She Sent An Anonymous Email Exposing Her Sister-In-Law For Lying About Going To College And Graduating With Honors While Applying For Jobs In Finance
While some people beef up their resumes from time to time with experiences that aren’t the most accurate, to lie about something as big as where you went to school or what you majored in is considered very wrong by most people.
One woman recently sent an anonymous email to report her sister-in-law, who lied significantly on her job application to the same company she works for.
She’s 25-years-old, and her older brother is married to a 27-year-old woman named Katie. She and her family are tight-knit and were very happy when she met Katie, and they got along very well.
“Katie has always been a bit insecure about her background,” she explained.
“She didn’t finish college and has bounced around from job to job, which is totally fine; everyone has their own path. But recently, Katie started lying about having a degree and even claimed to have graduated from my alma mater, a prestigious university.”
She planned to ignore Katie’s lie-filled resume until she found out she was using it to apply to jobs in her field, finance. To make matters worse, Katie decided to apply for a job at her company with her false resume and asked her to put in a good word for her.
She decided to mention Katie was simply a family member to some people in her company and said nothing more. Then, a while later, at a family barbecue, one of her coworkers was there, and he brought up Katie’s interview with their company.
“He casually mentioned how impressive her resume was and how she claimed to have graduated with honors,” she said.
“I couldn’t believe what I was hearing. I confronted Katie privately and asked why she was lying. She got defensive and said everyone lies on their resume and that I should just go along with it.”
Drobot Dean – stock.adobe.com – illustrative purposes only, not the actual person
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She became more uncomfortable and felt like Katie’s behavior had crossed a serious boundary. She figured that if Katie was caught in her lies, not only could Katie get in a ton of trouble, but so could she, and both their career reputations could be tarnished.
So, to nip things in the bud, she decided to report Katie to her company anonymously.
“I sent in an anonymous email, using a temporary email site, with the graduating class the year Katie supposedly graduated, stating that Katie was lying,” she explained.
“Katie has now been banned and blacklisted from the industry. She attacked me at a family dinner, saying it had to be my fault because I was the only person who could have told.”
While she feels bad for ratting out Katie, she knew she’d be putting her career on the line if she kept her secret.
Should she feel guilty, or was sending that email the right thing to do?
You can read the original post on Reddit here.
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