was pregnant, and my due date
was the week of the election. Also, just a week after joining the prior, I had also found out that I was pregnant, and my due date was the week of the election.
Also, just a week after joining the campaign, I was also in a serious car accident.
Luckily my pregnancy was safe, but I herniated a disc in the car accident.
And due to my pregnancy, there were very few things that could be done to help manage
my back pain.
If I did my job right, that shouldn't be an issue because my job can
essentially be handled from home and staff could do the rest. I had the team working in lockstep,
and I was proud of the work that I was doing, even though only about 10% of my views align with the
campaign. Then we hit a snack. The candidate's husband got deployed to a rather dangerous place for
a month, and she completely checked out. She stopped fundraising,
which means that everything comes to a halt in campaigning. She just stopped putting in the
legwork. We also lost our only lower staff member during this time. We knew the candidate was
worried about her husband, so no one on the team tried to push back very hard. Eventually, her
husband came back and it was go time. There wasn't a minute to waste, and I was back to getting our operation working full
speed.
A couple of weeks later, I told her I would need to take a step back from doing other staff
members jobs, mostly door knocking because of my injured back, but that we would hire
someone else instead.
Unfortunately, due to the lack of fundraising, it made it hard to pay anyone else, and
those duties fell on her.
Typically, campaign managers do not knock on doors.
We had a team meeting with the entire team, and I started pressuring the candidate about
all the things she wasn't doing, and there was a legitimate meltdown.
She started yelling at me about how I wasn't doing my job, and how my pregnancy wasn't
her problem, and how I was the reason that everything was failing,
and then hung up on the entire team.
This is where the malicious compliance comes in.
After this, I decided to take a step back from doing all the duties that were typically
handled by lower staff, and I just focused on doing my job duties, which weren't being
appreciated.
I pretty much went radio silent, and she kept nitpicking at everything.
Everyone in the campaign
started to grow uneasy, but I just told them to hold out.
Well, sure enough she calls me up and says,
Since you're pregnant and can no longer doorknock, you can either work for the state minimum wage
or you can find a new job. Mind you, she knew that my husband had been out of work for eight
months and thought that I had no options at this point. But what she didn't know is that my husband had been out of work for eight months and thought that I had no options at this point.
But what she didn't know is that my husband had gotten a job offer that exact day.
So I stopped her right there, thanked her for the opportunity, and told her I'd be working
my contractually obligated 30 day notice at my current salary and then leaving the campaign.
She then began to scream at me about how she wasn't paying me a dime more and started listing
off all the issues that she had with the way that I was doing my job. I stopped her.
I thanked her once again, and I told her all of my finishing tasks would be completed when I received
payment for the last month that I worked. Yes, she was a month behind on paying me.
I also demanded payment for the 30-day notice that she was legally required to pay me whether I
continued working or not.
I waited a few hours and she never finalized my termination in writing.
So I sent her a termination letter thanking her for the opportunity and once again repeating
everything that we discussed on the phone.
She sent me a nasty email again reiterating that I wouldn't be paid for the previous month
or 30 days and listed about 10 things that I'd done to be terminated, including that I didn't wear makeup to work every day.
I decided to send this email to the rest of the team and sure enough, everyone quit except
for the consultant.
In 5 minutes, she lost everything that she had.
Then a friend of mine offered me a dream job working for him, so all in all it worked out
in my favor within 5 minutes of being fired.
Well, here's where things get tricky.
I realize that my contract that obligates her to pay me for the 30 days notice isn't
signed, so I'm screwed.
Well sure enough, in her fit of rage, she starts emailing everyone talking badly about
me.
The only problem is, I still have access to her campaign email and I'm seeing
every email that she's sending. Email saying that she wants to keep me on staff, but I have to make
less money and that I shouldn't have been dishonest about my pregnancy. So clearly I wasn't doing
my job that badly. She just wanted to pay a pregnant woman less. She also asked the consultant
for a list of things that I did wrong in the
campaign so that she would have caused not to pay me my contract. I noticed that the consultant
never replied to this email. He told her that if she wants to fight it, send him a copy of the
contract and he would have a lawyer take a look at it. Well, sure enough, she sends him a sign
copy of the contract and once once again my contract is valid,
and she now has to pay me my severance.
She has given me every piece of ammunition I need to get paid at this point, as well as
a wage discrimination suit for referencing my pregnancy as a reason for termination.
I hire a lawyer.
She continues to pester me about turning over all my work.
The thing is, since I'm
an independent contractor, I only owe her a final product if I get paid. I reiterate
that she's not getting anything until I've been paid, and she can take it up with my
lawyer. She begins slandering me to everyone I know, and continuing to send emails about
me that I just keep collecting. She then starts calling every friend she has
to bully me into giving her what she wants. My response to all of them is talk to my lawyer.
In one final ditch effort, she has the consultant call me begging me to turn over the stuff.
The problem is that the consultant and I are personal friends and he's really unhappy
working for her, but he has contractual obligations.
I tell him to tell her the same thing. Talk to my lawyer.
Five minutes later, I get a call back from him saying that she's fired him
because he refused to throw me under the bus, and to make up excuses for my termination
when he believes that I was wrongfully terminated.
So since she fired him as well, he's also out of his obligations.
He also...he also told me
that the lawyer that she sent the contract over to said to just pay me. In a matter of two weeks,
she is once again at square one with no one on her side. She's out of money and struggling.
She finally emails me at about 11 p.m. saying that she's willing to pay me. It's nighttime, and I don't work for her anymore, so I decide that I don't need to respond
to her at that moment.
Well, she starts calling me incessantly and texting me, all of which I ignore.
By the time I wake up in the morning, I have 20 texts and 5 missed calls.
I tell her that I'll need to talk to my lawyer at this point, and I'll get back to her
after he responds.
Well, she goes nuclear.
20 minutes later, I get a call from the cops.
She claims that I've been embezzling campaign funds and stealing her data.
I have to get my lawyer on the phone and explain the whole situation and why this is a BS
claim.
I offer the bank account information for the funds that she claimed I stole and prove
that they were sitting right there in her account
She just doesn't know how to access them because I'm usually the one who does that
The police officer thinks that she's nuts at this point because she is
But he then informs me that it's considered larceny to withhold my pay and he asked me if I would like to press charges
I say if she refused to pay then yes
Within two days,
I received a check in the mail with my payment, and I turned everything over. The funny thing
is that my 30-day notice pay was actually more money than if I'd finished out the contract
with the reduced pay that she wanted to pay me. I got an extra 700 bucks, and I didn't have to
work for her for the remainder of the time. She ended up losing her election in a swing district by 15 points. So there's like a really important part of the story
that I'm not 100% sure if I understood correctly. But like OP was saying that she didn't have the
signed contract. So what I guess happened is OP signed her half of the contract and she gave
it over to the boss and the boss didn't sign the contract and give it back to her.
So the boss just had the contract like sitting at a desk somewhere.
And so when the consultant asked for the contract, I think that the boss went and found the contract,
signed it and then scanned it over to the consultant, which OP got her hands on.
So if she had just not signed it or had not sent it, then OP would have no legs to stand on whatsoever.
So she completely screwed herself over with her own stupidity.
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Our next reddit post is from Lay.
So about 10 years ago, my husband and I were renting a house while we tried to buy a place.
The landlord seemed so nice and it was a great situation.
When we found a place to buy,
we gave him our forwarding information along with the keys. It took about two months to get our
deposit back and we were shocked to say the least. He had taken about $400 out. He had an enclosed
door that had screens with no glass. It had outdoor carpeting that was gross and we bought a
rimman to cover the carpet since we had little, and it was questionable. It wasn't ideal, but it was a rental. When
we left, we rolled up the carpet and threw it out. Anyway, the landlord said in his letter
that he was taking out 400 bucks because we had broken the lease by having a dog, and
that his proof of that was the condition of the carpet. We did not have a dog.
That carpet was gross when we got there.
We tried to explain that,
but he was having none of it
and he would ignore our attempts to reach out to him.
Plus, how do you prove the absence of something?
Cume oflicious compliance.
You wanna follow the least so carefully
as to make up animals?
Well, perhaps you should read the laws a little better.
According to our state, landlords have exactly one month to send the deposit back. He took two months.
According to the law, you can be held liable for three times the amount, which is $1800
in our case. So we sued. We no longer wanted the $400 back. We wanted $5,400.
While the process was somewhat painful, he eventually had to hire an attorney, and we
settled on $2,000.
We filed with the help of our friends so we didn't know an attorney, just filing fees.
Our landlord ended up paying us $2,000 plus attorney fees instead of us paying him
$400 for a phantom dog.
Know your rights as tenants!
Our next Reddit post is from age 2020.
For 10 years, I worked nightship sorting mail to post office.
It was a secure job with decent pay and benefits.
All the bulk mail for the area would come in, and we would sort it into different rounds
based on the address.
Learning all the breakdowns took some effort, but once you had them memorized, the job was relatively simple. There was a set amount of letters
that you had to be able to sort per minute, and we were randomly tested on speed and
accuracy. With a little experience, you could easily sort three to four times faster than
what was required. The night shift ran 11pm to 7am, and the staff that delivered the
mail started at 6.30 a.m.
We originally had a great manager who was happy for us to leave work once we'd sorted
all that mail.
This was a great incentive for all the night shift to work as fast as we could, because
if we did, most days we got to leave an hour early, if not more, all for the same money.
Productivity was spectacular!
Our manager got a promotion to another office, and the new manager saw things differently.
When he realized that we were all leaving early each day, he passed a mandate stating that
we must stay at work until the end of the shift and assist the delivery staff.
We tried explaining the benefits of the traditional system, but he wouldn't be swayed.
Now the only reward for hard work was more work.
So from then on, we worked only at the official speed.
All mail was weighed, so management could calculate how long it should take to process.
We were always still well above the required rate,
just not at the stellar speed that we had previously achieved.
Not only did the work last until the end of the shift,
we even started getting over time, which never happened previously.
Management could do nothing except hire more staff to meet the demand and attempt to
cut down over time.
The new manager was shifted to another branch and someone else was promoted in-house.
Fortunately, they were well aware of the situation and let us go back to the original agreement.
Now with extra staff, we left even earlier and everyone was thrilled, both staff and management.
That was our Sashmalicious Compliance, and if you like this content, be sure to follow my podcast,
because I put out new Reddit podcast episodes every single day.