did my intern frame my coworker for credit card theft?

A reader writes:

This past summer, the section I supervise had some interns working here. All of them were offered jobs here once the internships were over. However one of them has created a situation where she lied to the police, but my boss and HR have still decided to offer her a job.

A staff member really liked the intern’s jacket and would often comment saying so. When the jacket went missing, the intern went to security and the footage from the lobby and parking area showed the staff member taking the jacket to her car when most other people were in a meeting. The intern got the police involved and told them her wallet with all of her ID and credit/debit cards were in her pocket. It was found that dozens of Amazon orders were placed with the intern’s credit card in the name of the staff member, to be shipped to a pick up point near our office. Our office is opened without assigned seating so although IT could say which computer was used to place the orders there is no way of knowing who did the ordering.

The police believe it was the staff member and she has been charged for stealing and using the credit card. She admits to taking the jacket but says she doesn’t know anything about the card. She says the intern placed the orders in her name once she realized the jacket was missing as a form of revenge. The staff member is credible, she has no history of trouble working here, has no criminal record and is a good person who volunteers and is active with her church and her family. He husband has told me that her lawyer advised her to take plea to get less time in jail because a trial would not be good for her.

I am concerned about the intern having lied to the police and her now being offered a full-time job. I am not sure how to frame this when I speak to my boss. I want to discuss it with him because some of my other team members have concerns about this intern also.

I don’t know how your office could possibly sort through this better than the police and prosecutors can. You’re presumably not criminal investigators, and it sounds like there’s no obvious way to tell who placed those orders.

But I’d be very wary of assuming that the person who stole the jacket is telling you the truth about the rest of the incident. You say that she has no criminal record and is a good person who volunteers, but you also know that she stole a jacket from an intern. I think you need to consider that there’s more going on with her than you knew about.

The one fact you know for sure here is that she did indeed steal from a coworker (it’s on videotape and she admits that). Given that, you can’t give her the benefit of the doubt about the pieces of this that aren’t on video.

And note that you’re taking her word as fact. In the opening to your letter, you wrote the intern “lied to the police.” But you really don’t know that. Your only evidence for that is the word of someone who stole from a coworker and now has strong motivation to downplay any other pieces of that crime.

If you have other concerns about the intern, which it sounds like you do, you can absolutely share those with your boss. But you don’t have grounds for alleging that she placed those Amazon orders herself, and it would be wrong of you to assert that as fact. You can certainly pass along to your boss that your other coworker is claiming that’s what happened, but you should be careful to note that you’re only passing on information and that you have no way of judging the veracity of any of this. (And if nothing else, your boss should be aware that you and others in the office are looking at the intern with such suspicion. That has the potential to create a really bad situation, so your boss should know.)

All that said … it would be awfully poor judgment to use your own name when ordering on someone else’s stolen credit card! It’s like robbing a house and leaving a signed note behind. If anything here makes me wonder about the intern’s version of events, it’s this. But lots of people commit incredibly stupid crimes so that in itself isn’t evidence of anything … and again, these are all questions for the police, the prosecutor, and your coworker’s lawyer to work out. Your office can’t solve this.

{ 1,388 comments… read them below }

  1. Dee*

    > The staff member is credible, she has no history of trouble working here, has no criminal record and is a good person who volunteers and is active with her church and her family.

    …Except for the bit where she stole something from another person in the office, in broad daylight. Obviously, if you’re right–IF–about the intern, that’s also a problem. But this is not cut-and-dried just because your coworker goes to church.

    1. Snark*

      Yeah, I understand reflexively siding with the person you know and like and have trusted, but….OP, c’mon. All that’s currently true from that quote is that she’s active with her church and her family. And that’s not going to excuse much.

      1. strawberries and raspberries*

        Seriously. I read the part about her church and her family and I was like, “Oh, okay, case closed then. “

          1. Frozen Ginger*

            The commandments only say not to covet thy neighbor’s wife, nothing about stealing her. (sarcasm)

            1. AJHall*

              You aren’t allowed to covet your neighbour’s ox, so if it was a leather jacket that’s the commandment bag to rights.

        1. many bells down*

          That’s what the manager at my daughter’s first afterschool job said, when I told them the other manager had been texting my daughter dick pics. “But he goes to church!” Yeah, okay, not relevant here.

          1. Ego Chamber*

            Gross.

            The only halfway good response I’ve found to receiving dick pics is sending dick pics back. Since I’ve been sent so many (unsolicited), I figure they should at least get some use, you know?

            1. Noobtastic*

              Do you accompany them with a caption, “You think that’s big? Take a look at THIS one!” Or “That’s nothing. Check THIS out!”

                1. Susan Calvin*

                  I don’t want to get too off topic here, but… maybe rethink that strategy? I can understand the impulse, and imagine it’s depressingly effective, but it feels kind of a lot like throwing trans women under the bus for a punchline/gotcha.

                2. Batshua*

                  I should try that sometime, preferably with a photo of something I own.

                  *coughs politely*

                  … and I think that’s all I’ll say about that here.

                3. a different Vicki*

                  Maybe “no thanks, I like mine better” and a photo of either a rooster or a famous person named Richard?

          2. Anna*

            It happened when a woman came into a shelter I worked at. English wasn’t her first language and of course her husband *couldn’t* have been abusive because he was so active in their church!

            No, he could have been abusing his wife because he knew if she left nobody would believe her.

          3. Betty Cooper*

            To quote Dear Prudence, “That’s like asking ‘how can you have brown hair AND like ham sandwiches?'”

              1. bunanza*

                The idea is that there’s no correlation between brown hair (going to church) and liking ham sandwiches (not being a thief). They’re totally unrelated attributes.

            1. Leticia*

              I came here because my atheist self was ticked off by the “she goes to church, therefore she is a good person” argument, but I see I wasn’t the only one. This is a response I am going to save for when I need it.

              In my experience, church going people have a recourse to get forgiveness – confess and do some hail Marys and you are on your way to heaven – or they feel they need to sin to be forgiven – or some other mindset I haven’t figured – that allows them to be worse than the average decent atheist that has to answer about his actions to his own conscience.

              Maybe I am wrong and people just make mistakes, plenty of mistakes.

              1. Gabe*

                Hmm no, I think there’s /no correlation/ between going to church and being a good person, and being an atheist doesn’t get you off the hook either.

                1. Noobtastic*

                  I agree. I think people are gonna people, whether they go to church or not. Some people just people very badly, and other people people very well.

                  Church is not supposed to be a measure of success in being good a good person. Church is where people go to learn how to be good. Some people just learn how to *appear* good. And some learn how to appear good from reading self help books at the library. And some learn how to BE good from reading self help books at the library.

                  Just ask Jesus about the Pharisees. They appeared very good, but they sure weren’t. But they were not the entire religion, either.

                  The thing is, church, whichever sect you join, is going to be something of a mini-culture. A whole lot of people go to church not because they believe any of it, but because “it’s what’s done,” and because they can make useful connections there. The ones who actually believe, though, take that belief system with them, wherever they go, even if they can’t make it to church, specifically.

                  TL;DR: Judge individuals as individuals.

                2. Candi*

                  Noobtastic, I LOVE this comment. <3 All the Internets, especially the last line.

                  Also, +1 for the mention of the Pharisees. Jesus was always hardest on them; they were both supposed to know better and be guiding lights.

                  On the blatantly obvious crime: I read true crime history for fun. Most criminals have very poor forward-thinking skills; now/the (very) short term is what matters. Low emotional maturity as well; self-centeredness and "magical thinking" are how they operate.

                  Magical Thinking: Everything will turn out the way they expected because they believe it will happen that way; failure and detours can't happen because that would mean the person wouldn't get what they want.

                  Which pattern of thought may give the LW a key as to who's lying -and explain why the cops, DA, and defense lawyer took the actions they did.

            2. Batshua*

              Or the real life example that a friend of mine gets a lot:

              “How can you be black and allergic to chocolate?”

              I … never know what to say when I hear that yet again someone somehow thinks being black should make you immune to having a chocolate allergy.

              1. Annonymouse*

                I guess the thinking is “you have chocolate coloured skin so chocolate must be good for/part of you.”?

                (Never mind it not being indigenous to their countries of genetic origin.)

                Yeah…. this is a stupid thing to say with no justification.

          1. Bea*

            Theft and coveting the objects of others are 2 of 10. Lying would mean she’s down to 7 out of 10 *doh* Just keep crossing them off at this rate.

              1. Hills to Die on*

                Didn’t say she’s a bad person, just that she isnt exactly trying to follow the commandments.

                1. Noobtastic*

                  Back when I was in school, 70% was enough to pass. Just barely, with a D-, but still, passing.

                  69 was just as hard a failure as a 0. Go figure.

                2. Dr Wizard, PhD*

                  In the UK and UK-influenced university grading scales, 70% is a first class honours. So that’s something, at least.

      2. Hills to Die on*

        I don’t understand reflexively siding with the only person you can prove actually stole. I’m actually fascinated by this.

        You would accuse a person who had zero evidence against them WHY? Because they were the victim so you assume they are starting trouble? Because You don’t know them? Because you think the intern got your friend in trouble? I am genuinely curious about your thought processs here.

        1. Ego Chamber*

          My guess is it has something to do with the other problems LW and coworkers have with this intern, which LW didn’t expand on, probably for brevity. Unless the other problems are things like “Intern is always saying it’s cold in here” or “Intern is a fish-microwaver,” and other petty nonsense.

          1. Anion*

            I’m imagining someone pointing an accusatory finger at the intern and shouting, “You are a fish-microwaver!”

            And everyone else in the office nods solemnly.

            Then they make the intern pin a scarlet “F” to her cool jacket.

            1. Specialk9*

              Wait, are we now not tarring and feathering those fish nukers? Dangit, guys, I just got a whole barrel of tar and I cut open my best pillow. Give me a little more heads up next time, ok?

              1. Ego Chamber*

                Nope, no more tar and feathering. It’s the Scolds Bridle for fish-microwavers (obviously).

                Sorry about your best pillow. :(

                1. Traffic_Spiral*

                  Scold’s Bridles??? [tosses torch and pitchfork in the air dramatically] why do we even bother having an angry mob listserv if you’re not going to use it to tell us which medieval punishment accessories to bring?

                  Sorry, I’m being mean. Scold’s Bridles are fine – I’ll just drop by Hobby Lobby on the way home.

              1. Floundering Mander*

                I microwaved some fish the other day.

                However, it was in my own home and I had the kitchen window open.

              2. Noobtastic*

                I confess. I used to be an office fish micro-waver. When people complained, I thought it was because they were jealous of my delicious fish.

                Thank you for enlightening me.

          2. Millie M*

            Fish microwaving is not a petty thing. My horrible ex-worker burnt fish in the microwave one time. The microwave is at the end of our not-very-long hall, so it’s right next to our offices, not in a break room far away. The stench was so thick you could cut it with a knife. We had the doors open and fans running all afternoon, and it still reeked the next morning. You might think burnt popcorn is bad, but let me tell you, it is nothing compared to burnt fish. I’m so glad that co-worker is gone (there are a million more reasons, but I’ll save those for another time).

    2. Archie Goodwin*

      Yeah, that jumped out at me, too. It’s possible that this is a one-off, but even so…the theft of the jacket doesn’t exactly scream “credibility” to me.

      1. SignalLost*

        Hell of a one-off. I just complimented a woman at Starbucks on her scarf. I did not knock her down and take it, because the leap from “I like that” to “it’s mine now!” is a bit longer for most people than for this staff member. Most people just ask where you got it and make a note to actively or passively look for a similar item.

        1. Archie Goodwin*

          True, but I’ve heard enough stories of people suffering severe lapses in judgment that I can imagine this as a one-time thing. Or first-time thing, if you’d rather look at it that way.

          1. Lady Ood*

            I kind of doubt that. Her desire to avoid going to trial indicates, to me, anyway, that she is more than a little concerned about what additional investigation of her past might bring to light. This may be a first time thing, but only in the sense that it’s the first time she got caught.

            1. July*

              I do want to point out that the -vast- majority of people avoid going to trial through plea bargaining: around 97 percent of federal convictions and 94 percent of state convictions happen that way. Some of these people are genuinely innocent. Defendants may feel coerced into pleading guilty by their attorneys or they simply may be too afraid of being convicted on the more serious charges brought against them. It’s a lot more common than most people realize, so I think we should be careful about assuming people plead guilty just to avoid having a whole bunch of other crimes investigated.

              1. SirTechSpec*

                Not to mention, *you don’t get time off for being involved with the law.* This is one of the reasons why wrongful arrests are so serious – even if the police turn around a few days later and say “whoops, just kidding, you’re free to go”, in the meantime you’ve very possibly been fired for not showing up (and nothing says employers have to consider “I was in jail” a valid excuse even if you can contact them somehow.)

                So a plea bargain where you can be convicted but sentenced to community service, a fine, or probation rather than prison, and get back to living your life, is often a better/the only option when the alternative is a trial that takes months and leaves you in jail in the meantime unless you can make bail, and would require considerable time, effort, and money regardless.

                (Though in this case, it hardly seems likely that she’s innocent of the theft of the jacket, so that in itself is reason enough to plead guilty rather than go through a trial. Doesn’t really say anything either way about if she’s hiding something else.)

                1. Ego Chamber*

                  “Though in this case, it hardly seems likely that she’s innocent of the theft of the jacket, so that in itself is reason enough to plead guilty rather than go through a trial.”

                  It doesn’t sound like she’s pleading guilty to stealing the jacket though, it sounds like she’s pleading guilty to credit card fraud, which makes this even more fucked-up if it’s a revenge scheme in response to stealing a jacket. (Obvious disclaimer: Stealing is wrong.)

                  There’s no way for the coworker to prove her innocence (which is what they’re looking for here, rather than trying to prove guilt) since it’s an open office and anyone can access the computer that was used to place the orders and those computers don’t have login requirements (whut) and there are no cameras inside the building and the coworker was in the building when the orders were placed but she wasn’t at a meeting or working on another computer or anything else that would give her an alibi.

                  Basically, she’s screwed if it goes to court, and a plea bargain is the obvious answer in even a cursory cost/benefit analysis.

                  Tl;dr: I agree with everything you said, but I wanted to point out that the crime in question is credit card fraud, and this whole thing sounds like a shit show and it’s going to be really awkward for everyone working there for a while no matter what happens.

                2. Not So NewReader*

                  At EG, you’d think the cameras would show her sitting at a computer and maybe even making those orders. I don’t get why the camera shows her stealing the coat but there are no cameras on the work stations/areas.

                3. JamieS*

                  Ego Chamber, if the OP is in the US(remains to be seen) no she doesn’t have to prove her innocence. She needs to prove nothing at all. The police need to prove she’s guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.

                  Remember it’s not like the prosecutor and police are the intern’s personal enforcers so they’re not going to charge the co-worker at the intern’s behest.

                4. Artemesia*

                  Usually people can get pre-trial diversion for something like this if it is a one off and get the record later expunged. Although the credit card fraud might remove that chance.

              2. FiveWheels*

                Agreed, BUT if someone is willing to stand up in court and say “your honour, I done it” it’s reasonable to assume, in the absence of other evidence, that they did indeed done it.

                1. OOF*

                  This is a common misconception, but it’s simply not true. Often times defendants are told that they’re going to be convicted regardless, and this is their only chance to reduce the sentence. Or they’re young, indigent or otherwise unable to navigate the legal system/potential coercion/etc well and feel that they have no other options.

                  We have no idea whether this in any way applies to this scenario, but I do hope we can all understand more broadly that these factors are at play, since it impacts how we hire and otherwise interact with members of our community who have been in the legal system.

                2. FiveWheels*

                  OOF, I’m not saying a sworn admission or guilt on a court of law is complete proof of guilt.

                  But if someone swears in open court that they did something, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, it is a VERY STRONG indication that the person did, in fact, do what they swore they did.

                3. fposte*

                  @FiveWheels–this might also be a bit of a country divide. I would agree that it’s reasonable for a business to treat it as a done deal and that people can privately come to whatever conclusions they want; however, I suspect that in the U.S. the correlation between people pleading and people being guilty of what they’re pleading to isn’t as close as you’re suggesting. It should be, but I don’t know that it is. (A quick search finds University of Michigan research on that that backs that up–I’ll add a link in followup.)

                4. Betty Cooper*

                  Also, in some jurisdictions, the court fees for pleading “not guilty” are higher than the fees for pleading “guilty.” There’s evidence that some people in those jurisdictions plead guilty simply because they can’t afford the other option.

                5. Dahlia*

                  Nope. There’s good evidence that this isn’t true. The innocence project recently published some numbers. A large proportion of people who ultimately get released based on DNA or other evidence showing that they couldn’t have committed the crime had actually confessed to the crime at their initial investigation/conviction.

              3. Dankar*

                It’s not even that they feel coerced most times–defense attorneys typically don’t advise clients against their own interests. They’re simply honest about how much more disruptive fighting those charges may be compared to minimal sentences like community service or probation.

                Many of the people picked up for petty crimes have jobs or family responsibilities that preclude the MASSIVE amount of time it takes for something to wend its way through the court system, while others who can’t make bail would be forced to wait until their trial to resume their daily lives.

                Mandatory minimums also play into this: Take a plea for a reduced crime with more flexible sentencing or challenge and potentially lose on a case that carries a much higher punishment with no room for mitigation. Our justice system needs drastic reform.

                (All of this is not to say that I think the LW is correct to suspect the intern. Typically the DA’s office wouldn’t pursue a crime like this unless there was at least SOME compelling evidence. And the intern’s story carries the weight of the fact that the coworker irrefutably STOLE HER JACKET AT WORK. That smacks of judgement bad enough to use the credit cards that were likely in that jacket.)

                1. lokilaufeysanon*

                  And don’t forget states that use the three strike rule. That can be a huge motivator for some to take a plea deal if they have two strikes and can avoid a third. (Guilty or not.)

              4. Anon for This One*

                I would agree. When I gave notice at my worst job ever, they wouldn’t let me perform my regular duties during my notice period, so they had me sit in my coworkers’ cubicles and do clerical tasks. I finished my notice period without incident–or so I thought. When I came in to pick up my last paycheck, they had one of my coworkers–the one I actually liked and thought was nice–accost me in the parking lot and accuse me of stealing somebody’s Coach wristlet while I was working in her cubicle. The wording was something like, “You and Joan were the only ones out front during the meeting, and Joan wouldn’t steal, so it must have been you.” I absolutely did not take the wristlet, but if they had decided to call the police, and the police felt I should be charged, I would have had to enter a guilty plea because a) I didn’t have money for an attorney, and B) I couldn’t prove that I didn’t take it. I was alone in the cubicle while the others were in their usual weekly meeting. It’s possible a student took the wristlet–our cubicles were in an open area that could be accessed by staff, teachers, students, and visitors–or that the coworker lost the wristlet, but I couldn’t prove that either of those things happened.

                1. FiveWheels*

                  Unless there is big time corruption, the police won’t charge you without evidence and the DA won’t prosecute you without evidence.

                  If there is big time corruption that’s another matter, but as a rule someone making completely unsubstantiated allegations is not enough to start a prosecution.

                2. FormerEmployee*

                  You aren’t required to prove you didn’t take it. The police are required to prove you did. The co-worker who says “I just know she took it because…” would not be taken seriously by the police.

                3. Jessie the First (or second)*

                  right, as the other two have noted, that is not how it works. At all.

                  So, let’s say that, with no evidence at all except for one person claiming she had a bracelet in there and that she thinks you must have taken it, the police arrest you, and send the case to the DA. The DA looks at it – and sees this as evidence:
                  1) 1 person claiming that an expensive bracelet existed, that she owned it, and that it was in her office
                  2) Same person claiming that the bracelet is not in her office anymore
                  3) Same person claiming she is *sure* it must be you, because even though other people were in her office, you were in there too

                  That’s not a case a DA would bring charges on. Criminal charges just don’t work that way. If we are actually in bizarro-land and the DA decides the above is worth taking to a jury for some reason, you do not have to prove you didn’t take it. The DA has to prove that you did, beyond reasonable doubt. You can literally say nothing the whole trial and a good defense attorney should be able to get a not guilty if all that exists is the “evidence” you listed. Seriously.

                  Criminal convictions are NOT so easily come by. While some people do take plea deals even while claiming they did nothing wrong, it tends to happen in FAR murkier circumstances than the one you have laid out, Anon for this one.

                4. Not So NewReader*

                  NYS is working on having a public defender at arraignment for everyone with a misdemeanor. If you are income qualified you could have a PD as a lawyer for the case itself. There are pros and cons to this that are too far off track for our purposes right now, but the point is some states will provide you with an attorney if you have been charged with a misdemeanor.

                5. Bloo*

                  @Jessie the first or second: Just a minor quibble, a Coach wristlet is a very small purse that can hang from your wrist. They’re expensive (cuz. …..Coach?) and generally have valuables so they can be separate from your purse. I’ve two and I use one as a de facto wallet (cash, credit cards, DPA, etc. ). Its not a bracelet, IOW.
                  I NEVER leave mine where someone else can access it. I, myself, am highly protective of my reputation (as well as my valuables) so I try to minimize unnecessary access to money, valuables. Protects me from being accused of theft. Ask me how many people I’ve worked for/with that enable their drug addict family members who….lie? Gasp!

          2. Elizabeth the Ginger*

            A lapse in judgement might excuse “the staff member swiped a candy bar off the intern’s desk after hours” or “the staff member knocked the mirror off the intern’s care in the parking lot and panicked and lied about it” – but to walk all the way to her car with someone else’s property shows not just a momentary impulse, but a whole lot of moments following where the staff member continued to make bad decisions, even when she still could have turned around and brought the jacket back.

            1. Miss Betty*

              I wonder where she thought she could possibly wear the jacket, especially after commenting on it so many times.

                1. Death Rides a Pale Volvo*

                  @MashaKasha: it’s a little early to win the entire damn week, don’t you think? Leave some for the rest of us.

        2. Christine D*

          When I was 7 I was at a friend’s house and really liked a troll figurine she had, so I stole it. I felt so horrible after that I gave it away to my babysitter, and I’ve felt guilty about it since (I’m in my mid-30’s now) even though I never got caught.

          I’ve never stolen anything again, even the odd items they forgot to ring up at the grocery store. I’m not sure how the coworker whose morals allowed her to steal from another is presumed to be innocent about making purchases from the interns credit card.

          1. Newt*

            When I was about the same age, I once spent a quiet 5 minutes playing gently with the stuffed toys in a shop bargain bin while my mum got the shopping. I walked out the door with one still in my hand, was 20 yards down the road before I realised and *ran* back to the shop to return it.

            It spent 5 years with it jammed behind about 5 boxes on the floor of a wardrobe and was overcome with guilt every time I remembered that it existed.

            I, too, struggle to see how anyone can have a “momentary lapse of judgement” that leads to someone seeing another person’s possession, deciding they want the possession, waiting until the owner and other potential witnesses are busy elsewhere, taking the item, leaving the office with the item and concealing the item in their car, then returning to the car and sitting back at their desk and continuing to work as though nothing has happened.

        3. Quill*

          Yeah, I haven’t experienced anyone doing this IRL since elementary school… when a girl tried to frame another girl for stealing “her” charm bracelet because she wanted the bracelet.

          The legitimate owner’s FULL INITIALS were on it, which I pointed out when I was brought in to be a witness. (My cubby was between theirs…) Needless to say, I was not impressed that I was a better detective at 10 than every adult in the building, and that framer hated me for the rest of the year.

      2. many bells down*

        My thought is that she could come up with a decent excuse for taking the jacket when/if she was caught. Maybe “oh I thought Sally left it behind by mistake so I grabbed it for safekeeping.” And thus she might avoid any real consequences because she’d get the benefit of the doubt. But stealing the credit card AND using it isn’t something you can come up with a believable story for, so of course she’s denying that. That’s a serious crime, whereas “oops took the wrong coat by mistake” isn’t.

    3. Snarkus Aurelius*

      Jim and Tammy Faye Bakker not only went to church but they ran the entire operation! Being active in church doesn’t mean squat.

        1. Jesca*

          See also John Wayne Gacy who volunteered a lot and just happened to have 33 boys buried under his house … I never for the life of me understand this “but they donate!!!” mentality.

          1. Bea*

            Right. The idea of someone being a good solid church going person meaning they wouldn’t do bad things is a cover and worse, a hunting ground for psychopaths.

              1. Ego Chamber*

                Fair enough, but church gives a far wider smoke screen: you don’t even have to volunteer/work for the church, you just have to go. I doubt I’d get the same free pass for merely having visited an animal shelter a couple times last year.

              2. Bea*

                True. This is why there are bad people in every walk of life including those that take care of children and the elderly. Teachers, healthcare or a firefighter “they’re so wonderful!” sure then why is there is child abuse at all, lots of which are committed by “good people” who believe in “spare the rod, spoil the child.” And not just a basic spanking debate but straight up starving and beatings. I grew up with a best friend who’s mother refused to let her eat because “she’d get fat” and she was all about the Good Book.

            1. Eels*

              Not to be all, “well, actually, ” but that was a suicide hotline. Just read Stranger Beside Me by Ann Rule.

              1. Pomona Sprout*

                Yes, and according to Rule, he was quite good at handling the suicidal callers AND very well liked and respected by his colleagues–including Rule herself. Classic example of a psychopath hiding his true nature from those around him!

                1. Relly*

                  IIRC the volunteers at that hotline knew at the time that there was a serial killer at large … so that nice Ted Bundy guy would graciously walk them to their cars.

      1. Liz*

        I grew up in a small New England town where, over a period of 10 years, 2 priests, a mayor, and a Youth Minister went to jail for raping kids.

        I wonder if the writer has heard of the movie “Spotlight.”

    4. Lilo*

      You really can’t know some people. A good-facing public veneer can hide a deep underbelly. I know we had a scandal where someone was stealing from a place I worked at in college and it was a guy everyone liked and seemed really stable in his home life, but it turned out he had a severe gambling problem.

      I am not saying everyone is suspect, but the fact that OP is so quick to blame the intern when coworker has shown some extreme behavior as stealing already suggests OP is in denial a bit.

      1. Indoor Cat*

        Gambling problems can get bad really fast. There was a woman who worked as a secretary and treasurer at my University who stole (embezzled?) $300k in two years. She was well liked, won “Secretary of the Year”, and had worked for the school for thirty-five years. For thirty-three of those years, she never stole a thing, but apparently she’d had a gambling problem for a long time. She maxed out credit cards, asked for money from family and friends until they stopped giving it to her, apparently burned some bridges after stealing from a friend (allegedly, she wasn’t convicted of this), until finally her addiction bled over into work. She was so certain that, any day now, she’d win big and be able to pay all the money back, but of course she couldn’t.

        It’s weird how she was able to hide it for so long. But, people are good at compartmentalizing. For a while, anyway.

        1. Just Jess*

          “It’s weird how she was able to hide it for so long.”

          It sounds like she hid it from coworkers for a long time. She’d probably been burning bridges with family and friends for decades.

        1. Kelly L.*

          Well, I think the frame-up theory is that they were never in there at all and the intern is lying, but Occam’s razor seems to point more toward her having stolen all the things, yes.

            1. Kelly L.*

              You know, I’m not totally sure, and I looked back over the post and I’m still not sure. Maybe this is something for OP to clarify: were the cards found in the jacket when it was recovered?

              1. TootsNYC*

                I think not, because the intern wouldn’t have had to tell police that that’s where her wallet was. They’d have told her.

                That said, the intern would have to go to a helluva a lot of trouble just to frame this woman. She’d have to cancel her cards and go without them, and not use them at all herself in between the time the jacket was stolen and she reported these purchases to the police.
                The police would be able to ask to see her credit-card (or debit) records to see where else they were used after the jacket was stolen.

                If you’re unaware enough to steal a jacket during broad daylight when there are cameras, you may also be unaware enough to use your own name when ordering (would you have to show your ID to pick up the stuff at the shipping spot?).

                I’m an active, regular church-goer, and I have to tell you: Use church-goers do not stop being flawed human beings. (in fact, that’s why I GO to church)
                And as part of being human, we fluctuate in our “holiness.”

                1. That Would Be a Good Band Name*

                  When our debit card was compromised, our bank did a pretty thorough investigation also. We had possession of our card though. Maybe when the card itself is reported stolen it’s different and they leave it up to the police? I can’t imagine that our bank wouldn’t have investigated and asked for video surveillance if there is any at the pick-up point.

                2. KitKat*

                  There is an Amazon “drop box” a couple of blocks from my house, outside of a 7-11 it is literally a set of lockers, no human interaction, so no one to show id to.

                3. Viola Dace*

                  Yeah, I used to go to a church where a member perpetrated a horrific financial crime (think Madoff) to many of the members who had trusted him with their money. He was sanctioned by the pastor as a financial advisor and everyone trusted him. Many people lost their entire life savings and their homes.

                4. Forrest*

                  “I think not, because the intern wouldn’t have had to tell police that that’s where her wallet was.”

                  Only if the jacket was recovered before she told the police.

                5. many bells down*

                  If it’s an Amazon locker, you don’t need ID, just the locker code that you’re given with the order. I’m in Seattle; I don’t know how prevalent Amazon lockers are elsewhere.

                6. Ego Chamber*

                  “She’d have to cancel her cards and go without them, and not use them at all herself in between the time the jacket was stolen and she reported these purchases to the police.”

                  Not accurate. I worked customer service for a bank and as long as you report the fraudulent purchases as soon as you notice them (within 30 days of the purchases I think), you’re still covered under standard fraud protection. Using the cards after you had the jacket returned but before you noticed the fraud and reported it shouldn’t matter to the bank or the police, also you can have cards sent next-day or with 2-day shipping, so it’s not always a long wait, especially you’re the one reporting fraud as opposed to the bank proactively blocking cards because of a data breach (getting new cards for that takes forever).

                  I had kind of assumed these purchases were discovered (or “discovered” depending on your interpretation) that evening, the next day or later, since the details are a little fuzzy in the letter: jacket is missing, intern realizes jacket is missing and goes to security, security finds footage of coworker stealing jacket, —later— intern gets police involved. If this really was revenge-shopping done by the intern, she would have had to place the orders before she went to security, which is a damn cold thing to do since she would have had no proof it was the coworker who took her jacket at the time.

                7. Not So NewReader*

                  @Toots: I loved this quote. “Churches are not museums for perfect people. They are hospitals for the wounded.” That to me is church done correctly. But there are plenty of churches that focus on other stuff and this causes problems.

                8. An Anon For This*

                  I actually (used to) know someone who went to all the trouble to do a false credit fraud report for completely idiotic reasons. It really does happen.
                  And yes, it’s a major reason I no longer associate with them.

                9. Dust Bunny*

                  The coworker could easily have removed the wallet from the jacket, in which case it wouldn’t have been there for the police to find when/if the jacket was recovered. The fact that the intern had to tell them about it doesn’t mean anything.

              2. Elizabeth West*

                It doesn’t make any difference–this is now a police matter. The OP’s office is not in charge of the investigation and I would highly recommend she NOT start her own version of one.

                FWIW, I think the coworker absolutely did it.

            2. INTP*

              My interpretation was that the wallet was in the jacket, but the suspicion was that as soon as intern realized the jacket was missing, she saw an opportunity to frame the coworker while the coworker was in possession of her stolen wallet and placed a bunch of Amazon orders (probably with credit card info she had memorized or saved to her Amazon account).

              It seems to me like it should be pretty easy for the police to figure this out. Whose Amazon account was used to place the order, for one.

              1. JB*

                Yes, there is definitely evidence not presented in the letter, which presumably the police will be able to untangle.

                1. DArcy*

                  Given that the thief has been charged with both crimes and reportedly offered a plea deal, the police *already have* investigated, found her to be guilty, and referred the matter to the District Attorney, who after independently considering the evidence from the police has *also* agreed that she is guilty, and charged her.

                  In other words, 100% of the trained professionals and 100% of the people who have access to the full evidence believe the coworker to be guilty of both crimes.

              2. Engineer Girl*

                All Amazon orders are date time stamped. The timing of the order could potentially show some insight. We’re the orders placed before the jacket was recovered? After? All that should show up in the police investigation.

                BTW – the IT department stinks! While there are hot seat stations at work, why are there no unique sign on IDs for each individual? How in the world can you track computer impropriety?

                1. Beaded Librarian*

                  I agree, but it is possible that people do log in with their own ID but someone else could hop on temporarily without changing log ins. That happens at the library I work as when we’re busy one person is sometimes logged into both stations to make it easy to help two people at once if it gets busy, that way patrons do have to wait the couple of minutes it takes to go through the whole login process. However in this case I think it would be highly unlikely that someone would be using someone else’s log in for long enough to shop on Amazon.

                2. Ego Chamber*

                  “BTW – the IT department stinks! While there are hot seat stations at work, why are there no unique sign on IDs for each individual? How in the world can you track computer impropriety?”

                  Same question. O_o Even when I worked retail, they tracked that shit and it was fireable to be signed in as someone else.

              3. Ego Chamber*

                “It seems to me like it should be pretty easy for the police to figure this out. Whose Amazon account was used to place the order, for one.”

                I basically live at Amazon and I’m disappointed in myself for not thinking of this. The credit card company can’t see which Amazon account was attached to the charges, but the police (or the employer if they wanted to—although it would be a massive overreach) could ask the intern and the coworker to sign in and go to their order history. That would solve things pretty much immediately.

                1. Artemesia*

                  Any time I order something not from my computer and to be delivered to another address, the fraud trigger on my credit card is tripped and I get a call or it gets blocked until approved. I have ordered gifts for my son to be delivered to his home in another state and have had this happen.

              4. DArcy*

                Given that the coworker has already been charged and convicted of credit card fraud, the facts at hand pretty clearly indicate that the police *already did* fully investigate and figure this out. It’s just that the OP refuses to believe that the coworker is guilty, and has concocted this belief that the intern framed the coworker.

        2. Drowning In Paper Anna*

          I’m not sure I believe the intern or the employee.

          The employee – Decent, hardworking, church-going, generous with time and talent, volunteering person, right? I know one of those, too. He passed every background check they threw at him until the day he didn’t. Turns out he had a thing for little girls. Lots of people “just couldn’t believe it” because all they saw was the nice guy. OK, way more extreme than this but, still.

          The intern – The intern is a woman, right? So, have any of you ever met a woman who keeps her cards and ID in a jacket pocket rather than a purse when dressed for the office? Have any of you actually seen a jacket appropriate for the office that has a pocket big enough for id and credit cards? Hell, *I* want one of those.

          I think I would fire the employee for jacket theft and recind the job offer for the intern because of the smell.

          1. Elizabeth the Ginger*

            If it’s an outerwear jacket, sure. Not every woman carries a purse.

            I agree with Alison – don’t try to out-detective the actual detectives.

            1. Annonymouse*

              I sometimes keep my cards in my jacket because:

              1) I was going somewhere close by (coffee shop next door, restaurant/cafe in front of building) and didn’t want or need to bring my whole bag with me

              Or

              2) I did bring my bag and purse but a combination of at least two of the following:
              the bulkiness of my purchase
              line of customers behind me
              speed of transaction
              lack of available and out of the way counter space

              Means I don’t have time to open my bag, find my purse, open purse, return card, close purse and drop it back in my bag before the next person needs to do their transaction.

              So I slip the card into my pocket. I also find jackets are more likely to have a pocket I can slip my credit card into than business pants or skirts.

          2. Seven If You Count Bad John*

            I keep that stuff in pockets. I don’t carry a purse. Of course, we don’t know what kind of jacket it was–I was picturing a nice outdoor coat with, yes, pockets, not necessarily something you’r wear indoors like a blazer (although honestly my blazers all do have functional pockets.)

          3. Natalie*

            So, have any of you ever met a woman who keeps her cards and ID in a jacket pocket rather than a purse when dressed for the office?

            Yes, I have. Rescinding the job offer on this basis would be pretty ridiculous.

            1. Sterling*

              I don’t carry a purse very often. I carry a small key chain wallet and it is often in the picket of my leather jacket that I wear to work. So yes actually I can see how the intern would have done that.

            2. KitKat*

              I’m one of them! I hate carrying a purse because I have a tendency to put it down and forget about it. Most of my jackets have an inner zippable pocket so I have no compunction about putting my wallet/phone/charging cord in the pocket – one less thing to carry and forget!

            3. Lilo*

              I also will shove stuff in jacket pockets if I am running out somewhere. I carry a purse but may have my wallet, phone, or train cars in my jacket. It is absurd to not hire someone for that.

            4. Mallory Janis Ian*

              My daughter wears an army cargo jacket and carries her cards in a wallet in the pocket thereof. Lots of women use wallets instead of purses.

                1. littlemoose*

                  Well now I can’t decide whether Mike B or MashaKasha wins this post, because both of their comments made me giggle.

            5. Princess Consuela Banana Hammock*

              I seriously cannot tell if this comment is real or simply trolling.

              I don’t say that lightly. The suggestion that “all women” keep their wallets in a purse instead of their jacket, and that because of that stereotype the intern must be lying and merits rescission of their job offer, is so patently absurd that I cannot believe it’s sincere.

          4. Lisa*

            “Jacket” could mean Coat or leather jacket, not necessarily a work jacket. So yes I can see putting a wallet in the pocket.

          5. Temperance*

            Yes. One of my closest friends doesn’t use purses because she dislikes them.

            It’s not that weird that a woman who doesn’t use a purse would keep her docs in a pocket. Glad to know that apparently being a butch lesbian would make my friend more suspicious if someone stole her shit and lied.

            1. TootsNYC*

              you don’t have to be a butch lesbian to not like purses.

              Or to see them as easily stolen.

              My MIL carries a purse, but it NEVER has her ID or cards or money in it. It has keys, sometimes. Tissues. Change. Stuff she wouldn’t care about losing if someone stole her bag.

              ID, cards, and paper money go in a men’s wallet in her jacket pocket.

          6. Purses are heavy ok?*

            Hi, I’m a woman. Nice to meet you. I keep my cards and ID in a holder either a pants pocket or jacket pocket, not in my purse. I’m on a keyed-entry floor and it’s easier to have my ID holder with me than to carry my purse everywhere during the day. I don’t think my habit here is odd or requires a leap of imagination.

            1. Specialk9*

              Nope. Nope, sorry, your female bits (if applicable) just got changed to male bits. Get a damn purse if you want them back!

              /s

              1. Noobtastic*

                But, now that Specialk9 has male bits, he’s a man, and if he gets a purse, now, it will be a “man purse,” and his male bits will fall off, not be turned back into their original lady bits.

                I thought everyone knew that.

          7. Just Another Techie*

            I totally use my jacket or pants pockets for my wallet at work. I hate carrying a purse, so I only buy jackets and pants that have deep enough pockets.

          8. Elder Dog*

            Yup. Lots of places won’t let you keep your purse with you. You have to leave it in a locker, which is usually a good four minute walk from your desk, making it impractical to go to during breaks. Women often carry a lot in their pockets in places like that, and since most women’s clothes don’t have pockets, a jacket pocket is the logical place to keep your wallet.

            The OP mentioned they don’t have assigned desks so they didn’t know who was on which computer doing the ordering. Those are the kind of places that don’t let women carry their purses with them claiming it’s a security problem.

          9. Anonymooooose*

            I happen to be a woman who keeps her wallet in her jacket pocket. This includes outerwear and professional suit coats with pockets lined on the inside. So yes. I have.

          10. palomar*

            Hi. I’m a woman who works in an office and often keeps her wallet in her jacket pocket because carrying a purse can be cumbersome. “Dressed for the office” is not a narrow band of wardrobe options anymore, and “jacket” can mean more than just a cute little kicky “like the boys” menswear inspired blazer.

          11. Science!*

            I hate carrying purses, so I keep phone and cards in my pockets. I have a small wallet that is just big enough for my ID, insurance card, 3 credit cards and my library card. I always make sure I wear the same jacket for a season because I never remember to switch out my wallet, so if someone took my jacket, it would definitely have all my stuff in it (probably minus my phone).

          12. animaniactoo*

            Most of my dress pants don’t have back pockets. If it is jacket whether, I am not carrying a pocketbook for the purpose of carrying my wallet, my keys, and my cellphone which are the only things I bring too and from work on a regular basis.

            Therefore, yup. Those go in my jacket pocket which hangs off the back of my chair.

            (just call me data point whatever… when it gets big enough, perhaps it will be enough for you to see it is not so unusual)

          13. Not The Droid You Are Looking For*

            Umm..I didn’t carry a purse until I was well into my mid-20s and often still simply shove my ID, CC, and some cash into my pocket.

            Last year I went to carrying a very slim card case, instead of my big hulking wallet. It slips easily into my pockets and has everything I need.

          14. zsuzsanna*

            Sure; I’ll keep an ID and a credit card in my jacket pocket sometimes. More commonly if it’s outerwear – which I’m thinking it was, or the intern would have been wearing the jacket all day. And firing the intern because of the “smell?” Seriously? Innuendo from gossipers who may be more attached to the longterm employee than the promoted intern? I’d be more inclined to fire the rumor-spreaders.

          15. halincandenza*

            I very often keep my cards and ID in my jacket pocket – I don’t like carrying a purse around for small errands, so I’ll tuck them in there when I go out for lunch or whatever.

          16. Drowning In Paper Anna*

            My bad, the thing about the what woman doesn’t carry a purse was unnecessarily snarky.

            But, those of you who do carry a wallet in your pocket, do you leave it in your overcoat pocket in the communal area where everyone hangs their coats or hanging on the back of your chair when any0ne can walk through your office? Even if I left the police work to the detectives, I would have questions about the judgement of someone who did that.

            I would really like to know where you get office clothes with pockets like that, because all I can find, I could barely tuck a single key in the pockets.

            And, actually, if I were the intern, I am not sure I would want to work there. I had a big part of sending the “really good guy” in my original post to prison. I still get stuff about “that’s is not how we handle those things around here” from a very small subset of people. A small subset, but enough to make things uncomfortable. I don’t know that I would want to be dealing with all of the jacket thief’s friends.

            1. Jessie the First (or second)*

              Wait, wait, wait. Because she had her ID and cards in her pocket, you don’t trust her judgment?

              How do you get to that? I went to the bathroom just now, and left my phone on top of my desk and my purse on the floor next to my chair.

              Guess I have terrible judgment and shouldn’t be trusted now? Because I think my coworkers are not thieves?

              1. Genny*

                I usually carry a purse, but if I’m grabbing hot chocolate (because coffee is gross) with a coworker, I’ll throw my ID, driver’s license, credit card, and debit card into my coat pocket. It’s not at all uncommon for me to forget they’re in there by the time I get back to my desk. The same thing could easily have happened to the intern.

              2. Esme Squalor*

                I have a lot of trust in my coworkers, and I routinely leave my purse, phone and iPad unattended in my private office on a shelf next to my desk. Over the years of working in my current office, I’ve never had a problem doing that. And if someone ever did steal from me, I would blame the thief, not myself.

              3. ChurchLady*

                Thank you! I am a church secretary. Other than my boss (the pastor) I am often at work all alone. In the whole church building. I often have to run here and there, in an open building, and I leave my office open, with all my stuff in it. Yes, even to run to the bathroom. While I have few to no coworkers to take my stuff, almost anyone could walk in and do so. So, guess I have poor judgment, too!

                I just do not get the victim blaming mentality all over these comments. “Co-worker” is a PROVEN on video thief.

                I cannot even.

              4. aebhel*

                Yeah, I often leave my phone (which has my credit card and ID in the case) on my desk when I go to the bathroom. I guess I just… assume my coworkers aren’t thieves?

            2. FiveWheels*

              Yes, my jacket goes on the back of my chair. Cards are a lot more likely to fall out of my trouser pockets, and I clearly don’t need my driving licence on me to go to the toilet or printer.

            3. SarahTheEntwife*

              “But, those of you who do carry a wallet in your pocket, do you leave it in your overcoat pocket in the communal area where everyone hangs their coats or hanging on the back of your chair when any0ne can walk through your office?”

              Yes? In the winter I usually have my coat pocket hanging on the back of the office door or over the back of my chair, and my wallet is usually in it, or in my bag that’s sitting next to my desk chair. Our office isn’t a public area and if I have to worry about my coworkers swiping my wallet, I should really find another place to work.

            4. McWhadden*

              All my Talbots suits have jacket pockets that can fit my wallet. Many of my Ann Taylor suits do, as well. Although Ann Taylor is more hit or miss in the pocket department.

              Most people assume work is safe enough to leave their wallet at the desk. Even if you use a purse people don’t bring their purses every time they go to the bathroom.

              1. Lora*

                Another vote for Talbot’s. Not super cheap, but good quality fabrics that last a long time.

                I do indeed leave my jacket and massive backpack-o-crap on my desk when I go 30 feet away to the coffee maker or the restroom, because I don’t work surrounded by petty thievery. I work with professionals who generally can afford their own Amazon things. What I cannot leave unattended is actually my drafting pens, foam ice buckets and tool kits, but that’s a bit different. Torque wrenches and Rotring pens are like gold…

                1. Clewgarnet*

                  This is why my work screwdrivers are pink and sparkly. My coworkers are all too afraid for their masculinity to ‘borrow’ them, and there’s the added bonus that they leave glitter on your hands, so any culprit would be caught pink-handed.

            5. animaniactoo*

              Yup, hanging on the back of my chair.

              On the few occasions that I carry a pocketbook, there’s not really a more “secure” place to put that either. There’s right under my desk, and there’s in the drawers that are full and don’t have a working key. Which would also obliviate the idea of just putting my wallet in those drawers when I walked away from my desk (in fact, my co-workers would have more reason to go through my desk drawers than my jacket pockets).

              Essentially, I HAVE to trust my co-workers not to be going through my personal stuff. There is a coat closet but that would actually be less secure in that I am in my seat for most of the day and I would not have line of sight on my jacket in the coat closet AND people have a lot more reason to be in and out of it all day long. So in actuality, hanging off the back of my chair and generally in my presence is the most “secure” space that I actually have for it.

              Office setup is a half-height cube farm basically. Very open and lots of people around to see whatever’s going on. Pretty much the same setup as the OP’s except that we have dividers and assigned desks.

              1. LavaLamp*

                This. I accidentally left my iPod on my desk over the weekend. It was still there on Monday because I apparently have decent coworkers who don’t go through my things and steal from me.

                1. Jersey's Mom*

                  I’ve worked at the same 250+ people, cubicle farm of an office for 15 years. I’m out in the field 90% of the time. Never had a problem with theft.

                  Until now — I have a Bath and Body eucalyptus (mini) hand sanitizer next to my computer. Turns out someone has used it up, then refilled it with water so it wouldn’t look like it was used. It costs a buck.

                  Really????

                2. Dr Wizard, PhD*

                  Re the hand sanitiser: that’s making me wonder if, rather than using it themselves, they were really bothered by the scent and tried to ‘neutralise’ it, hoping you wouldn’t notice.

                3. Jersey's mom*

                  Nope. Since i’m in the office intermittenly (once a week or so), I rarely use it – but noticed that the level of liquid was going down. So I stopped using it completely, and just before it would have been empty – it was suddenly full again.

                  The product has a much thicker viscosity, so it was easy to tell that it had been refilled with water.

            6. TootsNYC*

              She doesn’t have an assigned workspace. So in her jacket pocket is probably as secure as anywhere else.

              But this is not a bad point:
              “I don’t know that I would want to be dealing with all of the jacket thief’s friends.”

              This is a good point–and Alisondid point out that the boss needs to know that there are all these people who are anti the intern.

              And if they’re reacting the way you reacted to the details of her story–making up stuff and choosing the most negative possible cast for her actions or habits in order to justify their animus–then the boss needs to know.

              And if I were the intern, I too wouldn’t really want to work with them. I’d be looking as soon as I possibly could.

              1. Floundering Mander*

                Yeah I think I wouldn’t be that keen on working in this place after one of my new colleagues had already stolen my property. Unfair but it would cast a shadow on everyone else.

            7. Forrest*

              Are you really blaming the intern for her jacket being stolen? I think it’s kind of an unspoken agreement that you don’t steal from coworkers.

            8. neverjaunty*

              Wow. Please, stop trying to find reasons to play “there are the sides to every story” / “everybody is at fault” here. It doesn’t matter how different he intern’s card-carrying habits are from yours. The Intern Conspiracy Theory is not only ridiculous and impractical, it comes from an admitted thief.

              1. Jessie the First (or second)*

                Yes. Devil’s advocate gets really, really old when it veers so sharply into victim-blaming territory here. We are now actually arguing “well, what was she wearing” in this comment section. That’s…. gross. In pretty much any context outside of the Emmys and Oscars.

          17. FiveWheels*

            I often keep my cards in my jacket pocket. I almost never carry a handbag and my briefcase is unnecessarily bulky if I’m going to a shop. There is nothing suspicious about a woman using pockets.

          18. Elder Dog*

            Did the intern report her stolen jacket to the police?
            Or did she report her stolen wallet and credit cards?
            It would have to be a very very expensive jacket for the police to investigate around here, but a stolen wallet would bring a quick response from them. I mean, the jacket is just used clothing to the cops.

            I think the OP has had smoke blown at her about what the police were investigating.

            1. Ego Chamber*

              My read was that the intern reported the credit card fraud to the police (a police report is required by the credit card company if you’re reporting fraud charges btw) after recovering her jacket from the coworker, who was caught on tape by building security.

          19. McWhadden*

            I am a woman and I keep my wallet in my jacket all of the time. It fits in most of my suit jackets. Never mind outdoor ones.

            When I run out for coffee or lunch I don’t want to lug my purse around.

            I think it’s more likely that women will use jacket pockets for wallets because work pants usually don’t have pockets or deep enough pockets for women. But men’s suits and work pants almost always do.

          20. Allison in Alaska*

            Nope. I’m a woman with several fancy purses and fashion backpacks (yup!), and I always keep my tiny cardholder wallet in the right pocket of my coat or jacket. I’ve always got work stuff in my bags, so the cards/ID go in the jacket for easy access.

          21. Bea*

            I didn’t start carrying a purse until I was 27. I used a mans wallet and those fit into any pocket I’ve ever had. So yeah…you’re stretching really thin on your generalization of women here.

          22. Fiennes*

            I don’t often keep my wallet in a jacket/coat pocket, but it’s happened a handful of times. Mostly it’s been where I was at my office and wanted to run out for a quick bite/errand within walking distance and didn’t want to lug my purse around. If I had a smaller wallet instead of one with a checkbook, I could easily see doing this more regularly.

          23. Tammy*

            I’m a woman. I ride a motorcycle, and don’t have a car. Most of the time, I do have my iPad or laptop, and when I do, my wallet and stuff are in my backpack. But when I’m just going out to lunch or something and I don’t feel like carrying a lot of stuff, I’ll put my cell phone on its handlebar mount and stuff my debit card, keys, and ID in one of the pockets of my riding jacket.

            “Have any of you ever met a woman who keeps her cards and ID in a jacket pocket rather than a purse when dressed for the office?” is gender stereotyping, and it is so whether the person saying it is a woman or not.

          24. TootsNYC*

            I know many women who keep their wallet in their jacket or coat pocket!

            Or who slip it in there when they’re in a hurry and then forget it’s there.

            1. TootsNYC*

              in fact, one thing that annoys me about my niece’s partner is that it bothers him a lot that she doesn’t carry a purse. She had a phone-case wallet that she puts all the cards and money in, and she doesn’t carry other stuff.

              We were leaving their place for dinner, and she was ready to go, wallet/phone in hand, and he said, “Bring a purse.” Why? she asked. “You need a purse.” No, I don’t. “I want to put my charger in it.”
              So she went and got some clearly seldom-used purse and put her wallet in it, and his charger.
              He’s got this rigid idea that “women carry purses.” Period. Without any actual awareness of her as an individual entity.

                1. Beaded Librarian*

                  stuff, That’s what my brother-in-law does and he refuses to call it anything but a purse. and sometimes he’s carrying his but my sister isn’t carrying anything.

              1. Rusty Shackelford*

                More like “he’s got this rigid idea that MY woman should carry a purse so she can haul my stuff.” I wonder how much of the stuff in a typical woman’s purse or suitcase is actually for the benefit of other people. When men complain about women overpacking, I want to ask whose bag has the sunscreen, tissues, snacks, phone charger, tickets, toys, pen, fingernail clippers, cough drops, breath mints, etc. that are going to be used by *everyone*. (Right now my purse contains cough drops and travel-size tissue-with-lotion even though I’m not the one who has a cold…)

                1. Ego Chamber*

                  Seriously. Niece should tell him to wear a hoodie if he needs extra pockets to carry his crap.

                  Last time I was carrying a purse I realized it weighed like 10 lbs and when I dumped it out I was shocked because I don’t even use any of this stuff. Now I have a cell phone wallet like the niece. I like it.

                2. Cactus*

                  Seriously. My family calls me the walking pharmacy because I always have Kleenexes, NSAIDs, hand sanitizer, neosporin, Lotion, etc. I’m prepared for everything that could go wrong.

                3. selenejmr*

                  Exactly. We go up north every 2 weeks and my husband complains about my large bag and how heavy it it, while his isn’t full. Of course, mine has the towels, sheets, sunscreen, medicine, laptop, etc. while his doesn’t. He complains that I have so much stuff in my purse, then complains that I don’t have baby wipes in them!

              2. Specialk9*

                Wow. Yeah, that’s pissant behavior there. Sir, if you would like to carry a charger, I’m sure your ingenuity will enable you to find a solution, without using your girlfriend as an unpaid Sherpa.

              3. Angel*

                I am disappointed that she didn’t put his charger and HIS wallet into the purse, followed by handing him the purse. “What? You wanted a purse to put your charger in. You need the purse, you can carry the purse.”

                When I carried a bigger bag I referred to myself as a “packhorse” because I often carried my boyfriend’s wallet/phone/car keys/whatever in the purse. Now that I carry a clutch, I just kind of shrug eloquently. I keep telling him he should find a nice neutral purse to carry instead of his giant backpack or his pockets, but he’s stubborn on this point. Purses don’t “fit his aesthetic”.

              4. Floundering Mander*

                Ick. This is why my husband carries a backpack when we’re going out on a trip that requires anything like a phone charger. I might occasionally put his stuff in my bag but he doesn’t demand it, and I usually have at least a small bag.

          25. Nacho*

            ID and credit cards are designed to fit in a wallet, and every coat I own is designed with pockets big enough for a wallet. On the other hand, I’m not a woman, so maybe your jackets don’t have pockets?

          26. Susanne*

            “The intern – The intern is a woman, right? So, have any of you ever met a woman who keeps her cards and ID in a jacket pocket rather than a purse when dressed for the office?”

            Well, yes. Most young people I know have a wristlet of some sort, that holds keys, some folded bills, and driver’s license / a few credit cards. Those would easily slip into a jacket pocket, whether it’s an indoor blazer type of jacket or an outdoors jacket. Surely you’ve seen them in stores? Not everyone carries around a “full” wallet of the sort that holds a checkbook, zips around, etc. and wouldn’t easily fit into a pocket.

          27. Tuxedo Cat*

            My friend carries a wallet, and she often sticks it in her jacket. It’s totally plausible, IMO.

            I’ve occasionally carried credit cards in my jacket- forgetfulness sometimes more than anything.

          28. michelenyc*

            I carry a very small wallet. It holds my ID, debit card, insurance card, my metrocard, and a few other random cards. I don’t always carry my entire handbag. It definitely gets shoved in my jacket pocket all the time.

          29. Lauren*

            I usually keep my wallet on my person at work, or leave it in the car and just bring one card in. I’d feel awkward carrying my purse around all day but wouldn’t want to leave it unattended (I don’t think it’d be likely to get stolen necessarily but the possibility would still be distracting for me, I tend to be anxious about losing my wallet/keys/etc). I can easily see someone leaving their stuff in a pocket so they have it with them and then either removing the coat without thinking of the wallet or just figuring that a coat isn’t likely to get stolen in the office and not worrying about it the way you might worry about a wallet left out in the open.

            Also I’m sure there are plenty of work appropriate women’s jackets with pockets out there even if they’re harder to find. (Maybe the pockets are what made the jacket such a coveted item haha) I don’t know of one that would accommodate a super large wallet but certainly ones that could fit a slim wallet with a couple credit cards and some cash.

          30. Artemesia*

            I make it my life’s goal to never have to carry a purse and do not do so 80% of the time. I have an entire wardrobe of jackets, coats, travel shirts, even polartek cardigans that have hidden secure pockets and my wallet is almost always in one of those secure pockets. If it were my jacket hanging on the back of the door in the office, my card case would have been in the jacket and my phone in another one.

          31. a1*

            I would never carry my ID, cards, and money in a jacket pocket. They are too easy to fall out or be pick pocketed or be forgotten in a jacket or coat. I use my pants pockets. I only by dress slack with pockets for this reason. (and I work where we are business formal, so these aren’t casual pants). And even though I trust all my coworkers, and I work in the non-public spaces of my office (cubicle with medium height walls), I always put my purse in the desk drawer and there is stays all day. For those that leave cards and money and ID in coat pockets, would you leave it over the back of a chair at a restaurant, or coat rack? That just seems dangerous. And then what if you forget your coat somewhere and now you have no $$?

            Obviously, none of this changes the details of the LW, coat thief and credit card fraud, just wanted to add to the anecdotes on purse/pocket use.

            1. teclatrans*

              You can find dress slacks that allow you to use the pockets without totally ruining the line? That has not been my experience, sadly.

              1. a1*

                Yes. It’s not easy, but I do find them. I’ll even buy them if I don’t immediately need them, because finding them is rare, and I can then switch to them when the current one(s) wear out. I hate pants and skirts without pockets.

            2. Floundering Mander*

              Totally depends on the design of your jacket or coat, though. My dressy pants have teeny tiny pockets that are too small to securely hold my keys, but my suit jacket has an inside pocket. I have two winter coats: one has huge deep pockets, the other has pockets that zip. Unless I’m on a trip where I want my passport, I use a tiny little card case/change purse for a wallet, which easily fits into the pockets.

              1. a1*

                External pockets with zippers are still easier to be pick pocketed. It’s that it’s not against your body, someone real good with slight of hand can unzip and grab quite quickly. Front pants pockets, under the coat is the most secure (aside from a money belt). But that is getting quite far from being in an office.

                1. Floundering Mander*

                  Well in truth I usually wear jeans so this is kind of a moot point for me, but my coat with the zippered pockets is one of those packable down coats so it actually does fit fairly closely. But in any case, if I stick my wallet in my coat, zip up the pocket, and drape it over the back of my desk chair it’s not very likely that it will fall out accidentally and get lost.

            3. An Anon For This*

              I usually carry a purse, I’ve also done the “wallet in jacket” thing, but no matter what I carry I never leave it unattended in any public place (which includes work.) I take it with me everywhere, and if that’s absolutely not possible, I hide it really well. This is just a thing that was drummed into me growing up, and honestly I find it really astonishing that so many people here are so cavalier with their wallets and other personal belongings.

              1. Elspeth*

                Oh, I don’t think it’s cavalier to expect your coworkers NOT to steal your jacket and/or wallet.

          32. Alienor*

            I carry a purse and still put things in my pockets – for example, if I were going to get coffee, I might stick my wallet in my jacket pocket so I didn’t have to take my purse, then just leave it there for the rest of the day. I don’t think it’s that big a stretch of the imagination, and certainly not a reason to suspect the intern of lying and/or trying to frame the co-worker.

          33. Kickin' Crab*

            Adding my name to the chorus of women who keep their wallet in a jacket pocket, even when I have a larger purse/laptop bag for work. I’ve never met a jacket pocket so small that my wallet doesn’t fit. Pants pockets, on the other hand….

          34. Time Bomb of Petulance*

            Actually, yes. I hate carrying a purse at work, so whenever possible, I stick my cards and ID in my pocket(s). All of my work jackets (and even some of my work dresses!) have pockets I do this with.

          35. sap*

            I am a woman who loves purses and also carries a briefcase to work. I keep my wallet in my jacket *specifically while I am at work* and not during off hours because I do not want to carry a purse and also a briefcase, and I do not want to bring my briefcase with me to the coffee cart/nail salon/other floors in my security card building.

            This is such a bizarre sexist cmoment that boils down to “I don’t believe a crime victim about the severity of the crime because she would be deviating from what I THINK women should do if she is telling the truth.” If the only reason you have for accusing someone of lying is that they are a woman, keep it to yourself.

          36. Charisma*

            I very explicitly do. I hate being attached to a purse/bag with a passion. And I’m a city girl. I keep a small wallet that fits in either my pants or jacket/coat pocket and my purse/bag is for carrying everything else. I also see purses as a target for thieves when I am traveling on mass transit or in other crowded public spaces every day. I’m not even particularly tomboyish or anything. But I’ve witnessed more than my fair share of purse grabs over the years or had friends get their stuff lifted at bars/concerts/the gym. I’m not saying its an epidemic, but I have just become a person who prefers not to carry excess stuff.

            I actually did get my bag stolen once. I just had to laugh though because all the guy really got was my stinky recently used gym clothes! All my valuables were still on my physical self. I did get all my gym clothes back… but not the tote bag. Go figure.

          37. Noobtastic*

            I think you’re getting “jacket” and “blazer” confused, here.

            An outerwear jacked (perhaps a fancy leather jacket, with zip-up pockets?) would actually be an ideal place for a woman dressed for work (in a dress without pockets) to keep her wallet, lipstick and a few other small items, and not even need a purse, at all.

            My sister stopped using purses for years, because she had pockets! And yes, she worked in an office.

            Your stereotype about women’s fashion is enough to make you rescind a job offer? Of a woman who was obviously the victim of AT LEAST one crime (the confirmed jacket theft), because you don’t believe any woman would use pockets for her wallet? Seriously?

            Wow.

    5. Princess Consuela Banana Hammock*

      This is insane. I can’t understand the basis for concluding the intern is lying and put together an elaborate revenge scheme when OP’s coworker stole a jacket from an intern and was caught red-handed doing so. . . . I don’t know if she ever apologized, but it doesn’t sound like she did.

      Seriously, who does that?? She didn’t ask the intern where the intern bought it so she could buy the same item? She wanted it so badly she *had* to steal it from the person at the bottom of the power-hierarchy? OP, why does your coworker deserve a level of loyalty that requires suspension of belief? If her attorney is advising her that a trial would not work in her favor, it’s because there’s enough evidence to lead someone to believe that she most likely committed credit card theft. [Aside: I’m not saying plea agreements signal guilt, but imagine this situation from the perspective of someone who knows nothing about your coworker and then factor in the significant, unconscious bias that many have against people who are accused of serious crimes.]

      Let the police and attorneys sort out the criminal culpability. Do not put your reputation on the line to accuse a crime victim of lying when all the evidence to date indicates otherwise. If your intern did in fact stage an elaborate Amazon ruse, it will come out.

      1. fposte*

        I do feel like that the OP is finding it hard to see past her personal history with these people; maybe seeing how objective parties respond to the situation will be illuminating.

        (Did I miss where the staffer was fired for this? Because if she’s still there, it’s pretty outrageous to suggest the person caught on film stealing gets to stay but the person who’s the victim of the theft shouldn’t have a job.)

        1. Princess Consuela Banana Hammock*

          It sounds like she hasn’t been fired! …which also blows my mind. Even if there isn’t a criminal conviction for the broader issue, I’d be really surprised if there were no discipline for stealing the intern’s jacket since that part of the story is pretty verifiable. And if I were the intern, I would think my new employer was incoherent.

          1. Hills to Die on*

            For. Real. This may not be an issue because if I were the intern I would be on an aggressive job search.

            1. Barney Stinson*

              I would not want to work for a company that retained the person who stole my jacket. On film. The company is now beyond weird, and I’m working next to a person who stole from me.

              Nope. Nope. Nope.

            2. la bella vita*

              My thoughts exactly – I hope the intern gets another job offer and can turn this one down. Who wants to work someplace where people are gossiping about you and questioning your integrity because you were the *victim of a crime*???

          2. Candy*

            I once worked at a clothing store where a manager stole thousands of dollars over a period of time from the store (she was skimming money from the nightly deposit) and she wasn’t fired or charged. The owner kept her on and deducted money from her paycheque as a way of getting the money back. It caused SO MUCH gossip and bad feelings amongst the rest of the staff, like lots of people sarcastically saying stuff like, “oh so we can just take money from the till now?” Keeping staff like this on is a crazy bad idea but it happens

            1. Chinook*

              “The owner kept her on and deducted money from her paycheque as a way of getting the money back.”

              As hard as it is for coworkers to swallow, that actually makes sense from the owner’s perspective. How else are they going to get the missing money back? Though, I doubt that woman was stilling doing the nightly deposits after that.

              1. SirTechSpec*

                >How else are they going to get the missing money back?

                Um, a court order? Presumably if the manager agreed to repay the money, it’s because they admitted/there was compelling evidence of the theft.

                1. Candy*

                  Yeah, she admitted it. She claimed she had a shopping addiction and had something like 5 maxed out credit cards to pay off. She did always wear really great clothes

                2. Colette*

                  Most people don’t steal money to put it in the bank, or to create a room full of coins like Scrooge McDuck. They steal money to spend it, and they can’t repay what they don’t have.

                3. Cercis*

                  Enforcing a court order can be difficult, though. They have to have assets that can be garnished, which many people don’t.

                  I mean, it’s not a choice I’d make, but I can understand why someone would. I can also understand why other employees would resent it.

                4. Marty*

                  No court order, really? And here I thought that the court would be happy to garnish your wages to ensure payment…

                5. neverjaunty*

                  Without a court order for restitution, all you have is her pinky-swearing to pay it back.

                  Plus, you never know what will happen. People come into money sometimes.

                6. Jessica*

                  You have to have wages for the court to garnish, and having a conviction for theft on one’s record would (rightfully) get a person dropped from the candidate pool at practically any job that would check for that.

                  So, as Byzantine as it seems, keeping the employee and having them work off the debt probably *would* be more of a sure way to receive repayment than firing them, getting a conviction, setting up a garnishment, and hoping they get a job somewhere else.

                  That’s a patient owner, though, or else it was a lot of money that the owner can’t afford to write off.

            2. McWhadden*

              I would fire that person but, still, the company is the one being wronged and it’s ultimately their decision to make.

              In this case, she wronged another employee. Not the company itself.

              And they never would have seen a dime if she had been arrested. Courts can order what they like but if she doesn’t have the money it’s meaningless.

        1. Infinity Anon*

          Yeah, the power dynamics make this even worse. The OP has bliners on. “The staff member is credible, she has no history of trouble working here, has no criminal record and is a good person who volunteers and is active with her church and her family.” She is NOT credible (she stole from an intern), she does now have a history of making trouble at work (who steals from their coworkers while everyone is in a meeting?), she does now have a criminal record (she admitted to stealing the jacket), and she is not a good person because if she was she would not be stealing at all! Whether she volunteers, goes to church or has a family is irrelevant. What is at questions is not whether she would steal because the answer to that is yes. All that is being debated is the extent of her crime, and the intern seem much more credible.

          1. Chinook*

            “She is NOT credible (she stole from an intern), ”

            As bad as stealing is, in my mind it is compounded by the fact that it was an intern – so someone who is making less money than her and probably is less able to replace said item (though stealing from the rich is also wrong). And it isn’t like the coworker needed it to survive the cold (as in I can rationalize someone stealing my winter sweater when it is -20 out because maybe they really needed it but now I am the one stuck freezing on my way home without that extra layer). Basically, the coworker has no reason to do this except that she liked it.

            And add me to the voices snarking at “she goes to church.” Any good Catholic can tell you the lines are long for the confessional because we are all sinners (and a good confessor will tell you to return the jacket and apologize as well as do your 100 Hail Marys – restitution is required for forgiveness).

            1. Newt*

              This, too!

              Stealing would’ve been wrong legally and morally whether it was a jacket or a cheap trinket, and whether it was stealing from the intern or the boss.

              But when making a moral judgement of this “credible, non-trouble-making church-goer”, the fact that she stole something from an intern who at that time was on intern income and had no guarantee of a permanent job at the end of things? That makes my judgement of their character *more harsh*. Jackets aren’t cheap to replace either, not even cheap ones, and one “nice enough” to be coveted by someone else wouldn’t be easy to replace. Plenty of people don’t have more than one outerwear jacket anyway.

        2. Kindling*

          Also, it’s possible the intern isn’t even getting paid to work there – so you’re stealing from a coworker who doesn’t even get a pay cheque while you do… which you could use to pay for a jacket.

    6. The IT Manager*

      Yes! Stealing a jacket is a minor, minor crime compared to identity theft/credit card theft. The co-worker is admitting to the piece of the crime that has concrete evidence (video of her with the jacket) and denying the part you can’t prove and is also a much bigger deal with presumably bigger consequences including time in jail.

      I don’t understand why you believe your coworker over the intern. She indeed does have a criminal history – stealing a jacket. The coworker is a proven thief whereas you didn’t mention anything negative about the intern other than things the thief told you which make the thief look less guilty. LW, you seem really gullible and wanting to believe your coworker. Your boss and HR are doing the right thing. You and your other coworkers need to rethink your assessment of the former intern.

      Side note: Going to church doesn’t make a person a “good” person.

    7. The Other Dawn*

      Exactly. Being active in your church, a volunteer, etc. doesn’t really mean anything.

      We had a bank manager who was very active in his church, was a family man, volunteered lots with the local shelter, and had an unblemished work history. I caught him on video taking $5,000.00 in cash that a customer accidentally left behind on the teller counter (due to the setup it was difficult for a teller to notice this, especially since it was at an empty teller station). His friend was visiting the branch and found it laying there. He then called the manager over, who was behind the teller line at the time, and he slid the money to the manager. It was *almost* out of the frame, but I caught the corner of a $50 bill on video. (And them laughing and smiling to each other…) He later confessed to it, but only after we made it known that we had it on video and that we were calling the police.

    8. animaniactoo*

      The fact that there’s not criminal record merely means that nothing has been recorded YET.

      It is HUGELY likely that there are a number of these kinds of small incidents of “just a jacket” (or a dish, or a book) within her church and social circle that have been smoothed over and weren’t big enough to report AND that there was some reasonable benefit of the doubt for “accidents”. It may even be that there are a few similar minor incidents even within your office that people have shrugged off and may not even be connecting the dots on now.

      It’s very possible this is the first time there’s been concrete proof of her thievery.

      At this point, I would actually bet big money on somebody in her family finding the wallet and ordering stuff in her name for themselves. Because it seems she’s at least been smart enough up until now to avoid having her name attached. So that does seem like a misstep – but just because she claims that it was the intern, doesn’t mean it was the intern even if it wasn’t her.

      1. Daffodil*

        Agreed with you about past incidents with this coworker that have been overlooked or smoothed over. If I were the one making employment decisions here, I’d be asking around about that.

      2. Stranger than fiction*

        Unfortunately, I have a family member that is a kleptomaniac and your description reminded me of her. It started as a child just palming things that belonged to friends- toys, hair clips, etc. then escalated as she got older to clothes, jewelry, anything lying around , especially of course money, etc. then as an adult got worse with credit card fraud, breaking into people’s cars or houses etc. Got fired from a couple jobs due to missing tips, and now is serving a long jail sentence. You’d never ever know it or think it if you met her, she’s totally charming and has an innocent look.

        1. Hills to Die on*

          That progression it what leads me to believe that this isn’t the first time the coworker has stolen. Walking out of the door with someone else’s jacket — a person you know and pretend to be friendly with on a daily basis! — takes nerve.

          1. MashaKasha*

            Yeah, stealing a coworker’s outerwear when she’s in a meeting, in an open office area no less, isn’t something I’ve ever seen or heard of.

          2. Laura*

            Right? Put it on where security cameras aren’t watching, put your own jacket on over the top and walk out to your car with it. Take them both off, put them together in the car. Very easy. This person thinks she’s immune.

        2. LavaLamp*

          Correct me if I’m wrong, but I thought true kleptomaniacs only took things of little to no value like paperclips, or erasers.

          1. Natalie*

            No, the key feature of kleptomania is that the stealing is compulsive, not driven by necessity like Jean Valjean or whatever. The items stolen could very well have value, but they are being stolen for some reason other than that value.

          2. Falling Diphthong*

            It’s about not having economic value to the thief–they might pocket red things, and have a big closet o’ red things at home, from red folders to ruby necklaces. A variation on stealing for the thrill of it rather than for any economic gain.

            Credit card or identity theft does not seem to come under kleptomania–those have economic value. Unless you could steal literal plastic cards and never use them.

      3. Falling Diphthong*

        I thought of the jacket thief’s family members for the credit cards, too. Though not if it was on a work computer…

        OP, you are presenting two scenarios:
        1) Intern notices jacket is missing, correctly intuits that it was coworker (and that there will be video evidence?), races to a computer to order some things from Amazon in coworker’s name.
        2) Coworker notices a wallet in the jacket, removes the credit card, and quickly orders some things on Amazon before the cards can be reported stolen.

        I think you’re overestimating the criminal mastermindedness of the intern.

        1. Jesca*

          Yeah, that is what I was thinking too given the information that we have. And really, if my jacket went missing at work, I would have just assumed I lost the thing. Therefore, yeah, as animaniatic points out, these crimes could have gone unnoticed for a long time. It was just this time she picked the wrong person to target. This could have also been the first time she unintentionally snagged a credit card and decided to hop on that as well.

          In any event, all these scenarios sound a lot more plausible than the intern recognizing her jacket is gone, notifying everyone, watching surveillance video, and then quickly setting up the person who stole her jacket. And anyway you say the intern made it look like the other person bought this stuff with her card using her actual name. Did you ever think that maybe she used the credit card under her own amazon account by mistake (as apps and browsers will save and auto login to accounts) and that you are just not privy to all of the investigative details?

          1. Falling Diphthong*

            I’m still missing a thin black sweater after vacation. It was my go-to travel sweater, too.

            But if I had some reason to KNOW a jacket was on the back of my chair at 10:00, and now at 11:00 it is gone, you can bet I’d be following up immediately with everyone in the vicinity. Sometimes “I think I had it… Thursday?” isn’t what the jacket owner is thinking. I get that you can get pretty far by assuming that mindset… and odds are coworker did.

            1. Annonymouse*

              Yeah, and a jacket is less like a jumper in that if I wear a jumper to work I might hang I think over my chair, put it in my bag or empty desk drawer (the one for files I never use).

              A jacket – I’m assuming business/blazer type I can really only hang on the back of my chair and it’s a something you’d notice missing pretty soon after getting back to your desk.

              (If it’s navy or another cool colour snd you on a black chair you’re going to notice I think straight away. Black on black would take longer.)

              Also if it’s cold/windy enough that I need a jacket over a jumper or cardigan you can bet I’m going to be really clear about remembering I brought it in today.

              (To be fair I DO live in Australia so jacket weather I see more noticeable for me because it’s normally not needed.)

        2. LSP*

          Plus, I think it’s perfectly reasonable for the coworker to plead out, rather than go to trial. First, because that’s what the vast majority of people do, and secondly, because as the value of the amount stolen increases, as does the potential sentence. If she went to trial, she could get the book thrown at her (especially if the judge is, say, a church-goer who is annoyed that someone is cheapening his beliefs by trying to use them as a defense), so it makes perfect sense to, on a first offense, to take a deal.

          Maybe your coworker is indeed a good person with some impulse control problems. Maybe it was the start of a crime spree. It really doesn’t matter. She admits to stealing, and that’s enough to destroy her credibility for most people.

      4. Paxton Sparrow*

        I agree completely with this point – I actually have an entry level associate right now who I am fighting with Senior Management and HR about this exact issue. She has caused issues with every team she has been on but has the support of one senior executive so no one will file a grievance meaning she has an unblemished record. She has had 4 issues escalated this year including removal from 2 different project teams due to behavior and is unofficially blacklisted from multiple project teams.

      5. Collarbone High*

        True, and despite what the signs in the fitting rooms say, stores don’t always press charges against shoplifters. My sister was a pretty prolific shoplifter in middle school and the few times she was caught, the managers decided it wasn’t worth the trouble for a $20 item. (I’m sure being a pretty, middle-class white girl helped.) But “she has no criminal record” doesn’t necessarily equal “she’s never stolen anything.”

      6. Anion*

        Yes, this isn’t a “She was desperate so she stole a loaf of bread to feed her starving family,” situation. This is someone who thinks stealing–from people she knows!–is an acceptable way to get things she wants. I would also be surprised if this was the first time she ever stole anything. You don’t reach the point where you’ll steal a co-worker’s jacket out of desperation; you reach it out of entitlement.

    9. Jaydee*

      The problem here is that the LW is dividing the world into “good people” and “bad people.” People who commit crimes are “bad people.” Co-worker has always been nice, never had problems before, is active in her church and family. She is a “good person.” Therefore it is very difficult for LW to believe that she could have committed a serious crime. Because that would mean she is a “bad person.”

      The world isn’t divided like that. People aren’t divided into “good people” and “bad people.” People who do bad things can also do very good things. And people who do good things can also do very bad things.

      1. Rusty Shackelford*

        And if there are *good people,* those who steal jackets don’t belong in that category, no matter how often they volunteer or go to church.

      2. Elizabeth the Ginger*

        Very much this. She could be a thief and still be a wonderful and kind dog owner, for example, or a wonderful and sympathetic volunteer at the local nursing home, or a super-efficient file clerk. It’s not all good or all bad. Just like there can be people who never steal or cheat or lie but are only mediocre at their jobs and very dull to be around socially.

        The bad in this case, though – even just the admitted bad of taking the jacket, regardless of the credit card situation – means she should no longer be employed by this company. Stealing at work (barring some extreme Jean Valjean “loaf of bread to feed my starving nephew” kind of thing) should be automatic grounds for dismissal. It doesn’t mean she needs to be tarred and feathered universally and never have a job anywhere again. But this bridge is burned.

        1. Anion*

          Yes, I know someone who occasionally shoplifts from the grocery store, because said person is very poor and sometimes literally can’t afford that package of lunchmeat or butter, but (obviously) still needs to eat to survive. I don’t consider that person a bad person. But that person would also never, ever steal another person’s actual belongings; I could leave $50 on that person’s couch by accident, and they’d call me immediately to tell me I left it there.

          You don’t steal a jacket that you really like out of desperation, you steal it out of entitlement and covetousness. That’s very different from shoplifting so you can eat. (I’m not advocating shoplifting here, I’m just saying I see a difference between what my friend does and what the person in the letter did.)

        2. Annonymouse*

          Hitler was an animal loving vegetarian.

          You can be really moral and “good” in some areas of life but atrocious in others.

          One does not excuse the other.

      3. PersephoneUnderground*

        I love this comment so much- people show you if they’re “good” or “bad” through the sum of their actions, and it’s rarely perfectly simple. I always think of a co-worker who was always bossy and argumentative with me (unprofessionally and irrationally unpleasant, got mad when I did what the boss wanted when she wanted me to do something different, not a we just didn’t get along problem), but who took really good care of her elderly mother who had a serious illness. She’s just such a perfect example of “people are complicated” and rarely perfectly good or bad people.

        1. Not So NewReader*

          This.
          And the complexity just piles on. Some times good people do things that some people but not everyone thinks are bad things. Conversely, when bad people do good things we can’t figure that one out either.

          What is boils down to is that sometimes we totally misread a person and it’s shocking to find out that there are many things going on with that individual.

          While we and OP will never know for certain what happened to the credit cards, I think that OP will find there is more to this story in months and years to come. And that can include more poor behavior by either the coworker or the intern, or both parties.

        2. So Very Anonymous*

          I kind of think of this as the “Professor Snape” theory of goodness, and it’s one of the things I really liked about the Harry Potter books.

    10. Runner*

      It makes me sick to my stomach how many readers here used that one comment to bash going to church. I don’t even go to church.

      1. Jesca*

        Yeah, I agree with you that and I was a born and raised agnostic who rarely participates with others in the religion I have chosen as an adult. Its one of those things people have decided are “not insensitive” to harp on.

        1. Temperance*

          100% disagree. By the LW mentioning that the thief is a church-goer, she was letting out a dog whistle to let us know who she considers good and trustworthy: Christians.

          1. caryatis*

            Definite flavor of religious discrimination in this story. I suspect part of the reason OP is so biased against the intern is that the intern is not a church-goer.

          2. Annonymouse*

            Exactly.
            This forms a huge part of OPs justification here.

            Goes to church = incapable of bad deeds
            Doesn’t go to church = must be guilty.

            All we are doing is pointing out that assumption is erroneous.

            We aren’t saying “all church goers are guilty, lying sinners – of course she’s the bad guy!” rather that there are people who do both good and bad things regardless of religion.

      2. Rainy, not-PI*

        I haven’t seen anyone bashing going to church. I have seen a lot of people refuting or ridiculing the idea that “going to church” must necessarily mean “good person”.

        1. RabbitRabbit*

          This. It’s not an indictment of going to church, it’s the thought that being “church-going” automatically means that you couldn’t be a ‘serious’ thief.

        2. The Annoyingly Alliterative Athiest*

          Yes, this. As an uncloseted atheist, I routinely get told I am less moral than people who go to church regularly, so there is a strong urge to push back when someone declares that church-going = good person. It has been my experience that going to church doesn’t make you a good person any more than standing in a garage makes you a car.

          1. Jesca*

            Hmm. I find that odd. I live in an area that is pretty close-nit and mostly Christian church goers. And sure maybe once every couple years I run into a person who criticizes me for not going. But definitely not regularly and definitely not overtly hostile about it. Maybe people are just different in different areas?

            But maybe my view is skewed as I was not raised with any religion and taught to respect all regions as a child, and therefore am not sensitive to being “pushed”.

              1. Rainy, not-PI*

                My sister lived in a town where asking for the bacon to be left off sandwiches resulted in a waitress calling her a “dirty Jew” to her face.

                1. fposte*

                  Ah, okay. To be fair I don’t get grief about it much more often than you state either, but I wouldn’t expect to given the university town culture; I definitely know people who get more.

              2. Anion*

                I wouldn’t necessarily agree that it “happens a lot more in the U.S. than in some other countries.” Or rather, maybe it does happen more than in *some* other countries, but there are also a lot of other countries where it happens an awful lot. I’ve never had anyone in the US try to shame me for not going to church, but it happened more than once in the UK. (The UK is also the only place where I was ever handed an anti-evolution pamphlet or regularly heard anti-Semitic comments, but I don’t take that to mean anything about the UK as a whole; it just means there are nuts and anti-Semites everywhere in the world.)

            1. Rainy, not-PI*

              It’s great that your area isn’t like that. There are a lot of areas that are like that. You can find it “odd”, but you can’t find it “untrue”.

              *BTW, the term you’re looking for is “close-knit” as in a tightly-manufactured fabric, not “close-nit” like lice eggs very near one another.

            2. animaniactoo*

              fwiw, I was raised atheist and I’ve been dealing with the attitude in various forms all my life.

              It has gotten considerably less (and there’s been a strong pushback imo to the point that I almost feel like it’s oppositional flashback for the previous saturation) in media/pop culture, but in general the bent has always been that it’s acceptable to be non-practicing, being agnostic means you’re searching and will probably eventually acknowledge the glory of God. Being straight up atheist means you have *no* beliefs and nothing to keep you centered/moral/ethical.

              To the point where I have *developed* a defined stance about my near-atheism* that says “I choose to treat those around me well because they deserve to be treated so. If I get to the end of my life and I discover there is a God, I hope that how I have treated people will matter much more than my belief in him/her/it.” I would not have had to develop that if I hadn’t gotten enough flak about it in my life in one form or another.

              *near-atheism. My belief is that there is something or someone out there, simply because I am not egotistical enough to believe we are the highest form of life ever to have evolved. I believe that they *may* occasionally do something to affect our world, but I doubt that they take much interest in our day to day lives.

              1. Julia*

                Wouldn’t that make you agnostic?

                And I totally agree that if there is a God, I hope they’d just me on my behavior instead of how often I worshiped them.

                1. animaniactoo*

                  No, because I don’t really believe in a God per se. I don’t believe there’s a heaven waiting for me or a hell. What I believe would probably be more along the lines of an alien race that’s more advanced than ours. I haven’t really fleshed it out at all beyond the vague notion that there’s something or someone who may possibly affect something at some point for reasons that we would know nothing about. It’s probably The Doctor.

          2. TootsNYC*

            actually, if you go to church and LISTEN, the message is, “no one is a good person.”

            “All have sinned….”

          3. Artemesia*

            My first mother in law made quite a point of the fact that a person who was not ‘churched’ could not be a good person because why would someone have any reason to be good if there was no God to provide consequences of not being. I consider this a very primitive view of good and evil but it is pretty common. Being an atheist pretty much disqualifies one for political life in this country for this reason. And this is why so many politicians pretend to be Christians who very obviously are not.

            1. Layla*

              I’ve always found that quite a frightening point of view. If they didn’t feel they were being ‘watched’ – if they lost their religion – would they suddenly run amuk?

              1. Floundering Mander*

                Me too. I don’t find the idea that I must behave or else there will be consequences at all compelling. Rather, I have no interest in doing the majority of things that are bad. I don’t refrain from murder because I’m concerned about punishment, I just don’t have any desire to kill anyone.

              2. sap*

                There have been really interesting studies showing that people behave better when there are pictures of people watching them in their immediate vicinity. Sour weird.

                1. Floundering Mander*

                  I can see that. I’ve experienced it myself, in that I felt like someone could see me trying to sneak the cookie out of the jar as a kid. But that’s still extremely minor stuff. It might stop me from doing things I have decided not to do, like eat that extra piece of candy or put off doing the laundry for one more day. But it’s not preventing me from stealing other people’s property, because I have no desire to do that in the first place.

            2. Annonymouse*

              How about “My reason to be good is because I respect other people and myself and want to live in a world where all are equal and treated well”?

              As opposed to

              **”Invisible omnipresent force is the only thing holding me back from a crime spree. I have no respect or care for anyone but myself and I have no desire to positively contribute to the world because I am already “good”.”

              **Please note those is not a view I ascribe to all people of all religions. People with or without religion can be either of these mindsets.

              People without religion for them it’s more about people at large finding out about their jeratude or people they hope to impress hence why they do bad things to those “less” than them.

      3. strawberries and raspberries*

        We’re not bashing going to church. We’re bashing the idea that going to church makes you instantly good and credible even when you have done something very much not good on camera, and the implication embedded in that assumption, which is that not going to church makes you instantly bad and not credible.

      4. Perse's Mom*

        I don’t see anyone bashing church attendance. Commenters are, rightfully, bothered that the OP is using the thief’s church-going ways as some kind of moral defense.

      5. Ellen N.*

        I don’t see it as readers bashing going to church. I see it as readers pointing out that being a churchgoer is not an indication of moral purity.

      6. Lilo*

        No one is bashing going to church, just the assumption that someone is a good person because they go to church. Key difference.

      7. Temperance*

        No one here has “bash(ed) going to church”. Several of us have pointed out the fallacy behind the “churchgoer = good person” idea.

      8. MashaKasha*

        I don’t see that (but will admit that I’m biased), what I see is the bashing of “she goes to church, so there’s no way she could’ve done something like this, so the victim made the whole story up and should be fired”. That’s one hell of a stretch.

        1. Jesca*

          But to point out as well that she also says she regularly volunteers and seems nice. Yet these facts are glossed over as just about everyone is focused on the “but she goes to church” statement. That is kind of what I think people would take umbrage with.

          1. strawberries and raspberries*

            Okay, but “seems nice” and “volunteers” still does not trump “on CCTV actually stealing something and then having her name on purchases made with a stolen credit card.” It is significant that the OP added the “goes to church” part, because as I said before, the tacit implication of that is “not going to church = more likely to steal.” In some parts of the country, not going to church can have significant social ramifications. Hell, I’m in a highly diverse part of the country and I have still been in professional situations where not going to church paints a glare over decisions I’ve made or beliefs I have.

            It’s nice that you were raised to respect all religions equally, but when your religion is regularly minimized and marginalized and you lose social currency because you don’t participate in freaking church, I would say it’s pretty legitimate to call out someone’s naive use of church attendance as rationale to excuse someone’s criminal behavior.

          2. SarahTheEntwife*

            The church bit seems like a particularly egregious thing since there is nothing particularly virtuous about going to church. Volunteering is at least theoretically a reason you might have to think that someone is a good person. Going to church…means that someone is religious, or enjoys the community. There’s nothing innately good or bad about that and yet it gets used as a proxy for morality.

            1. Rusty Shackelford*

              Yes, that’s what I was thinking. She’s a nice person (as far as the OP knows), she volunteers, these are good things she does that are a benefit to other people. “Goes to church” doesn’t have that factor.

              1. Jesca*

                It says she is “active with her church” not that she simply attends. What I have found from those who attend church, is that this has a different meaning than “goes to church”. Being active in church means they typically handle volunteer activities, do community outreach programs, run after school programs – those sorts of things. So it was like hand in hand with volunteering. At this is how it is viewed in my area from what I have been told.

                1. MashaKasha*

                  It varies in my area. When I was a church member, the only person in my church that had ever actively hit on me, was active in church, as were his wife, parents, and in-laws. A close friend of mine was active in church and in charge of the outreach. This friend was also regularly being piled on by other active church members, parish council members etc. because my friend’s politics was the opposite of theirs and friend didn’t bother hiding it. In my experience, “he/she is very active in their church” can mean a whole spectrum of things; not all of them good.

          3. Anion*

            Exactly. No one is talking abut being shamed for not volunteering or telling stories about volunteers who’ve done awful things.

      9. Susana*

        Runner, it’s not that – nothing wrong with going to church, of course. It’s the OP’s premise that going to church means this co-worker is somehow morally superior.
        The more I think about this (including the fact that OP says the whole team has issues with this intern), the more I wonder if the team doesn’t like having interns in general, or maybe resents that the interns sailed into staff jobs when maybe the team didn’t.

      10. Susanne*

        Runner, no one even remotely bashed going to church. We bashed the sickeningly-sweet and so-completely-untrue sentiment that whether someone goes to church is some kind of marker of being a good person.

      11. Nacho*

        I’m not seeing people bashing church, but bashing the idea that “going to church” is some kind of a character strength that should give someone extra benefit of the doubt in situations like this.

      12. ArtK*

        Nobody is bashing going to church. They (we) are disagreeing with the idea that going to church is a guaranteed marker of honesty and virtue. Assuming someone is good simply because they go to church is a bad, bad mistake.

      13. Anion*

        No, I see where you’re coming from. There seems to be–in general, not necessarily here or just here–this sort of meanspirited delight when someone who goes to church or is religious or conservative “falls” or turns out to be a bad or criminal person, and I don’t see that kind of delight in other situations. Someone posted a comment on a recent thread about the super-“progressive” school in which they work (or a spouse works, or they live near, I can’t recall the exact details and don’t want to point fingers anyway) and how apparently the staff there are anti-Semitic (among other things) and the parents who pride themselves on being “progressive” and liberal chased some homeless people out of the neighborhood, while applauding themselves for how “woke” they are. Another person discussed a similar situation at a non-profit, where all kinds of nastiness takes place among those who pat themselves on the back for being caring and open-minded. I didn’t see a lot of comments about how gross those particular hypocrisy(ies) is, or how typical they may be, or how those same people probably call those who disagree with them “Nazis.”

        (To make clear: the person who posted the comment was not saying s/he agreed with those people, and the person posting about the non-profit was clearly unhappy with the situation. I’m not saying and do not mean to imply *in any way* that anyone commenting here is that type of person or agrees with that sort of attitude or behavior. I’m just saying I see where you’re coming from; we’re quick to jump on the “People who go to church act all holy but aren’t!” bandwagon while giving people who are hypocrites in other major, arguably worse, ways a pass. And I’m not religious or a church-goer myself, either.)

        1. Annonymouse*

          Oh they don’t get a pass.

          It’s much easier to point out to them

          “You think you’re a good person but your actions make you an @$$hole. Would you like to revise that?”

          “Um …. I guess you’re right.”

          Because even I feel they bring up other actions their current ones are still there for us to see.

          Also there is the way society gives you a pass for being religious over being good.

          Religion is something you live by that you aren’t supposed to change or go against on a whim. It’s a lifestyle, a commitment and a part of character.

          Non religious “good” actions or character traits don’t carry that same weight because these clearly are choices I can change at any time without serious consideration or just cause.

          I’m not religious but I’m *kind, helpful and friendly. If I was caught stealing it would technically be less shocking than if my very Christian coworker did I think because she has an obvious moral code to guide her. I don’t.

          And those people you mention are ridiculous and I hope they get a karmic comeuppance.

          *these are words others use to describe me frequently. I have no self perception so I’ll take them at their word.

          1. Anion*

            See, I guess I’m just confused about what “society” others are seeing that I’m not, because I see, for example, someone like Joss Whedon held up as some paragon of awesome, intelligent, “woke”ness, and lauded for being feminist, but he regularly makes viciously nasty comments about the appearance of women whose opinions he disagrees with, preyed on young actresses in a sexual-predator way, and treated a pregnant actress abominably simply because she had the gall to get pregnant. But I don’t see anyone calling him out; he gets a pass because he’s considered “virtuous” for espousing the “right kind of ideals.” That’s the kind of society I see: one that gives a pass to the most vile kinds of behavior because someone says the right things. I don’t see anyone getting a pass for such things on the basis that they’re religious; if anything I think people are more eager to see their actions as bad.

            That might simply be what I look at vs. what other people do, of course, but I can’t think of a single high-profile person who’s been given a pass for any kind of behavior because they’re religious. But Whoopi Goldberg can excuse the rape of a 14-year-old on the grounds that it “wasn’t rape rape,” and barely anyone says a peep, she still has her job, and people still lend her views on women and feminism credence.

      14. Chinook*

        Runner, not only am I church goer, I am even an altar server, so I can honestly say that what I, and others, are saying is not at all reflective of our attitude towards religion but more how many people we see who attend but don’t seem to make the connection between what they are being taught and how that should apply to their interactions with those both inside and outside of their faith. Sometimes it is due to ignorance and sometimes they are just plain hypocrites. Even the Christian gospels have examples of Jesus calling out so called pious people for poor behavior (and him explain that, at least with the professed sinners, he knew what they were capable of).

    11. SoAnonForThis*

      At a previous employer, we had a real theft issue going on. Cash would disappear and some gift cards that had been bought as employee incentives went missing. People were careful to lock their office doors, but all of them were pretty easy to open with a credit card (we’d all use this trick if we accidentally locked ourselves out of our own office and no one was onsite with a master key). One day, a very long term extremely well liked employee was fired seemingly out of the blue. It came out that her credit card had some charges that couldn’t be explained and some digging turned up that she had been making personal charges for quite some time on her company card and coding them as work items. It was mostly small things that were easy enough to slide through for a long term trusted employee that no one was checking on too closely. A lot of people didn’t believe it. They thought that it had to have been exaggerated or that she just made a mistake somehow. However, the theft problem in general went away after she was let go and we eventually realized that it had to be connected and we just didn’t know her like we thought we did.

      All of this to say that I get the desire to side with the employee that you know, but you just never know what might be going on. Our employee was very well known in the community, worked with charities, had a ton of people that would have sworn (me included) that there was just no way that she could have done what she did. At this point all you know is that the intern accused someone that you liked and are having a hard time believing would do those things. You definitely do not know that they lied to the police.

      1. Jesca*

        This is soooo true. In my teens, I worked for a chain pizza place. The store manager pulled me aside one time to tell me that I need to be more careful as my drawer keeps coming up short. I felt like crap about myself! I was an honor student with early admissions to college, and I can’t even count money! He kept telling me it was low amounts. One day I come to work, and he is gone! Turns out the home office some how was not buying this, did some investigation, and found that this dude was using my drawer to pocket cash. He would sign in and then steal the money out. Unbelievable! Everyone was shocked. No one knew he was pulling me aside and writing me up to try to set me up for it! When everyone found out about that, double shock.

        You never really know people.

            1. Jesca*

              I know!!! What a bullet dodged that I didn’t even know was coming! But i look at it like I was lucky enough at a young age to learn that you never can truly know someone.

              I actually had a manager at a part time job a couple years ago steal money from my wallet in our shared locker. Turned out, that wasn’t the only thing she was stealing either.

        1. AMPG*

          Oh, I worked for a small store when I was in college, and kept finding my drawer short by $20 or $30. I told the owner I thought someone was stealing, but she didn’t want to believe it, and I couldn’t figure out a pattern of which other employee was around every time it happened. Eventually I thought I might have to quit because it was only ever my drawer that was short, and that made me the most likely thief from the owner’s point of view. Right around that time, the opening cashier came in one day to find both drawers cleaned out – we figured out that another employee had an addiction problem and had robbed the store and skipped town.

        2. kd*

          I worked for a movie theater chain in my teens. The same thing happened to me. We found out that all the managers (4 or 5) were all in on it. They would periodically write us up for it, but when I asked for proof, or the chance to count my till with them at the end of the night, they would shrug and just say everything was fine, we just couldn’t let it happen again. (I was 19, most of my coworkers were about the same age, and the managers were at most 23 years old. There was a lot of “intermingling” with coworkers and managers).

          When a new GM came in, she tried to fire a lot of existing crew members, and she immediately gave me a warning, letting me know that one more write up would result in termination. I explained that the old write ups were not valid, but she (obviously) didn’t agree. I promptly found a new job, and learned my lesson: speak up when something is wrong. When I began bartending after that, I was responsible for receiving my bank, counting all my inventory, and then caluclating sales based off inventory sold. My drawer was never off.

        3. chi type*

          That EXACT same thing happened to me at my first job (only the manager/thief was a woman so I know we never worked together- ha).

      2. Liane*

        We had someone like this at OldJob. A young man who worked in the Electronics Department, really nice, good at his job, fun to talk with on break…
        One day some of us see his name and picture in a Police Beat column in the paper. He had been arrested for about $5K in in theft from our store! I have no doubt he did it, although I am not sure how. I suspect some of thefts were fraudulent purchases/returns, as I know he’d done returns with me of relatively small-ticket electronic items in the past. I’d never seen anything odd about them, and I always scrutinized receipts, matched up serial #s and dates, like we were supposed to–no matter WHO made such returns. Because Doing the Job Right is important to me–and cameras. Maybe he did legit returns with several people until he found someone who was lax about procedures because it was a coworker doing the return? All I know is Loss Prevention never asked me about any of his returns.

      3. Turtle Candle*

        We had something like that too. A guy who was generally genial, well-liked, a good worker, always contributed to the food drive and so forth, was fired for theft. He was in IT, and it turned out that he’d been slipping additional items onto purchase orders and then taking them home for resale. He got away with it for a while because one more flatscreen monitor or hard drive didn’t raise red flags… but he got cocky and put on (of all things) four wiimotes, and yeah, THAT got noticed.

        Never would have guessed it until it happened, though.

    12. Kathy*

      The part I don’t get is that if the Amazon orders were picked-up; wouldn’t there be some kind of cameras near that area showing who picked up the merchandise? I really can’t see the intern doing this.

      1. Mallory Janis Ian*

        That’s what I was thinking; wouldn’t the police look at the camera footage and see who showed up to pick up the packages? Unless the full-time employee really did order them, and then the intern saw them on her account and went over there to see WTF was going on.

      2. Ego Chamber*

        The timeline seems really fast on this one. I don’t think there was time for delivery and pick-up (unless someone had Prime?). I think Intern reported the charges within a day or 2 of them happening, and the police went straight to Coworker for questioning, instead of setting up a sting at the pick-up location like something out of Brooklyn 99.

      3. ChurchLady*

        My apartment building has lockers where you receive a code by email. The machine is supposed to take your picture and you’re supposed to sign, but it is easy enough to stand to one side and scrawl anything. I don’t know if “actual” Amazon lockers work the same, but some comments on here lead me to believe so, or with even less security. But I am no expert.

        I also do not believe for one second that the intern found out her jacket was stolen (on video, no less!) and then immediately thought, “I will now order millions of Amazon in co-worker’s name and *really* get co-worker.” I mean, really?

        1. Jessica*

          Especially since it would be the intern’s accounts paying for the orders, which would be denied as fraud and then she’d be liable for all of it (in addition to whatever fallout occurred as a result of trying to frame the coworker). And for what? To make the coworker look bad? There’s no benefit to herself at all, just potentially being on the hook for hundreds of dollars.

          1. An Anon For This*

            Oh I have known people who would absolutely think that way, and try to pull off something that stupid. They do exist.

    13. JM60*

      It seems like a clear case of religious favoritism. From the comment about the theif being a churchgoer, it sounds like the OP probably wouldn’t be so inclined to believe the the if of the theif was an atheist. If such favoritism affects the victim’s employment, then she would be victimized again by what I believe to be illegal descrimination (although I’m not a lawyer).

      1. JM60*

        To add to this: If you’re favoring someone because of their religious beliefs and/or practices, then you’re discriminating against others for not having those religious beliefs/practices.

    14. Sheworkshardforthemoney*

      I wonder why the husband said they were going to accept a plea for lesser jail time. Would she really be jailed for presumably a first offence if she really is an upstanding citizen? I’m not downplaying her crime but jail time for stealing a jacket seems excessive. Or would a trial open up a can of worms involving criminal activity that the OP is unaware of?

      1. Shelby*

        It wouldn’t be for the jacket. No way you’d get jail time on that. It would be for the cards. Credit card fraud and identity theft are considered much more serious. Also, because the orders were done by computer there could be additional charges for the fraud. If there were dozens of Amazon orders those could equate to over 100 fraud/theft related charges easily.

      2. Helena*

        The husband said the lawyer advised her to take a plea deal. It doesn’t say anywhere that she accepted the deal or plead guilty.

  2. nnn*

    If this were a mystery novel rather than a workplace advice column, my advice would be to stake out the Amazon pickup point and see who picks up the orders in question.

    1. esra (also a Canadian)*

      I desperately want a workplace crimes unit show. It would air on Hallmark and star one ex-soap opera actress as a Jessica Fletcher-style consultant who goes from office to office uncovering crimes in-between her actual job of streamlining office software and an appealingly-gruff detective.

      1. Archie Goodwin*

        See, I think it’s time for another entry in the Law & Order franchise.

        Alternatively, you could get Nero Wolfe involved, but I MAY be a tad biased…

        (Actually, he did get involved in workplace stuff at least once. It…escalated, let’s say.)

        1. Lily Rowan*

          There’s so much workplace stuff! I just re-read The Rubber Band, which….actually has some similarities to this story! The letter writer should watch out for decades-old grudges and Englishmen.

          1. Archie Goodwin*

            My go-to for dysfunction is The Silent Speaker. But then, I grew up in DC and still live there, so there’s something about that kind of bureaucratic infighting that’s familiar, somehow…

            Besides, I love Phoebe Gunther.

          1. Archie Goodwin*

            He went to Balliol, you know.
            And sat at the feet of Gamaliel.

            (Love that novel – thanks for reminding me.)

            (And I promise I’ll stop now. :-) )

        1. Jaydee*

          On the next episode of “Law & Order: Office Park Security” Callahan and Rivera investigate a string of stolen lunches at Teapots Inc. while Parker and McDonough go undercover at Llamas, Llamas, Llamas! to find out whose buttocks were copied and posted in the break room. When the two investigations unexpectedly converge, a scandal will be uncovered that rocks both companies, and the Llamas’ HR Department will go toe-to-toe with the union reps from Llama Cuddlers local 77 in the biggest grievance arbitration in company history.

        2. Falling Diphthong*

          Ooooh, yes!

          One lesson I have taken from this column is that nothing rouses office passions like expecting there to be simple carbohydrates and then THE SIMPLE CARBOHYDRATES ARE GONE!

        3. TootsNYC*

          including murder disguised through a stolen-lunches ruse.

          Start stealing people’s lunches, so you can poison the colleague/lover who’s jilting you by making it look as though they stole someone else’s lunch, and as though that someone else tampered with the lunch to sicken the lunch thief.

        1. LKW*

          Next on Law & Order: TPS… When a printer goes missing, everyone looks to Office Security. When pieces of the printer are mailed back to the office… they bring in the L&O squad to catch the culprits. “And then… when I opened the box… it was one of the cogs that move the paper through the rollers! What kind of sick psycho is doing this?!”

          1. Wendy Darling*

            As someone who has fantasized about dropping their printer off the balcony many times… a psycho who owns a printer. Those machines are monsters.

      2. Mike C.*

        There was one for restaurants, but then it came out that everything on the “hidden cameras” was staged. It was always weird stuff like, “the employees run their own restaurant inside the owner’s place and only accept cash”.

        1. crankypants*

          I remember that show. They also used a interceptor that captured their employee’s text messages and emails. I remember how illegal that seemed.

        2. esra (also a Canadian)*

          Hahaha that one where the staff all happened to have actor headshots for him to pin to the board?

        3. pope suburban*

          Not a restaurant, but something like that happened at my old place of employment, a construction company. The bookkeeper/admin and at least two of the department supervisors were in on it, and what they would do is they’d buy materials on the company accounts, then have her fake up invoices (and order business cards with their personal numbers on the, not the company’s), and pocket 100% of the money. They all quit before they could be fired, once one of the owners started investigating them. They’d made tens of thousands of dollars off the scheme, but their ineptitude exceeded their criminal instincts, so it couldn’t last.

        4. True Story*

          Actually, this happened at the restaurant my brother manages. No lie. One of the cooks was pilfering company pizza dough to make his own pizza business out of his house. He took orders while on the clock at the restaurant and had someone else working in the home kitchen.

          Very sketchy.

          1. Jessica*

            A now-defunct restaurant in Mpls also went under because one of the chefs was using restaurant resources to furnish his own catering side gig. A friend of mine was the pastry chef at the time.

        5. Anion*

          Mystery Diners!

          My favorite was the one where the bar manager was running an escort service out of the bar, and chased away female customers because of it.

      3. OlympiasEpiriot*

        Even Peter Whimsey had a workplace mystery… Murder Must Advertise. Very good read, btw, and a nice description of the day-to-day of an advertising office in 1930’s London.

        1. Turtle Candle*

          In the workplace, the employees are represented by two separate yet equally important groups: the other employees, who are always keeping an eye on you, and the managers, who may (or may not) do something about it. These are their stories.

      4. Anion*

        Tracey Gold stars in “Murder in a Cool Jacket: A Lucille Sunshine Workplace Mystery,” airing next week as part of the Hallmark Channel’s “Strangers You Know” Mystery Month.

        (Yes, I’ve seen a lot of ads on the Hallmark Channel, why do you ask?)

    2. Lady Ariel Ponyweather*

      Or stake out Pro Revenge on Reddit and wait for the ‘Steal my jacket? I’ll send you to prison’ post.

    3. blackcat*

      Well, maybe depending on the pick up point, you *have* to order in your own name to pick it up (maybe they check IDs)? So that would explain the ordering stuff in one’s own name.

    4. Infinity Anon*

      If it were a TV show they would be able to track the IP address that placed the order and it would obviously tell them exactly who was using that computer.

        1. Elizabeth West*

          I had to take some liberties with that myself in the bank robber book. A real crime lab would take weeks or months. “Aw come on, Tess; check this glove and we’ll buy you lunch anywhere you like.” Oh look, hidden evidence!
          Much better than Twenty-five weeks later, Tess finally opened the plastic bag. The killer had moved to Schenectady and it took them another six months to find him.

    5. Ellen N.*

      What you said. Also, whose Amazon account were the items ordered on? Pilfering someone’s wallet doesn’t give you their Amazon logon credentials.

    6. Sunflower*

      In my city, a lot of these locker pick ups are inside of stores- mostly convenience stores who most likely have video surveillance.

  3. Lily*

    That person *stole a personal item*. From *an intern*. I really don’t get why you think she would be credible and honest about stealing stuff.

    1. serenity*

      She admits to taking the jacket but says she doesn’t know anything about the card.

      I think the OP is not being objective here about a staff member who she has history with. Otherwise, I can’t fathom how someone who admitted the above can be considered credible or reliable person at this point.

      1. my two cents*

        It seems like a LOT of extra work for an intern to do in addition to having had their coat stolen and having to review the security footage for it.

        That, and Amazon orders ship VERY quickly. Intern would have needed to know immediately that it was the coworker, and then pull up the coworker’s home address for the Amazon orders. Turn-around on Amazon orders is very quick – you cannot cancel an order after a few hours of it being placed.

        Like, had it happened the way the coworker is saying, there’s no way the intern would have absolutely immediately known it was that coworker to place the Amazon orders in their name prior to reviewing the footage.

        1. Cambridge Comma*

          That’s true; the time of the order compared with the time the intern requested the tape might solve it. (Not that it sounds like OP’s problem to solve.)

          1. serenity*

            Like Alison said, it should be a police matter at this point.

            And I do hope that others in the OP’s office are less fixated on the intern than on addressing the staff member’s admitted theft. Has that person been disciplined or fired? Or is everyone too busy foaming at the mouth about the intern’s “lying” that there’s going to be no consequences for the staff member? This whole scenario is wrong on so many levels.

          1. krysb*

            Wait. Whoever shopped on Amazon would either have to have access to the intern’s account or would have to go through their own/a dummy account. So either the intern would be able to view those charges in Amazon, or she’d have to have waited for those charges to appear on her credit account. I wish we had a clearer timeline of events.

            1. Alton*

              I’m guessing the orders weren’t made through the intern’s account. If they were made through the coworker’s account, that would be pretty damning evidence against the coworker. A dummy account might also be able to be linked to the individual who created it, even if the orders were placed at work.

            2. Kyrielle*

              Which really, really won’t take long. I use my credit cards on Amazon all the time, and the “pending transaction” shows when I log on to my credit card, even if it’s just a few minutes later. (I’ve never tried doing it as quickly as possible, but I did realize a time or two that I hadn’t noted it in the budget software, and it was faster to check in the app for my credit card than the Amazon app.)

              Plus, if you call and say you’ve lost a card (and, I assume, if you call and say a card has been stolen), one of the things they do is read to you all the recent transactions to confirm they’re yours. (This is also what happens if they detect odd-for-you activity and call you about it, actually.)

              All of this based on my experience with my cards, of course, and it may vary – but it’s certainly very plausible that this information would have been available to the intern quickly.

            3. Sarah*

              I mean, this is where the whole “police are investigating” bit comes in. Presumably the police here are not totally incompetent, and were able to compare the times of
              a) the security footage of the coat being stolen to
              b) the times the Amazon orders were placed (and through what account/address)
              to come up with a likely scenario here. OP may not have all of that information, since typically police investigations aren’t 100% transparent to the public. Those who are actually investigating the crime are MUCH better placed to make a determination here than either OP or the comments section hearing things 3rd or 4th hand.

              1. Sarah*

                And note, lying to the police is ALSO A CRIME. So if the interns story were actually fishy and not adding up, this is something the police could/would investigate too. I’m not saying police are infallible, but certainly they’re much better positioned to make a determination here.

            4. LKW*

              I have an alert on my cc that tells me anytime the card is used for anything over $1. A few months ago someone tried to use my card and I was able to cancel it pretty quickly.

              Not to give away all of my dastardly secrets here but the employee-thief could have found the wallet, taken a snapshot of the card info (mine is now all on the back of the card – single photo!) and sent it to anyone. So don’t assume the employee specifically logged on to Amazon, but they could have definitely made it really easy for someone else to take 15 minutes to set up a new account, pull things from their wish list and send it off somewhere. It would be easy for the police to track that as well.

                1. Talvi*

                  It could be a debit card – that’s what I use mostly. I only ever use my credit card for online purchases; the rest is on debit. You can’t rack up all that many charges on a debit card without knowing the pin – after every 100$ spent using the tap, the machine forces you to insert the card and enter your pin for the payment to go through. (This could very well be bank-specific, though.)

            5. Kelly L.*

              I think the thief added the intern’s credit card to the thief’s own Amazon account as an additional card. So the charges would appear in the intern’s bank account (because they were going to her card) but not in her Amazon account.

              And sometimes Amazon charges don’t show up in your bank account for a day or so.

            6. Traffic_Spiral*

              A good credit card knows way more about you than you think. So if it gets pinged for Amazon purchases from a different account than what Intern usually uses, the card will notice the data disparity, and send an email going “Hey, your card was used by Coworker’s Amazon account to buy teacups – that cool?”

              Then you go to the cops and be like “so… my wallet’s gone, and I got this email from my credit card saying that it’s being used to buy things from my coworker’s account.”

          2. Fake old Converse shoes*

            Not necessary. My credit card has a service that sends an email to my address whenever I use it. So, if my credit cards or accounts are stolen, I’m immediately notified when they’re used.

            1. RabbitRabbit*

              After the Equifax hack, I set my bank and credit card accounts to send push notifications to my phone about any transaction. They get sent from the company very quickly.

            2. anon24*

              One of my credit cards texts me instantly when my card is run. The other one sets a notification on my smartphone (which then sets a vibration/notification on my Pebble watch). It’s quick enough that if I’m in a store using it my phone is going off before I’ve gotten to the signature screen. My husband complains that he can’t get away with anything because if he runs the card and doesn’t text me beforehand I’m instantly texting him “what did you buy at [store] that cost $50?”

        2. TootsNYC*

          plus, the intern would have to go without using that card from the moment the jacket was stolen.

          (it wasn’t a home address–it was a pickup point near the office. Which makes it more credible for the intern. But also makes it credible for the jacket thief to do, because she could claim someone else had done it, maybe. Or, she really wasn’t thinking things through–not realizing that the security cameras would spot her with the jacket–and so she may have thought that not using her home address would shield her from detection, names aside. And would she need an ID to pick it up? Then of course she’d use her own name.)

          1. Annonymouse*

            My bosses and I tend to get personal packages delivered to the office.

            You can be sure I’m there Monday to Friday 9-5 and I won’t miss the delivery. At home it often results in one of those “pick up from the post office that isn’t open after 5 or on Saturdays” slips.

        3. Elder Dog*

          If your jacket with your credit cards is stolen, and you report it to the police, the police are going to tell you to call your credit card company right away and report your cards stolen. When you report your cards stolen, the card company rep says to you, there were five charges made on Amazon since 8 AM this morning. Was that you? If you say no, you can hand the phone to the police and the card company will give the police the details of those charges. It takes about five minutes.

          The card company cancels the charges, and Amazon won’t ship. Amazon will tell the card company the details of what was charged and where it was being shipped within a couple of days, and the card company will share that with the police. Then the police will ask to review the security footage, find the jacket and charge the employee with the theft of the jacket AND the cards.

          The employee’s lawyer probably helped her get a plea bargain where she pled to just stealing the jacket in order for her not to have to go through a whole trial that would cost the county $$$, since the charges were cancelled and she didn’t actually benefit from the theft. Costing the county $$$ is the important point here.

          The intern didn’t have to point a finger at the employee. It makes more sense she called the police because her wallet was taken. The police wouldn’t likely go through all this big whoop over a stolen jacket even if it was an expensive one.

          1. DArcy*

            Right. But the intern probably didn’t call the police /right away/, because most people don’t do that; I’d argue that it’s typical that if a clothing item gets missing at work, you’d not necessarily call it in as a theft until you’ve looked around various spots where you’d been that day and asked a few coworkers, “Hey, have you seen my jacket?”

            There’s more than enough time window for the jacket thief to use the intern’s credit cards before the police recovered the stolen jacket and wallet.

            1. Ego Chamber*

              I thought building security recovered the jacket based on the security footage, then the intern found out about the charges on her credit card later and called the police in at that point.

              This makes more sense to me, and seems more likely based on the phrasing in the letter, although the timeline is unclear.

    2. Anna*

      It’s the low risk version of “Okay, I was at the store where the robbery took place, but it was an hour before the robbery took place. Okay, I was in the store a half an hour before the robbery took place, but I left before it happened and didn’t see anything” etc.

      1. Wasn't Me*

        Menace II Society? Love that movie! O-dog was soo dumb with that tape, right? Almost… criminally dumb ;) Poor, poor Caine.

  4. A person*

    Are the newly-hired-as-staff-member intern and the arrested staff member going to be working together after the latter gets out of jail? Seems like there’s going to be a lot of drama in the office already since some people don’t trust the intern’s version of events.

    1. Snark*

      From the narrowly selfish perspective of an AAM reader, OH GOD I HOPE SO BECAUSE THAT LETTER WILL BE A THING OF BEAUTY AND POWER.

      1. A person*

        Based on some letters we’ve seen it’s not outside the realm of possibility!

        I wonder how the intern’s experience will be even if the staff member/thief doesn’t come back. She was the victim of a crime and at some of her coworkers assume she’s lying about it! I dont believe that’s in any recipe for succeeding at your first full time job.

    2. Kvothe*

      Will that coworker even have a job after jail time? She committed the crime at her place of employment, I’m assuming she would have been fired?

    3. RVA Cat*

      This! The theft itself should be grounds for a misconduct firing.
      Also, did the intern get her stuff back? If anything the company should pay for her to get ID theft protection as a goodwill gesture.
      Seriously side-eyeing the total lack of information security as well. OP, you may want to think about whether this is a healthy and functional workplace. The whole “but she goes to church!” thing makes me think there’s some cliquishness going on and that you’re distrusting the intern/new hire because she doesn’t fit a certain narrow profile.

      1. Susanne*

        What IS this, “but she goes to church”? Are we in the Deep South or something? In regular parts of the country, people are aware that there are all different religious traditions, or no traditions at all, and what everyone does on Sunday (or whatever day) is their business and typically not discussed with coworkers. I would have no idea whether my coworkers regularly “go to church” or not, and wouldn’t expect to know unless there was some unusual circumstance (e.g., I see ashes on someone’s head on Ash Wednesday, someone needs to leave early on Friday for Shabbat). And I sure as heck wouldn’t think that that makes them better morally than others — how odd.

        Echoing the others who are flabbergasted that the staff member who stole the intern’s jacket — proven on videotape, no less! — still has a job. That seems like an immediate fireable offense. She didn’t take the intern’s ballpoint pen or stapler or stack of post-it notes or drink her can of Coke. She stole her jacket. Brazenly. In my mind, that is an employee who is done and done.

        1. LA*

          Hey, that kind of thing will get you fired in the Deep South, too. That “but she goes to church” thing is not going to fly as an excuse even down here, no matter how “irregular” we seem to be. Especially not with proof that said churchgoer stole from a coworker.

          For the coworker to have done this and not been fired, this must be a dysfunctional workplace. Which can happen anywhere.

          1. A person*

            Even at my old dysfunctional office in the Deep South where people who went to the boss’s church got special privileges, I would think this would be a firing offense!

            My first day at a different dysfunctional office in the Deep South (at a government office no less) one of my colleagues asked me which church I go to. Not IF, mind you. And that’s how I became the office heathen on day one. I’m glad no one stole anything from me, but I sure hope I was just imagining those suspicious looks when someone’s book went missing!

        2. TootsNYC*

          It wouldn’t surprise me that people know someone goes to church.

          I mention it at the office. Sometimes in a philosophical discussion, or I would mention that I’m the church organist, or that my church has an orphanage in the DR and I buy underwear for it.

          So people know.

          But yes–I go to church because I am a flawed person. My church attendance doesn’t make me a better person.

        3. Blue Anne*

          Eh. I work in a small office in Ohio. Not only do I know I’m the only weirdo heathen (by the standards of come of my colleagues, anyway), I know most people’s denominations. It’s not that weird.

          But it’s also not some sort of ironclad excuse.

        4. Helpful*

          It’s really offensive that you would call the other parts of the country “regular parts of the country.” Come on.

        5. Beckie*

          I really hope that this letter writer is actually from, like, Maine or Northern California or some other part of the country with a relatively low rate of religious practice. (In fact, is someone more likely to play a solidarity, “but they go to CHURCH!” card in a place where churchgoing is common or uncommon?)

      2. Jaydee*

        I don’t think it’s so much a “but she goes to church!” thing as it is a “she’s always seemed like a good person for reasons including (but not limited to) her church-going and I’m letting that blind me to the possibility that her crimes went beyond stealing the intern’s jacket.”

        1. TootsNYC*

          yeah, people at work get shocked when I swear.
          Because I go to church regularly! And sometimes even talk about how my faith intersects with politics or philosophy (when that’s the conversation).

          But if I say the “f” word, they get shocked. (I always point out–that’s not the Lord’s name, and there’s no commandment against vulgarity, just against profanity)

  5. Snark*

    o_0

    o_O

    Woooow. Dang.

    I take pretty significant exception to the assumption that the intern lied to police, because you have no other evidence that she’s a felon or a liar, and, well….you do have evidence that Coworker is. It’s not out of the question that Coworker committed credit card fraud, because she was already committing theft. I mean, honestly, if you’re on camera ganking someone’s jacket, that’s damning as hell, and it really cuts your credibility down to a stub.

    But that stub of credibility is still there, and OP definitely has more experience with the coworker than the intern. Not that respectable, churchgoing people are immune from the temptation to commit crimes, but. I think all you can go for is “I have some serious doubts about the situation and I need to get them off my chest,” but don’t throw intern under the bus when all evidence points to her being the victim, not the aggressor.

  6. Katie the Fed*

    Let the police handle it. As far as the intern – I’d just keep an eye on her for signs of dishonesty, but I don’t think you have a strong reason to suspect intern malfeasance here. The coworker was stupid enough to compliment the jacket repeatedly and then steal it in front of cameras, so she might have been stupid enough to order stuff to her own name.

    It’s really exceptionally rotten to steal from a low- or un- paid intern, too.

      1. Annonymouse*

        IF you’re a fan of stupid criminal shenanigans you’ll love:
        https://m.facebook.com/funlegaltips/#~!/funlegaltips/

        This guy posts free legal tips I’m assuming he’s lived through like:

        “Do not wear crotchless blue jeans to your public indecency hearing. Yes. This happened.”

        “Do not post pictures or comments to any social media about your crimes.”

        “If things are going south in your trial and you fake a heart attack, show restraint. Do not do the Sanford “I’m coming, Elizabeth!” Style theatrical one.”

    1. ChurchLady*

      “As far as the intern –I’d just keep an eye on her for signs of dishonesty” What?

      Why? No, really – why?

      I just re-read the whole letter again. There is not one fact in OP’s letter pointing to any dishonesty, ever, on the part of the intern. Not one. Zero. OP’s (delusional) animus against the intern is clear. OP’s bias for the “good” co-worker is clear. Nothing points to the intern needing watching in any way. Co-worker is a known thief, caught on camera.

      Victim-blaming.

  7. Snarkus Aurelius*

    “Our office is opened without assigned seating so although IT could say which computer was used to place the orders there is no way of knowing who did the ordering.”

    It’s 2017. Your office doesn’t have individual login credentials for each employee? Anyone can sit at a computer and do whatever he wants?

    If you want to take action on anything here, it would be this.

    1. Kathleen Adams*

      Excellent point. It should definitely be possible to tell who was logged on to that computer, and if it isn’t…you have yourself some potential for much bigger and more long-lasting problems.

    2. Junior Dev*

      Seconding this. There are much more destructive things one can do with an office computer than place some fraudulent Amazon orders.

    3. Fiennes*

      It’s possible that some activities would require specific login but a simple web visit would not — making the Amazon ordering possible for anyone.

        1. queenbeemimi*

          My workplace has a general windows login we can all use when in un-assigned locations (because of the nature of our work, we have both personal machines and floating workstations). So it seems feasible to me, and it’s not out of the norm for the field I’m in.

    4. nonymous*

      yeah, how do they check email? is it all web based? if so, then how do they keep people from lazy-saving passwords?

      1. SignalLost*

        Actually, in all seriousness, can IT find out whose account credentials were used to log in to amazon itself? I don’t do network admin, and the request may be entirely cloaked from the admin, but this cannot have been the intern setting up an elaborate revenge campaign, creating a new amazon login, ordering a zillion packages for delivery to an order point you would have to know the address of, and then cackling maniacally while she destroyed the staffer’s life, all in five minutes.

        1. Akcipitrokulo*

          Possibly not, but would be able to tell who was logged into the PC at the time. So *IF* the coat-stealer had logged on *AND* left their PC unlocked *AND* the intern was passing and realised they could frame them…

        2. Daffodil*

          Network admin here. No, probably not. I could maaaaaybe retrieve that info, if the person placing the orders were careless about it. But given that they can’t pin down who was logged into the computer when the order was placed (which is really bad!), I doubt their IT is going to be up to the task.

          I’d also really expect that the order-placer created a new Amazon account to place the orders. If they didn’t – if they used a pre-existing account – the police should be able to get that info. Unless there’s a reason to believe the intern would have the coworker’s personal Amazon login info, that would be pretty conclusive evidence to me. In fact I wonder if the thing about the ‘orders being placed in the coworker’s name’ means that she did use her own account, and the LW is going to an extra level of denial (or technical misunderstanding) here. It sounds like everyone involved is not very tech savvy.

          1. SignalLost*

            I was going to say “good to know!” as an acknowledgement that I had read your comment and appreciated the info, and then I thought “…maybe not the best approach on a thread about someone somewhere having committed a crime with an unsecured computer.” :)

            1. Daffodil*

              Hah! Part of doing security is that you have to see opportunities to do harm before you can fix them. I’m not a real computer security tech – I’m a Jane of all trades, but of necessity that involves a fair amount of security. I’ve made coworkers do a double take a few times when I point out XYZ problem and that it leaves an opportunity for ABC crime. Part of my job is having access to all the info in the company, so I have to be above reproach, and people sometimes mistake that for never having an evil thought. It’s fun.

              But as I said below, if you want to commit a crime with a computer, either a) be using top-notch encryption and know enough to be sure you’re using it correctly, or b) assume that a sufficiently funded criminal investigation can get it. The more I learn, the more certain I get that cyber crime is just a bad idea.

              1. Candi*

                Hah! You sound like Jamie (Hello Kitty avatar). She’s head of her company’s IT department, and it’s amazing how people don’t think, and she has to deal with it. (There’s a blog post around here somewhere where Alison interviewed her about the IT keys to the kingdom and What To Do if only one person has those keys. Which is silly but happens.)

                If she’s reading, she’s probably twitching in the corner over this company’s IT setup. :p

                One thing I’ve noticed with computer internet security; the workable ideas don’t seem to be keeping the bad guys out -almost impossible if there’s any kind of connection- but to make it such a pain in the derriere the crooks don’t want to bother with the time and effort.

                1. sstabeler*

                  It’s not even quite that- AFAIK, for MOST security purposes, it’s basically the same principle as the old saying about being chased by a tiger (I think it was). “I don’t need to outrun a tiger. I just need to outrun the other people trying to outrun a tiger”- for most security headaches, you are up against opportunists who are looking for vulnerabilities across a wide range of IP addresses, not someone who is planning an attack on you specifically. If it’s sufficiently hard enough, they will look for easier targets.

          2. Just Another Techie*

            I think we can assume the police have that info already, since they know the address the packages were shipped to! The only way they’d know that is if they got that information from Amazon in the course of their investigation, since no matter who is lying or whose account was used to place the orders, I can think of no scenario where anyone involved would be both able and willing to give the police the ship-to address.

            1. Sunflower*

              I wonder if the police know more than they are telling on the office? Especially if it’s an open investigation. If the police have reason to believe it was the staff member, maybe its because THEY KNOW it was the staff member.

              1. Turtle Candle*

                Yep. I’d assume that the police very likely know quite a bit more than the office does, because there’s no reason they’d keep the office posted on this (and plenty of reason they wouldn’t!).

            2. Daffodil*

              Oh yes, definitely. I’d have a hard time retrieving that information, but I wouldn’t bet against a digital forensics specialist, and the police would be remiss in their duties if they didn’t get that info from Amazon. I suspect the LW is being selective about the evidence here.

              The moral of the story is that if there’s anything digital involved, you need to either a) be using top-notch encryption and know enough to be sure you’re using it correctly, or b) assume that a sufficiently funded criminal investigation can get it.

              1. Kyrielle*

                Or the LW, not working for the police, may not be privy to all the details. All too often, someone on the outside of an action (legal or otherwise) sees only part of what’s going on – by design. OP may be assuming they have firmer knowledge of the details than they do.

        3. Cassandra*

          Cybersecurity newbie here… my best-guess answer is mmmmmmmmmmmaybe and that’s IF they got a memory dump (not a disk image, a memory dump) after the orders were placed BUT before the computer was shut down.

          Which, given the security in evidence (I agree with the WTFs on the no individualized logins), does not seem terribly likely.

        4. Anon for Work Purposes*

          No, but as someone who used to work in security monitoring for a major online retailer. I can tell you that it is not out of the realm of possibility to reach out to Amazon directly and find out exactly when and how the suspicious transactions took place from their end. Did it happen before or after the jacket thief was identified? What types of items were purchased? Other questions I’m not allowed to talk about…

          Unfortunately, It’s too late now to setup computer credentials that could have solved this mystery on the OP’s end. But maybe you can avoid situations like this in the future.

    5. Akcipitrokulo*

      Yeah – working in IT here… unless all the PCs are completely unprotected or there is one login for everyone (which is making me do all kinds of NOOOOO….) … you can tell who was logged into a certain PC at a certain time.

        1. Someone else*

          Fourthed. The only way this story might make sense is if there’s a bit left out where supposedly they know who was logged into the computer, and it was intern, and Intern is saying thief went to desk intern was using, which was still logged in as intern and not locked, took jacket, found cc, placed orders at said desk, then left with jacket. If that is the story i could see how the op maybe got the idea the orders might not have been the their. But shared workstations should so not at all mean shared logins, so if IT really has no way of knowing who was using the computer at the time of the orders, their internal IT policies suck.

      1. Daffodil*

        You can tell who’s logged in, but if your procedures around passwords are sloppy it may not do you much good. Ways I have seen password security be foiled:

        – Person writes their password down.
        – People know coworkers’ passwords because they occasionally log in as each other to retrieve information in a pinch.
        – Manager keeps a list of all their employees’ passwords. (Came down on that one like a ton of bricks.)
        – IT person keeps a list of employees’ passwords. (In hind sight I should have gotten the guy fired for it, but he was my boss and that was my first IT job.)
        – There’s no auto-lock for idle computers, or it kicks in after an excessively long time.
        – Everyone gets set up with the same default password, and they’re not forced to change it.

        The most practical fix for all of these is making people change passwords frequently. Every three months is the recommended time, but people absolutely hate this, and sometimes it results in more passwords getting written down, not less. Even then you can’t entirely rule out a scenario where someone accidentally walks away with their computer unlocked and someone else sits down as soon as they’re gone. It’s not a solved problem.

        1. Geoffrey B*

          At my old work, the Big Boss kept a spreadsheet of everybody’s passwords. In an unsecured folder on the network drive. I even remember the filename: “BRIEN’S MASTER PASSWORD FILE KEEP OUT YOU BASTARDS.xls”.

            1. Geoffrey B*

              To be fair, he did have a password lock on the spreadsheet, but this was back in the days when password-protection didn’t mean encrypting the contents, so it would’ve been trivial to bypass. And I’d be *astonished* if he’d used a strong password.

              One of many reasons I’m glad not to be working for that guy.

              (I dealt with this by giving him my password as requested, and then forgetting to let him know when I updated it a month later.)

        2. a different Vicki*

          Making people change their passwords frequently doesn’t fix most of these: the boss or IT person who keeps a list would just demand to know the new passwords, and if there’s no auto-lock a password won’t help. And as you note, the more often I have to change my password, and the more rules it has to live up to, the more likely I am to write it down. At this point, I have a few of my important passwords memorized, and a few others are low-enough-security that I reuse them (e.g. library card PINs), but if I need a mix of random symbols, capitalization, and numbers, to be changed monthly, of course I’m going to write it down someplace I can find at work. So, either on or in my desk, or in my wallet, because that’s the only thing I’m sure I’ll take to work every day.

          Yes, starting people with different passwords rather than something like “your password is ‘newuser'” would help, yes, as would auto-locking computers.

          1. SpecialK9*

            Oh my gosh, Vicki, please don’t do that! That has me really worried for you. A secure way to keep your passwords is to pay for an app on your phone, like Last Pass, and keep them there. Then you only remember the password to get into the app. It’ll generate passwords using the criteria you set.

            1. a different Vicki*

              Yes, that is secure: *if* I can count on remembering that one password, and can count on the security of that app. I guess it’s a question of who you trust: backdoors and security holes turn up in all sorts of places, and what are the chances that criminals also find one of the zero-day exploits than the NSA is hoarding instead of reporting? (Answer, I don’t know, and nobody else does either.) For the moment, I’ll trust Bruce Schneier, who said either write down individual good passwords, or use a password manager.

              What I’m not going to do is put a lot of mental effort into following an unreasonable policy (the change-it-monthly part: the person who promulgated that has said that he was wrong, and never had evidence in favor of it) for something that protects them more than me.

              This is moot right now, since I’m freelancing and not using that sort of company system right now: but when your boss explicitly tells you that you have to leave your password taped to the underside of your keyboard in an open-plan office, the only password guideline that still makes sense is not to use that password for anything else.

    6. Hey Karma, Over here.*

      This. I can use any computer as well, but I’m logged in as myself. So, what? Computers are just open to anyone? The dang library makes you log in. I don’t get this.
      I do wonder if there is more to it, but the company wants the employees to get over this, so they are saying they’ve done all they can, move on.

    7. Daffodil*

      IT person here. It’s possible that everyone does have individual logons, but either there’s a default password when accounts are set up and most people just keep their defaults, making it easily guessable, or the computers don’t lock themselves after a short period of inactivity. Either could lead to not really being able to know who is at the keyboard. It’s much more common than you’d think, sadly.

      I suspect one of two scenarios: Either the IT is pretty terrible and really can’t venture a reliable guess about who was at the computer, or they’ve said something to the police along the lines of “The coworker’s account was logged in, and this is how we secure our accounts so it’s unlikely that anyone else was using it. But obviously our skills don’t extend to proving whose fingers were on the keyboard.” If the LW really wants to believe her friend, that can easily turn into “Well there’s no way of knowing for sure.”

      1. LA*

        And given that it’s an intern, it’s very possible that all the interns have a default login that non-interns would know.

      2. oranges & lemons*

        My office’s IT guy made me change my computer’s password because it wasn’t easy enough to guess and he couldn’t get in when he came in on a weekend.

        1. Kyrielle*

          *twitch*

          *twitch twitch*

          And I thought it was bad when IT at a previous job demanded I give them my password so they could set up a new laptop for me. (It was, but. Not as ridiculous as requiring passwords to be guessable for…some random access you presumably didn’t know about?)

          1. oranges & lemons*

            For bonus points–the main reason I set up that password was because a colleague was known for going through people’s personal email for blackmail material.

        2. Daffodil*

          … What. The correct protocol in that case, if he absolutely has to be logged in as you, is for him to reset your password to something temporary, and then inform you of the temporary password and make you reset it again when you get back in the office. Which is annoying as heck, which is why you work hard to avoid that scenario.

        3. Mallory Janis Ian*

          Wow. My office’s IT guy stopped me dead in my tracks when I (a long time ago before I knew better) tried to tell him my password so he could log in and fix my computer. IT people aren’t supposed to want to know your password!

          1. Observer*

            I keep on getting asked why I don’t know people’s passwords. Folks, I DO NOT WANT TO KNOW.

            I tell them that the auditors would kill us if I had the passwords. Which is true.

      3. Hey Karma, Over here.*

        Thanks for that. It really clears up my question of “what do you mean you don’t know?!?” That’s plausible and as someone who doesn’t always lock the computer when I step away for “just a minute” I get it.

        1. Akcipitrokulo*

          At old place, that would be a severe talking to first place followed up with disciplinary – we were dealing with medical records though.

          New place, you’ll probably come back to discover that you’ve emailed the whole company promising to bring in cake tomorrow….

      4. The_artist_formerly_known_as_Anon-2*

        I’ve been working with computer / data security for over 30 years. I’ve seen “experts” blunder through answers.

        First of all, NO ONE has any business knowing your passwords for access. Not your subordinates, not your boss, not your co-workers.

        An effective system for security –

        1) One user = one ID = one password.

        2) New users have 10 minutes to change their passwords. You log in, and are immediately advised “change it NOW”

        3) NO LISTS. No one, including the boss, has a list of passwords. Actually, a good security system encrypts passwords, and even the security people can’t get to them.

        4) You have TWO individuals with administrative authority. Not one. That way, if one of the parties with admin authority leaves, or is terminated, the other can suspend the departee’s ID and create a second admin. That way, there’s no need to ask for passwords from a departing employee. And you still have accountability.

        I once had to research an incident of data being sabotaged; there was a suspect, BUT – eight other people in that facility shared the same ID/password. I had NO way of telling whose hands were on that keyboard.

        The boss asked me “was it (so and so)” — I said “you might think that. And you might surmise, one of the bosses did it, to make the (so and so) look bad. So, I can’t attest to whose hands were on the keyboard. So, that’s my answer = ‘I don’t know.'”

        And when I see people in here, in a quandary over “the departing employee won’t give me the password” – yeah, they shouldn’t have to, if you set up your security correctly and professionally.

    8. LKW*

      It would have been just as easy to send the cc information to someone else via photo or text or use a smart phone. Let the police figure out the account/shipping information. That should be damning enough.

    9. Portia*

      I’m sure this is a big IT and security risk…but in my experience it’s not uncommon. I’ve worked at several places that had a default login and password for all the computers that were in a common area, so if something like this had happened, there would have been no way of tracing who it was (or at least, no easy way). And yes, people accidentally left themselves logged in to gmail and amazon and so forth all the time.

  8. Barbara in Swampeast*

    OP, while no one can say for sure who used a computer in your office, I bet the police have found out who picked up the packages.

    I’m sorry your friend is not who you thought she was, but I hope you take some time to think about how easy it has been for you to ignore the admitted theft and blame the intern.

    1. neverjaunty*

      This. It’s appalling (if all too unsurprising) that the OP is blaming the victim of her friend’s actions.

    2. Steve*

      When I was in college (to date myself, this happened almost 20 years ago) I used a credit card on a campus computer and the number was stolen. The thief used my name and credit card number to order several hundreds of dollars of porn videos, shipped to a Mail Boxes Etc a few blocks from campus. I of course disputed the transaction with my credit card company. The merchant called me and yelled that I must be lying because the items were shipped in my name and the thief had picked them up, which would have required an ID. Well, I assure you that I neither ordered nor picked up the items. Therefore either the thief managed to get the items without an ID, or they created a fake ID for the purpose. Either way, the requirement for an ID to pick up, is not as strong as you might think.

      1. many bells down*

        Amazon has “lockers” now, too. You get a code with your order, and when it arrives you just go down to the bank of lockers, enter the code on the computer screen, and one of the doors pops open and tada! there’s your stuff. I’ve used them a few times for returns as well. No ID needed, since it’s all automated and presumably only the person who made the order would know the code.

  9. Cambridge Comma*

    The coworker didn’t realise thet she would be picked up on the videotape, so maybe she equally didn’t realise that the Amazon order details would be visible?

      1. Manders*

        Yes, I’m pretty sure the identification points require you to provide your ID to get your package. You can’t just waltz in and demand an Amazon box with no way of proving who you are.

        1. Snark*

          An Amazon Locker just provides you with a PIN in your confirmation email. You punch in the PIN and the locker pops open. You don’t interact with anybody.

          1. Manders*

            Amazon pickup points aren’t the same thing as Amazon lockers, though. I think this may be confusing to people because there are a lot of different ways to get an Amazon package delivered to a place that will hold it for you that someone might refer to to as a pickup point, but there’s also a specific thing the company uses called a “PickupPoint” that requires an ID.

        2. Deep Thoughts*

          You can have packages sent to an amazon locker, which is a freestanding box outside a store. They email a code to you, which you can use to open the locker and get your order.

          1. sunny-dee*

            I wondered if it was a PIN or if you had to show an ID, but the other thing was access to that email. She may have used her own account because, well, she didn’t know how to set up a different account and have access to the email.

        3. Wannabe Disney Princess*

          It depends. I use an Amazon locker ALL THE TIME. The pickup code is sent to the phone and email associated with the account. Nobody checks it’s actually me picking it up. But, conversely, nobody knows it isn’t me picking it up either. I could put anybody’s name on there.

          1. Hey Karma, Over here.*

            I did not know about this feature. This explains everything. Thinking that sending it to a box makes it anonymous in some way. Combined with the sheer brazen ego of someone who would walk off with a coat…employee figured nobody could tell, it’s just a number.

          2. Anna*

            I’d bet there are cameras or something either on the locker or in the stores/buildings where the lockers are. So, it’s not totally unreasonable to imagine they could find out if they needed.

              1. Falling Diphthong*

                That’s a good point. The lawyer has told coworker that “how could anyone know who placed the order or picked it up” was not going to fly at all as a defense. And OP is getting the coworker’s version, without the lawyer’s ‘why this won’t hold up’ annotations.

                1. Rainy, not-PI*

                  I would be very surprised if Coworker hasn’t been stealing stuff from people in the office for quite some time and no one connected the dots–the outrageously brazen nature of the crime *and* the patently ridiculous defense seem to me like someone who is used to petty thievery *and* having a hard time with the idea that they’ve been caught out.

                  I wonder how many other interns had stuff go missing and just gave it up as a bad job after being told that Coworker would *never* steal because she *goes to church*.

                2. Steve*

                  Actually we don’t know what the lawyer told the cow-orker. All we know is what the ‘orker told the OP. Given that the ‘orker is a known thief and liar, I would take whatever she says with a grain of salt.

                  I am not a lawyer, but “you can’t prove who took those items” actually is a perfectly good defense. Innocent until proven guilty and all. So, I’m suspecting the evidence against the ‘orker is actually stronger than she is letting on.

            1. Kate LJ*

              Amazon Lockers do have cameras on them, just like ATMs. The locker in my building does, anyway, so I assume they all do. Still, anyone with the code could pick up the package, just like anyone with your PIN can use your card at an ATM.

  10. Judy (since 2010)*

    Do you not all log into the computers with unique accounts?

    If someone deletes the TPS database could your IT tell who did it?

    If someone downloads all of your proprietary documents, could your IT tell who did it?

    To me, it sounds like there’s some information security work to be done.

    1. Countess Boochie Flagrante*

      Good lord, this.

      I have a bias I’ve mentioned before in favor of heavy IT security (I work in finance) but oh man, I’m having palpitations thinking about how bananas this is for any company in this day and age.

      1. SignalLost*

        I currently work in order fulfillment for *ahem* a company named in this post. We are the lowest of the low and we do nothing that involves using a computer in a free-range kind of way (at my level we log into a web app that I’m sure most people don’t realize is a web app). We still have better security than this.

        1. Hey Karma, Over here.*

          No joke. As I noted elsewhere, because I’m so freaked out about this “free range” idea, the local library has better security for public workstations.

          1. Kyrielle*

            The local library probably has less trust in the least-trustworthy of their patrons, than most companies do in the least-trustworthy of their employees.

            Although, as this letter shows, that trust may be wildly misplaced.

        2. Daffodil*

          TBH, most work environments with low-paid workers have waaaaaaay better security than office environments, because they just treat their employees with suspicion from the get-go. I’m guessing that the office environment in this story is a) not in a high-security field, b) an older average age group with long-term employees, and c) I’d give it even money that it’s a non-profit. “Everyone” who works there is trustworthy, and they’re not dealing with highly valuable info anyway, so who needs security?

          As a network tech, fighting this attitude is the most unpopular thing I have to do. People like to use the same password for years on end (heaven knows I’ll do it too with my personal stuff!) and get really unhappy when you force them to change it.

          1. Observer*

            Not necessarily. Nonprofits with networks generally do have individual log ins. If they don’t have a network, just a shared internet access, then possibly not. And, of course, there is always the issue of someone leaving their credentials lying around.

        1. Hey Karma, Over here.*

          Yes, this. Oh, wait you mean obstructing the police? I thought you meant in terms of their own staff. They don’t have to tell every employee what they are doing to assist the police. Instead of telling everyone they are doing what they can, IT made a statement that they can’t do anything, in some weird idea that this will make people finish talking about it.

  11. Leatherwings*

    I find it kind of incredible to believe that, after realizing her jacket and wallet were gone, the intern’s first thought would be to go online and order a bunch of crap from Amazon to frame the person who stole it. That seems… implausible given the rest of the setup.

      1. Matilda Jefferies*

        And my credit card company. It’s not clear whether or not the intern actually did that, but if she did, the police can certainly establish the time of the Amazon purchases, relative to the time of the theft. (Also, echoing the other responses that the company needs to establish unique login credentials immediately if not sooner. Yikes.)

        OP, I’m with the others in suggesting you check your assumptions here. From an outside perspective, based on what you’ve written in your letter, the intern seems to have more credibility in this situation than the staff member does.

      2. Steve*

        My first thought would be “where did I misplace my jacket?” Like the OP, it simply wouldn’t occur to me that a coworker was actually a brazen thief.

        1. many bells down*

          Once I knew my jacket had been stolen. AND I spotted someone walking down the street wearing it – it was customized, and I’d repaired a tear in the hem rather poorly, so it was very obviously my missing jacket.

          I still didn’t get it back. She denied taking it and walked off and what was I going to do? Wrestle her? This was before cell phones so I’d have lost her entirely if I’d gone to call the cops.

          1. ggg*

            My cousin had a whole load of laundry stolen from a dorm dryer, and the next day, saw a girl wearing her shirt that said something like “Third Place, Smalltown Tennis Tournament.”

            She got her clothes back.

            1. ChurchLady*

              The only thing that would make this (sad – who steals someones clothes!?) better is if your cousin’s name was emblazoned on the back of the t-shirt!

              1. The_artist_formerly_known_as_Anon-2*

                There was a “whiz kid” who held up a bank in a neighboring town.

                Wearing his high-school hockey jacket.

                There was a show on TV some years back – “America’s Dumbest Criminals”. Having spent two summers working as a civilian for a police department, I can assure you that the producers of that show had absolutely no shortage of material at their disposal.

    1. apostrophina*

      I mean, I believe it *might* happen *somewhere*— it’s a big old world, and I’ve certainly overheard enough outlandish conversations to know that a surprising number of people really do think/behave like people on talk shows—but there’s no way it would be my #1 theory.

    2. my two cents*

      Well, and how would the intern have had access to the coworker’s home address?
      I know where my coworkers live, in general…but not beyond their subdivision/neighborhood, and certainly not house numbers or zip codes.

      1. Princess Consuela Banana Hammock*

        It sounds like the items were shipped to a location near work (probably a locker?), not to the coworker’s home.

        That said, I still think the likelihood that the coworker committed credit card theft is higher than the likelihood that the intern staged an elaborate con to compound the coworker’s legal liability.

        1. my two cents*

          Oh yeah, forgot entirely about the pick up point option.

          I’m still pretty set on the coworker having placed the order(s).
          Cops will quickly figure out when the order was placed, and they should be able to track the IP for the computer/phone used. Either coworker or intern placed the order from their house (the cell tower location for data, or their home wi-fi/internet will be discovered), or they used a work computer (track IP addy) or their cell phone during work hours (work wi-fi?) and can check cam footage.

          1. JM60*

            In addition to IP address, they should be able to easily subpoena Amazon to get information about which account ordered the items, such as how old or is (was it created after the theft or around that time?), whether it had previous credit cards associated with it (such as one of the co-worker’s cards), etc.

            1. JM60*

              But if law enforcement come up empty for some reason, or don’t pursue it due to lack of time/resources (which is why some crimes go unpunished), all benefit of the doubt should go to the intern over the coworker, because you know that the coworker did commit at least one workplace crime.

      2. LCL*

        In this work group, we have a list posted in the office only of names and addresses. I know it’s not the modern way to do things, but we’ve been doing it this way since dirt was new.

    3. Kathleen Adams*

      That is such a weird (and unlikely) form of revenge.

      Of course I don’t know either of these people and the OP does. But just on the face of it, if I had to decide which was more credible between (1) person who steals a jacket also tries to misuse a credit card she found in that jacket and (2) person finds out their jacket has been stolen and decides to get revenge by planting fake evidence that the jacket-stealer also stole her credit card…well, let’s just say that (1) is by far the more likely.

      At the very least, the OP has some excellent evidence that the staff member is dishonest. Her evidence about the intern isn’t nearly as strong, and in fact rests on the basis of someone who has already admitted to theft. I’m sorry, OP – it’s difficult to find out that someone you know and like isn’t who you thought she was.

      1. Snark*

        It’s possible. I just agree that it’s unlikely. If I got something stolen by a coworker, I’d basically just try to get them fired, not stage an elaborate ruse framing them. It’s just a little baroque for how people actually think.

    4. Amy*

      It would take me a bit to realize it was even stolen. I would just be assuming I left it some where around the office or at home before I went to someone stole my stuff. I’m always leaving my sweater in the conference room that’s way warmer than the rest of the office.

    5. Akcipitrokulo*

      So… the intern has memorised her 16-digit credit card number? ‘Cos otherwise how did she enter it when the card was in her missing jacket?

        1. Em*

          Memorizing the number doesn’t seem odd to me. I do all my bank and credit card stuff online and some online shopping, so I have memorized the numbers for 7 or 8 bank and credit cards. If I’ve been doing a lot of online ordering, I end up memorizing the expiry dates and security codes of the cards I use the most.

          1. Em Too*

            Me too! Only of one card, but yes. Otherwise I’d have to get out my chair to order things. But if my cards were missing, I’d be looking for them, not ordering stuff in other people’s names online.

            1. Mallory Janis Ian*

              I have all my credit card, debit card, and library card numbers, expiration dates, and security codes stored in my head. Once I’ve entered a number multiple times, it just sticks (plus I don’t want to get up and dig around for my wallet). I still have the number for a card I haven’t used for years stuck in my head. Plus all my immediate family members’ social security numbers and the DOB/SSN, etc. for an old boss who relied on my assistance more than any other boss ever has.

              1. Emm*

                I have the number for a bank account I closed a decade ago still stuck in my head, thanks to the number of times I had to input it into telephone banking when I was a teenager.

        2. Falling Diphthong*

          I still remember the point when I realized that my young teenager had memorized my credit card number, expiration, and security code, and so didn’t need the actual physical card to order things online anymore.

          So it’s quite doable.

          1. Elizabeth West*

            I have mine memorized. Which has come in handy when I’ve forgotten it. But even if the intern does have it memorized, I still doubt very highly that she and not the coworker ordered the items.

        3. The Cosmic Avenger*

          Yes, I have all of those memorized, plus I have them stored in LastPass. (Breaches happen, but I probably put myself more at risk with every purchase than I do by keeping that information there.)

        4. A.*

          I not only have my current and previous CC number, expiry date, and security code memorized, I also have my current and previous library card numbers memorized.

        5. Fiennes*

          I have all my data for all my cards & accounts memorized. Well, maybe not my investment account – but I know my credit cards/checking/saving by heart. I didn’t realize this wasn’t ordinary procedure.

        6. Annonymouse*

          It’s not that hard.

          Before going on maternity leave I had both my bosses and my own cards, expiries and dates included, completely memorised.

          I did all then office purchasing and they’re both often in meetings or out of the office so it was the easier solution.

      1. hayling*

        I do think that the intern is innocent, but I’ll provide the counterpoint that I have my debit card number, including expiry and CVV, memorized.

        1. Antilles*

          I do as well. If you have one or two main cards that you use for everything, it’s pretty easy to memorize it over the course of a year or so.

        2. CMart*

          I was going to comment myself asking if this was all that unusual. I’ve had my main accounts of various sorts (debit and credit cards, checking account and routing number) memorized since I was old enough to have something like that.

      2. Commenter*

        I have the credit card number of my main credit card memorized, along with the CVV code and expiration date. The number hasn’t changed in 20 years since I first got it, I use it on a bunch of sites, and I’m good at memorizing numbers. So that part isn’t that outlandish to me. That doesn’t mean I think the intern did this, just that it’s possible.

      3. JulieBulie*

        1. She could have lied about her wallet being stolen, and had the cards on her all along.
        2. It’s not that unusual to memorize a credit card number, especially if you order a lot of stuff. (I order from Domino’s frequently and don’t let them store my credit card number, so I have to enter it every time. I’ve “memorized” it effortlessly.)
        3. Even if I don’t think it’s weird that the intern might remember her credit card number, I still think it’s far more likely that the coworker did the crime.

        1. irritable vowel*

          I mean, either the wallet was in the jacket or it wasn’t. What happened after the video footage was reviewed – did the coworker, once she admitted to taking it, bring the jacket back, and if so, was the intern’s wallet in it? That’s something that would have been included in the police report regarding the stolen property. I’m guessing that since the coworker has been charged with the credit card fraud, the wallet was in fact in the intern’s jacket.

          1. Just Another Techie*

            And I imagine that none of these details were shared with the office in general because that’s not how police investigations work. Whatever the police found in the jacket or have learned about the Amazon orders, OP and likely her boss too, will never know. All they’ll ever get to know is that the police found sufficient evidence to press charges, and the defense attorney is advising a plea bargain.

          2. Mike B.*

            Why would the coworker have left the wallet in the jacket when she returned it? “I don’t know anything about the credit cards” is a tough claim to make when you admit you were in possession of the cards at the time they were used; she seems to be gambling that they can’t prove the wallet was there to begin with.

      4. Anna*

        Well, you can save payment methods on your Amazon account so if this implausible course of actions were to happen, it’s not the credit card number that would have stopped her.

        1. Detective Amy Santiago*

          Yes, but if you ship to an address that you’ve never shipped to before, they require you to re-enter the card information.

      5. LBK*

        Amazon saves your payment info, so that part doesn’t seem particularly implausible (and I personally do have my credit card memorized – I buy way too much stuff online to have to check it every time).

        1. A Rose By Any Other Name*

          Yeah, but I’ve been asked to confirm my credit card information if I’m shipping to anywhere that’s not in my address book, such as anything other than my home address.

      6. LKW*

        I’ve got mine memorized. You never know when you’re going to need that information and while I try not to say those numbers out loud in public, it’s a wee bit more secure if I’m not simultaneously on the phone looking at my card. That’s just an invitation for eavesdropping.

      7. SignalLost*

        Eh. You can store info in Amazon anyway, so if the intern did it, she probably just selected one of the stored cards. But that said, I have managed to memorize all three of my credit cards and one of my library account numbers (which is even longer) because I have a magical memory for random strings of digits and typing them in helps me to remember them. (And the CCV on my primary card is something like 369 which is memorable in itself because of the pattern.)

        1. sap*

          When shipping to a new address (even an old address with a new name–which I discovered after changing my maiden name) Amazon requires full re-entry of a credit card number, so storage wouldn’t really help Intern here unless I misunderstand the story and Intern was accusing coworker of shipping things in Intern’s name.

      8. Bagpuss*

        I don’t find the idea of memorising the number odd. I know one of mine (including expiry dates and cvv number). The other I haven’t quite got because my card got skimmed so I have a new number.

        That said, I don’t think that there is any evidence to suggest that the intern has done anything wrong at all.

        Has the thief been sacked?

      9. Tuxedo Cat*

        I don’t think the intern faked it, but I have my credit card number, CCV, and expiration date memorized. Not every single card I have but I do have one memorized.

    6. Jess*

      I thought the same! A coworker stealing from an intern (or anybody) at the office is so completely out of line that I would just assume it would result in the coworker’s immediate termination (if it was provable, which it was here), and thus there would be no need for any personal “revenge.” (Not advocating personal revenge in any case; just pointing out that even if you’re the type to consider personally avenging wrongdoing it wouldn’t even be necessary here!)

      1. Whyblue*

        This! Why would the intern bother? A theft caught on video should be enough to get the thief fired and in some legal trouble. Seriously, if I wanted revenge in that kind of situation, I would post the story and the thief’s picture or even the video on social media for all the world (and church members) to see. Why go through all the trouble of framing her for a second crime? Is the result really going to be that different? Whereas the thief has all the more reason to deny the part of the crime that cannot be proven beyond a doubt, even if only to save a little bit of face.

    7. BethRA*

      Don’t get me wrong, I see no reason to believe ex-coworker’s story, but is that any more or less incredible than stealing a credit card and using it to order a bunch of stuff in your own name?

      OP, I know it’s hard to let go of what you thought you knew about Ex-Coworker, but please don’t victimize this intern again by punishing her for what’s happening to your former co-worker.

      1. Falling Diphthong*

        I mean, coworker didn’t have the sense to silently covet the jacket and then steal it, but admired it in front of witnesses multiple times so she would be the lead suspect if it went missing at work. Nor to realize that there were multiple security cameras recording her. So I’m not sure any subsequent crimes have a high bar to clear.

        1. SignalLost*

          In general, I’m just so disappointed that so many people commit dumb crimes because they haven’t thought things through. I mean, I’m sure the police disagree with me on that, but my God, the failure of our education system is so evident in the lack of logical thought in something like this!

          1. Chinook*

            “I’m just so disappointed that so many people commit dumb crimes because they haven’t thought things through”

            I am on record, as an educator, for telling a few students, on separate occasions, who have playfully contemplated a life of crime or taking over the world that I am okay with it as long as they aren’t stupid about it. I don’t want them to be dumb, lazy criminals but, instead, to strive to be criminal masterminds who even those chasing them have to admire for the amount of intelligence and planning their crimes take. Don’t be a lazy criminal – be a smart one.

            Basically, if they were caught because they did something stupid or lacked planning, then I would be embarrassed to have ever taught them. But, if taught a future Moriarty, I would have to smile if I ever heard about their exploits.

            Strangely, once I pointed out the amount of work a successful life of crime would take, most teenagers figured it wasn’t worth the effort. The one who did has promised me a seat on his escape helicopter!

          2. Bagpuss*

            I’m not sure that I blame the education system. Logical thought needs a certain level of intelligence, as well as the ability to apply logic. I think you can teach people to think more logically, but I don’t think you can make them more intelligent.

            And I suppose that the thieves and other criminals who can do forward planning and logical thought are less likely to get caught!

            I used to work with criminals, and it’s true, most of them were distressingly inept. Not only people committing dumb crimes but people repeatedly committing the *same* dumb crimes and never working out that they are going to get caught *every* time.

          3. Misc*

            My mother had a phone stolen by someone at work recently (after a series of other thefts), looked up the call history online, called the last number… the person who stole it answered.

            Apparently they just picked it up, *got seen with it and made up a story about finding it lost in a random place and that they were taking it home to keep it safe*, left details with the person who saw them, went back and removed their info straight after that person left, then went home and gave it to a family member who promptly used it to ring their personal phone. So not only were they SEEN and had ample opportunity to back out, but they compounded it and then didn’t even have the sense to not use it for awhile or something. And my mother didn’t even have to use any of the tracking options.

            Yes, people are that stupid.

      2. oranges & lemons*

        What I really want to believe is that the intern is a mastermind who orchestrated the whole thing, including manipulating the co-worker into stealing her jacket in the first place. Even better if they were in it together, planning to swap jobs and identities.

    8. AMT*

      Also, the letter seems to have glossed over the fact that the employee STOLE THE INTERN’S WALLET along with the jacket. Even if she didn’t place the orders (which should be easy to trace to her or the intern’s Amazon account, right?), what exactly did she plan to do with the wallet after realizing it was in the jacket pocket?

        1. bookish*

          But it seems like it’s a fact that the wallet was IN the jacket, and the part that the employee is denying is just the USE of the credit card.

      1. Anna*

        The OP is working on the idea that the intern framed the employee for the Amazon orders to get back at the employee for stealing the intern’s jacket. I think this is a Sweet Valley High plot.

    9. TootsNYC*

      and remember that our intern would have to not use ANY of the plastic cards in her wallet. And she’d have to throw the wallet itself away (not something I’m doing–I took a long time to find a wallet in the shape I like).

      That’s a lot of trouble when the intern is already able to get revenge by being loud about the idea that a staffer stole a jacket from the lowest person on the totem pole.

      1. AMT*

        “remember that our intern would have to not use ANY of the plastic cards in her wallet”

        This point is important! Amazon asks you to verify your credit card number and expiration date anytime you ship to a new address. You can’t do that unless you have the physical card (or have memorized the number and expiration, but how many people do that?).

          1. Super Anon for This*

            Yeah, but a bunch of people, like myself and others on this thread, don’t. I’d say chances are 50/50 that intern is one of those people which makes coworker’s story even less likely.

  12. LawBee*

    “good person who goes to church” and as a full-time employee stole a personal item from an intern. wtf. People make mistakes, but come ON. OP is definitely letting her personal relationship/knowledge of the staff member color her view. Also, is staff member coming back to work? I hope not.

    “But lots of people commit incredibly stupid crimes”
    A guy tried to rob the first ATM that was ever installed in our town. (yes, back in the 1970s) How? He tried to hold it up with a gun, and when that didn’t work – shot it. Apparently he thought someone was inside the machine doling out the cash? I think he ended up on one of those “American’s Dumbest Criminals” video shows.

    1. K.*

      I just laughed so loudly I had to clap my hand over my mouth because my office door is open. The mental image of this is HILARIOUS.

    2. SarahKay*

      About 15 years ago, when I worked retail, there was a member of staff who processed about £250 ($400) worth of fake refunds on their last day (they were leaving for other jobs, not being fired). The big drop in profit from the area was noticed and checked, the fraudulent refunds identified, and the (now ex-)staff member was called. Their response was: “Ha, nothing you can do, I don’t work for [Store] any more!”
      I gather that person were very shocked indeed to discover that in fact we could (and did!) call the police and report them for theft.
      Never underestimate just how stupid people can be about their crime.

      1. Falling Diphthong*

        Never underestimate just how stupid people can be about their crime.

        I’m reminded of The Stainless Steel Rat, who got himself captured for bank robbery so he could learn from all the brilliant master criminals packing his prison block, and instead found himself surrounded by not terribly bright people who couldn’t come up with a smarter plan.

      2. Samata*

        Not as funny as yours, but a co-worker of mine, Jane, got a credit card stolen out of her wallet. Jane found out pretty quickly and reported it at lunch. Turns out it was another co-worker…who left work, drove to the cable company and PAID HER OWN BILL with the stolen credit card.

      3. many bells down*

        What’s that saying about “never attribute to malice what can be adequately explained by stupidity”? Sounds like that might be relevant to this letter. Attributing malicious revenge to the intern as opposed to just the thief being … not that clever.

      4. Anastasia Beaverhausen*

        Our star salesperson, beloved by all in the company, got nabbed for stealing the secretary’s credit card from her purse and going on a 2000 dollar shopping binge with it when she accidentally signed her own name to a large bar tab the same night. She was the highest paid person in the company and drove the car and had the wardrobe and the shoes and the hair to go with it. Her excuse was the cost of her daughter’s cheerleading camp had left her broke so she had no choice.

    3. Comeswithcats*

      I live in a very small town and our ATM (not plural, our only outdoor ATM) recently got vandalised. By people urinating on it. Yep. The individuals were caught on security camera and everyone knows who they are (again, small town). Even though they were caught on camera, some of them are still claiming it wasn’t them! Oh, and the individuals who committed the crime? A group of young women. Apparently one would hold the other one up so they could pee on the machine. Still not 100% sure how that works.

      1. Anastasia Beaverhausen*

        Well it took me 2x reading through to get a proper visual. I assume they were getting a boost to pee on the keypad portion that angles out? Now I know why ATMs are frequently going touchscreen and “seat-less.” jeez. You’re welcome for the visual. sorry!

  13. CatCat*

    “All that said … it would be awfully poor judgment to use your own name when ordering on someone else’s stolen credit card! It’s like robbing a house and leaving a signed note behind. If anything here makes me wonder about the intern’s version of events, it’s this..”

    This is totally believable to me. Most people who get caught for crimes are doing pretty stupid things easily traceable back to that person who did it. You just don’t see exciting news stories/TV shows/movies about this mundane stuff.

        1. Jerry Vandesic*

          I wonder what that job interview would sound like. “Tell me about how you navigated the transition from misdemeanor to felony.” “Tell me about your career plans. What do you expect to be stealing in five years?”

          1. AMT*

            I used to interview criminal defendants as a social worker. My inner monologue: “So you decided to rob someone in broad daylight…in a very distinctive outfit…with very distinctive facial scars…and then use the victim’s credit cards…and then deny to your lawyer that you were wearing that very distinctive outfit that day…when you were wearing that outfit at arraignment when he first met you (and photographed you in said outfit)?”

            1. Lison*

              I’ve a friend who works as a court stenographer and this one case was assault of a minor so the victim was giving evidence via video link so all they could see was the judge and the two lawyers and when asked how the victim knew it was the defendant who attacked them answered “well he has this really distinctive jacket” and described it whereupon all the courtroom looked at the defendant who was wearing that same jacket in court. The judge said to the defence “would you like to consult with your client?” Response was yes, quickly followed by a change of plea to guilty. There was no way the victim could have seen what the guy was wearing and it was a custom jacket so lesson learned is if guilty of a crime maybe wear a suit to court just to make sure you’re not wearing what you were when you committed the crime.

        2. The_artist_formerly_known_as_Anon-2*

          I always wondered what it would be like to have someone come in for an IS/IT interview, and his/her experience was writing sickware/malware/scumware, or browser Trojan/traps.

          That would be funny. The CV would use hokum for language, but if you read between the lines, you’d know.

      1. AnonEMoose*

        As a cop I knew once said “Most of these people ain’t exactly PhDs.” (Of course, I also know some PhDs who are a bit less than competent when it comes to practical stuff.)

      2. LKW*

        Well remember your sample set are people who got caught. It’s the ones you don’t catch that may very well be brilliant.

    1. LA*

      Not to mention, the coworker was stupid enough to mention several times how much she liked the jacket before she stole it. Even if they hadn’t had video to prove she’d taken it, when intern noticed it was missing, the coworker had already made herself a suspect.

      1. anon24*

        Yes that jumped out at me too. I’m no thief but if you had a jacket I loved enough to steal from you I wouldn’t ever let you know I liked it beforehand. The co-worker is not devious at all.

    2. Q*

      Yeah, I can totally see someone putting their name on it because it’s being mailed to them. After all, most people don’t really know how to commit crimes cleanly—they don’t commit crimes often!

      1. Chalupa Batman*

        Exactly. Someone who doesn’t make a habit of committing major crimes (and OP obviously thinks the co-worker falls into that category) is very likely to make a dumb mistake when they do. As someone notes upthread, there’s a fair chance that the co-worker has been committing “small” thefts with a heavy dose of plausible deniability (“oh, I didn’t realize that was your Llamas Inc coffee mug, I have one just like it!”), and this is one of the first times she tried something a little more complex. I hope she really is a decent person who’s had issues come to a head and can get some help now….and that OP and the other co-workers can treat the intern fairly regardless of what they think of her personally.

    3. queenbeemimi*

      I mean, the coworker stole a jacket she had *openly admired* *multiple times*. Everyone is going to remember that kind of detail when the jacket “goes missing.” That’s not the work of someone with impressive critical reasoning skills. Plus, apparently didn’t realize her own workplace had cameras and would be able to review the footage. It kind of adds up, to me.

      Not that it’s impossible for Intern to be pulling some Gone Girl shit, but… when you hear hoofbeats, think horses, you know?

      1. RabbitRabbit*

        Exactly. It doesn’t take Columbo to figure out who might be a reliable jacket theft suspect when someone has been openly fawning over it.

      2. Rainy, not-PI*

        Many years ago, I worked for a company doing data entry after a huge warehouse fire once. (No one was hurt, thankfully.)

        The disgruntled ex-employee who did the arson A) had told everyone he knew that the company deserved to be burned down, B) bought the kerosene with a personal check (this was a long time ago), and C) had worked in the warehouse for several years and *still* confessed out of fright when the cops told him that the warehouse cameras had caught him setting the fire. There were no cameras. There had never been cameras. People: mostly not rocket surgeons.

        1. Collarbone High*

          Working in newspapers, I’ve edited stories about some incredibly dumb crimes, including a guy who killed his wife with a Benadryl enema. Among his errors: googling “how to kill without leaving a mark” on his personal laptop; buying all the supplies in one trip to the local Walmart, with a credit card; and disposing of the empty boxes and receipt in his kitchen trash.

          (Tip for cashiers: if someone buys an enema kit, 50 boxes of Benadryl, rope and a tarp, you should probably call the police.)

      3. Blossom*

        Do you know what, though, it would not occur to me to think “Oh, my jacket’s missing, Jane’s said she liked it, I guess she probably stole it”. I mean… who does that?! Well, the OP’s co-worker, evidently…

        1. Anastasia Beaverhausen*

          I have a favorite jacket and I know where it is basically at all times. It’s either on my body, in my closet, or on the back of my chair at work. Should it to go missing at work, knowing there was video footage available, I would definitely ask to check the footage to see where it might have wandered off to.

    4. Marillenbaum*

      Like all the people who end up getting caught breaking in to someone’s house because they updated their Facebook and it geotagged them.

    5. Normally A Lurker*

      I had my card number stolen once. They made one purchase, and were caught… bc they signed up for eharmony under their real name.

      1. Akcipitrokulo*

        My daughter’s contactless card was stolen. they caught the guys on CCTV openly making purchases with it in several different shops… seriously? Yeah, people can be incompetent.

      2. Sunshine on a cloudy day*

        Someone stole my cc number as well. The one thing they used it for was a Christian Singles account/membership.

        I admit – the night before the charged showed up I had been out with friends, having a few drinks. Possibly one too many. I’ve definitely woken up with a purchase or two on my card that I’m fuzzy about making (usually some strange combo of food or random, cheap Amazon items). However, as a pretty firm agnostic, it was one of the few charges that I could say 100%, without a doubt that I did not make.

          1. Snark*

            Funny you say this, because we got into a bottle of Malbec last night and there’s a cookbook on the way I don’t remember ordering for the goddamned life of me.

            1. Snark*

              EDIT: just to clarify, I wasn’t blackout drunk and perusing Mexican recipes, I just have no recollection of actually hitting buy now and doing that thing.

              1. Rainy, not-PI*

                When I do this, I don’t investigate too hard into what I’m receiving. It’s like a spontaneous gift from drunk!Rainy.

      3. Mallory Janis Ian*

        I had my university purchasing card compromised once a few years ago when some online thieves hit upon a run of active credit card numbers from our university. They bought an online dating subscription; some sexy lingerie and clothing from a Fredericks-of-Hollywood-type online store; and some sporting equipment. The university purchasing office closed all the cards that were affected and issued new ones. I don’t know whether the thieves were ever caught or not; they never tell us that sort of thing.

        1. The_artist_formerly_known_as_Anon-2*

          I had an Omaha Steaks order on my credit card. There was something about Rahway, New Jersey and the only thing I know of in that town is a state prison.

    6. Valkyrie Ice Queen*

      I watched a Forensic Files once where the murdered got caught because after killing a woman, he jacked her cards, then bought some stuff down the street from where her car was, and SIGNED HIS OWN NAME ON THE CREDIT CARD RECEIPT.

      1. Samata*

        This is why I could never be a thief. When I go grocery shopping with partners card I have more than once switched names mid-signature becuase I am signing my own.

        I mean there are other reasons to not thieve, obviously, but this is pretty high up there on the list of things that would get me found out. Quickly.

      2. Bagpuss*

        I seem to recall a bank robbery few years ago where the robber brought a pre-written ‘hand over the money now’ note with him. He wrote it on the back of a letter he’d received which had his full name and address on

    7. Turtle Candle*

      Hah! Yeah, you don’t need to call in Jessica Fletcher for the person who stole your credentials and then made a bunch of easily-traceable purchases. Since the more challenging/difficult/dramatic crimes are more likely to make the news, we tend to, I think, overestimate the cleverness of most criminals.

    8. Jessica*

      Even the guy who perpetrated the Target breach was busted because his malware left a document behind with his email address on it–which he had also used on a forum for hackers, where his profile included his real name.

      1. Jessica*

        Although the reason he was able to get access in the first place is because a third-party vendor with Target clicked on a phishing email, which wasn’t caught because they only had the freeware version of Malwarebytes, instead of the paid version which would have been more up-to-date.

        And the breach STILL wasn’t caught because the $2M firewall on Target’s systems kept sending repeated emails to the security team over and over…and instead of checking it out, they assumed it was a false positive and turned the emails off.

        It’s dumbasses all the way down.

    9. bookish*

      This is believable to me because I actually was just a victim of credit card fraud and they immediately used it for the dumbest (meaning: most identifiable) things – insurance payments (for car insurance! I’ve never owned a car! And the payment was for more money than I even had in my bank account!), food delivery to their address, transportation, etc.

      So I definitely believe that someone would lack the foresight to use a different name, especially if the same person had publicly coveted the jacket a lot before stealing it, in view of a security camera.

  14. Mustache Cat*

    I definitely can’t help but feel that you’re blindly choosing to believe the staff member because you know her better than you know the intern. I’m guessing that, if the staff member denied taking the intern’s jacket, you would have believed her for that one, too. I’d suggest trying to keep an open mind, despite your personal feelings, and seeing what the police come down with.

  15. nnn*

    Also, it occurs to me that the Amazon orders were placed via an Amazon account. Unless it was a newly-created account, it was either Employee’s existing account or Intern’s existing account. The police would be able to look into this.

    1. Sally Sparrow*

      Oh, I didn’t even think of this. Who’s Amazon account was the stuff ordered on?

      I’m just imagining the crime drama where the intern secretly bates the CW into stealing her jacket. Then intern rapidly hacks into the CWs amazon account that way she can place a bunch of orders in CWs name to be delivered to a spot near their office with her credit card, just to make the CW pay for all that she wrought on the intern.

      1. Lily*

        Which the police probably did, because they pressed charges against coworker despite her presumably having told them the story about strange revenge.
        That means that they have enough prove to be reasonably sure it was the coworker who used the credit card.

        1. Solidad*

          From experience I can say there is some pretty substantial evidence that coworker stole the cards and used them or the cops and prosecutors would not be going forward.

          Proving these types of crimes and convincing a jury is notoriously difficult. In most cases of this type of theft being reported to the police, nothing is done except a report is filed.

          So the fact that there is a prosecution in the works makes me think there’s evidence and not just guesswork.

      2. Lauren*

        I had this exact same thought! The odds of one of them hacking into the other’s amazon account to make the purchases is very low. So whichever account was used is probably the person who made the purchases.

    2. Normally A Lurker*

      I’m also curious as to how they used the card. Amazon requires you have the address of the card being used (or at least the zip). So… the co-worker had that info?

      Like, on the surface, I feel like Intern is the one to believe here.

      And also, how did Coworker use the card on Amazon?

      (I still side with Intern here though)

        1. Normally A Lurker*

          Oh., good call. Thanks! (also, super duh on my part)

          Like I said, I still believed Intern. I was just curious.

  16. Roscoe*

    I guess I’m really not clear why you (and others) are so adamant that the intern is lying. The other person was caught on video stealing something. Yet it seems that you are taking her side over the person who is definitely a victim here. Even if you do believe your former co-worker, which again I don’t get, you shouldn’t even bring this up. This is a baseless allegation at this point.

    1. Allison*

      Some people feel it’s more “fair” to assume the accuser is lying, than it is to believe the accusation. Somehow it seems more neutral, like you’re at least a bit skeptical of both parties that way, but it isn’t, you’re taking a side either way.

      1. CMDRBNA*

        I feel like maybe the OP and the jacket thief are friends? Because the OP is going way out of her way to paint the intern as the villain here, instead of, you know, the thief.

        Having seen stuff like this happen in other places I’ve worked, I think a lot of the time managers just don’t want to have to do anything about problems, so it’s easier to be like well that was a momentary lapse of judgment, they’re a good person, they won’t do it again…basically convincing themselves it’ll be ok and they don’t have to do anything unpleasant or, god forbid, “confront” someone.

        I worked for a manager who would tie herself up into the most extraordinary semantic knots to convince you that a problem didn’t actually exist, and if it did it wasn’t that person’s fault, and if it was there were reasons nothing could be done, and anyway you were probably the one at fault because you complained about it, all because she was terrified of ever having to actually be a manager.

  17. Lady Ariel Ponyweather*

    It’s been a while since I ordered anything on Amazon, so correct me if I’m wrong: Wouldn’t the email address attached to the Amazon account give away who the culprit is?

    At any rate, you definitely can’t do anything about this one. It’s a mess of a situation, that’s for sure, and you and your whole office must be feeling unsettled. There might be other behavioural clues that could indicate who’s telling the truth, but chances are high you’re never going to find out. (My guess is that it’s all the co-worker, but that’s admittedly coloured by a similar experience in my past.)

    It is rough, though, and I sympathise with wanting to be loyal and supportive to your co-worker. You are far better off leaving the whole thing alone and treating the other issues with the intern separately.

      1. Lady Ariel Ponyweather*

        Oh yes, but I meant an email address or other account information that can prove who made the order. That’s probably not information anyone in the office would be able to access, but law enforcement probably can.

      2. KitKat*

        You don’t need a credit card statement, you just need to know whose account the items were ordered from. The way I see it there are 3 possibilities:
        Items ordered from coworkers account with interns CC – almost 100% proof that the coworker did it

        Items ordered from the interns account with the interns CC – huh, that’s weird, how would the coworker known the Interns login info – this scenario is the one wheee it is plausible the intern is lying.

        Items ordered from a “new” burner account with interns CC – this one could go either way, although Amazon can definitely tell the exact time the items were ordered so that might narrow things down a nit

        1. Ramona Flowers*

          Right but Amazon aren’t going to give that out.

          Pop fact: when you experience fraud and your card co covers it, they – not you – are treated as the victim and the info doesn’t get released to you. Over here, anyway.

          1. blackcat*

            Actually, I’m 90% sure that if I called amazon and said “I have a transaction number 12345678* on my credit card. [insert various information about the card/billing address/etc] What can you tell me about that order?” they would totally give out the information of 1) what was ordered and 2) to whom and where it was shipped to.

            I am 100% certain that the cops can obtain that information from amazon, in part because they could get a warrant. I would not at all be surprised if there is a clause in the amazon terms of service saying that they reserve the right to give out information to the cops even without a warrant.

            *You can generally obtain transaction ID numbers from the credit card company, even if it’s not on the bill.

  18. LadyL*

    W/r/t using your own name to buy stuff with a stolen card, yeah that’s pretty stupid, but you know what else is pretty stupid? Making a big deal about how much you like a jacket and then stealing that jacket. On camera. So really, who knows exactly how much bad judgement your coworker has? ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
    Honestly, this situation is a mess, I would stay as far out of it as you can. Let the police handle it, be wary and watchful, and thank your lucky stars that this had progressed to being out of your league (in terms of responsibility for office issues).

    1. Rusty Shackelford*

      W/r/t using your own name to buy stuff with a stolen card, yeah that’s pretty stupid, but you know what else is pretty stupid? Making a big deal about how much you like a jacket and then stealing that jacket. On camera. So really, who knows exactly how much bad judgement your coworker has?

      A fair point!

    2. Blue Anne*

      This is exactly what I thought. Yeah, it’s dumb… but we’re clearly not dealing with a criminal mastermind here.

  19. Lily*

    By the way, the story the stealing person tells isn’t very credible: so, the intern noticed the jacket is gone, and started ordering stuff in the name of the coworker that had told her the jacket was pretty? As a revenge? And later it came known that it was indeed the coworker stealing the jacket? Why would the intern have guessed exactly that, and not assumed that anything else had happened, including misplacing the jacket, someone else accidently misplacing it while tidying up, someone else stealing the jacket?

    I mean, if my jacket went lost, I wouldn’t assume it was stolen by one person who happened to comment on it. If it was stolen, it could have been stolen by literally anyone else.
    The revenge story only made sense if the intern knew that the coworker stole it. Which she presumably didn’t until the police saw the vid. Which the police presumably took into account when deciding whether the coworker’s claims of credit card revenge could have any truth in it.

    1. Caro in the UK*

      I agree. The timeline needed to make the framing story plausible seems extremely improbable to me, unless there are some details messing from the letter.

      1. fposte*

        Yeah, I actually thought it was going to turn out that they were in it together and it was all planned; I couldn’t figure out how else it would happen in a way that would incriminate the intern.

    2. Emily*

      Right? I mean, I would think the time that the orders were placed would shed light on who placed them. However, having had to report a burglary to the police once myself, you’d be amazed on what the police won’t follow up on (I knew who did it, found the craigslist posting of the stolen property that included a phone number, and also got a picture of them that proved that they did it, and the police didn’t do anything at all).

    3. Akcipitrokulo*

      TBH my first assumption would be that I’d left it somewhere… in staffroom? Did I take it off in kitchen and forget it? Oh, (sweary words) did I leave it on the train?

    4. Sunflower*

      I also can’t help but pick up a bit of annoyance that the police were involved.

      Two thoughts-
      A lost jacket…my thoughts would probably be oh shoot I lost it/someone took it. I would most likely chalk that up to a loss. However if my credit cards were in there OF COURSE I would report it.

      My only other guess is I can’t help but wonder if intern had to get the police involved bc her claim wasn’t being taken seriously.

    5. TootsNYC*

      Well, she didn’t have to place the orders immediately. We don’t know when the wallet was reported missing, or when the jacket was returned.

      From the OP: “the intern went to security and the footage from the lobby and parking area showed the staff member taking the jacket to her car when most other people were in a meeting. The intern got the police involved and told them her wallet with all of her ID and credit/debit cards were in her pocket.”
      So it sounds like the coworker actually drove away with the jacket.

      It could have worked like this:
      Coworker steals jacket (A: it doesn’t have wallet in the pocket–orB: it does, and coworker removes wallet from pocket)
      Intern discovers jacket is missing, discovers that Coworker took it.
      Then we diverge:
      A: Intern plans to frame coworker; places orders. Then tells cops, “I’ve realized my wallet was in that jacket pocket, and Coworker must have placed these orders”
      B: Coworker late places orders using card; intern sees charges, tells cops.

      There was probably a gap of time.
      But considering that the intern was trying to figure out where her jacket was, it’s far more likely that the person who was proven to be a thief was actually a thief.

  20. Sally Sparrow*

    I dunno. I just feel like it is too elaborate to make up. I mean CW steals the interns jacket. Did the Intern KNOW the CW stole it? She would have had to have known the CW was going to steal her jacket before she could go online and place a bunch of amazon orders in CWs name.

    And then new getting new credit cards is sufficiently annoying because then the intern wouldn’t be able to buy anything herself (and its not like interns are rolling in cash).

    I suppose intern could have ran back to her desk to place a bunch of Amazon orders as revenge after viewing the security footage. That just would not be my first inclination after seeing that my CW stole my jacket. I’m pretty sure my first thought would be I want be freaking jacket back.

  21. Lady Phoenix*

    Yeah, I don’t care of the Coworker goes to church, I would definitely pin her for credit card fraud too. She has already proven to be a thief, and why would to the intern have a reason to make it look like fraud when they already got their stuff stolen.

    OP, take off the blind goggles and realize you coworker is not honest.

  22. Some sort of Management Consultant*

    FYI: church attendance does not automatically equal “good person who would not steal”.

    1. Bow Ties Are Cool*

      In fact, one could argue that a thief, if at all religious, would be more likely to attend church than an honest person, being more in need of forgiveness…

    2. DCGirl*

      The person who was the most unpleasant to me, day in and day out, at my last job was married to a preacher and was proudly listed as the church’s “First Lady” on its website. I used to hope that she would be smote by a bolt of lightning as she sat in the front pew.

    3. The_artist_formerly_known_as_Anon-2*

      A bunch of co-workers at one place I worked, all attended the same church. Long story short – they were TAKEN, by a new church member, a “financial consultant” – who offered “investments ONLY available to born-again Christians.”

      When holy advisor and his wife disappeared for a “short spell” (meaning = forever), they were still confident he’d be back.

      Then they saw a segment on one of the religious shows – informing them that such “investments” are ILLEGAL – and run the other way if you’re offered something like this.

      1. Can’t remember what name I used before*

        Many years ago, I worked at a Salvation Army thrift store. There was an older couple that both worked for the organization, one was their equivalent of District Manager, and they were both retiring at the same time. They had worked for SA for decades, were much loved and highly respected, and made the rounds to personally say goodbye to each store’s manager.
        The next day when I went into work, the locks were getting changed, and my manager told me that this fine, upstanding, devoutly Christian retirees had, after closing time, driven around to every single store in their district with a moving van and cleaned them out of things like nicer furniture and large appliances.
        You just never know!

  23. Chriama*

    I feel like there’s more nuance to the story that the OP hasn’t articulated. Coworker *stole* a jacket from the intern, but your belief is that the intern framed her for credit card fraud? I don’t understand it. I’m wondering if there’s either
    – another reason to dislike or distrust the coworker
    – inclination to not believe that someone you know and like could be a thief
    – wanting to side with the old and familiar over the new and uncomfortable (I’m reminded of family members of someone convicted of a crime who want to cover up or make excuses for why it happened)

    It’s just… the coworker stole a jacket from the office, in full view of the security cameras. Where was she planning to wear it? Did she really think the coworker wouldn’t notice? What sort of other ethical lapses has she had over time (I mean, come on! There’s no way this is her first crime)? Why would you believe her when there’s clear evidence of her dishonesty already?

    1. Some sort of Management Consultant*

      Yes, is there something else about the intern that is making the LW accused her of this? What are we missing, LW?

      (I hope we’re missing some vital piece of information because it doesn’t really make sense to me at ALL right now.)

    2. WhiteBear*

      Exactly! If the thief was dumb enough to steal what sounds like a statement item from a coworker in plain view and not even try to hide it in a bag or anything, then I wouldn’t put it passed them to place online orders using a stolen credit card while also using her real name as the recipient. Such a devastating lapse in judgement by this person… and for what? A jacket?

    3. Chriama*

      One other possibility is that OP noticed a conflict between the coworker and the intern *and* the intern has shown a tendency towards vindictiveness (and her reaction to the theft doesn’t count, I mean come on!) that she believes the intern capable of this because she’s seen similar behaviour before.

      1. Observer*

        It still honestly does not make sense. The intern would have had to realize what had happened before getting the security footage and make the orders immediately, creating a new account / email to make it happen. As well as the fact that even someone vindictive could find better ways of getting back at someone than taking this risk.

    4. The IT Manager*

      It occurred to me that the coworker may be a serial shoplifter. IDK why. Maybe because the low stakes, not expensive items shoplifting is similar to stealing the jacket.

      I don’t think the coworker was aiming for the wallet, but when she found it in the jackets pocket she said “jackpot” and tried to order things online.

      1. Amy*

        This line
        “Her husband has told me that her lawyer advised her to take plea to get less time in jail because a trial would not be good for her.”

        Makes me wonder if it’s just the video of her stealing the jacket or if she has a record of some other petty crime. I mean the video by itself is a compelling argument.

        1. Lilo*

          “Less time in jail” stands out to me. You usually don’t get jail time for minor theft in a first offense. How much stuff was ordered off Amazon?

          1. Lilo*

            Which of course makes coworker even less credible. Surely you would fight a charge thatbresulyed in jail time versus a misdemeanor (jacket theft) that did not.

            1. Alton*

              Eh, yes and no. It’s not uncommon for people to be pressed to take a plea deal because going to trial and losing could result in a hefty sentence. Sometimes there can be a lot of unknowns with going to trial, and people have plead guilty to things even when there was no evidence they committed a crime. But things like economic status and quality of representation can play a big role in that.

              It wouldn’t surprise me if the police have pretty good evidence in this case, but I also wouldn’t be shocked if the coworker felt that the theft of the jacket was damning enough to want to avoid a trial on the other charges regardless of how strong the evidence is.

              The revenge story is just kind of outlandish. Stranger things have happened, but it’s like something you’d see in an old Perry Mason episode.

              1. Zip Zap*

                Or it could be that in a trial, other damaging things about her character would be brought up and added to the public record. That’s one reason some people avoid trials.

          2. Solidad*

            Also, cops do not go after this type of theft and prosecutors do not push forward without absolute, irrefutable evidence of guilt.

            These are tough cases to put in front of a jury. You don’t do it unless you are sure.

            I’m also fairly certain this woman is known to the police and/or prosecutors given the response.

        2. CDM*

          This.

          This screams “Lawyer knows client committed ID fraud and credit card theft”

          Not

          “Lawyer knows client walked off with a jacket almost certainly worth under $500.”

        3. The Annoyingly Alliterative Athiest*

          To me, that line shows that the manager in question is involved with the co-worker outside the workplace, and is probably biased in their favor. I’m guessing their social circles overlap, and wouldn’t be surprised if that overlap involved a church.

    5. Claire*

      With the “was she planning on wearing it” comment – waaaay back in 5th grade a friend stole a necklace from my bedroom. She then wore it and when I said “That’s my necklace,” she said it was hers. It was like $10 from Old Navy, and not a precious family heirloom, so it’s possible she went out and bought it herself, but I doubt it because it was ~ a year old and stores rotate inventory so quickly. Maybe the coworker here would be smart enough not to wear the jacket to work, but she might have been bold enough to wear it to work, because like that friends of mine, coworker would have seen the jacket as being her property now.

      1. Anastasia Beaverhausen*

        Wow you are so right. I’ve worked with people who absolutely would do that. One was a nut who lived in her head and whatever made sense in there, she would insist to the last breath was the honest truth. Another was just that bold and hateful. I don’t know. I have a different makeup I guess. I just try to get along and get through the day and not bring work home with me. I’ve never understood people who are happy to screw you over and not be the least bit bothered.

    6. Fiennes*

      I’m curious about this point as well, bc the OP says other coworkers have concerns about the intern as well. While on the balance it seems much more likely that the thief coworker is guilty for it all, what exactly makes others wary about the intern? If it’s just a matter of the churchgoing thief being known/popular, then that’s not valid. But if the intern has shown past behavior that would actually point to something like this, it really needs to be part of the post.

      My personal guess is that the other concerns about the intern are more work-related than genuinely worthy about suspicion. Which brings up an interesting point: management may be giving the intern an unmerited full-time job only to make it up to her about the workplace theft. Guilt and/or fear of liability (?? Unsure) could be the drivers here — in which case, the thieving coworker can be guilty as sin AND the intern’s job offer should be examined more closely.

      Maybe that’s not applicable at all, but I wonder about it.

  24. WhiteBear*

    While yes, placing an order in your name using a stolen credit card is incredibly stupid and is the only fishy part about the intern’s version of events, those packages were sent not to someone’s house, but to a pickup point. Which means in order to collect those packages, you would have to present i.d. So I don’t think this discredits the intern. Also, it seems way more far-fetched that this is an intricate revenge plotted by the intern. Until she saw the footage of the coworker taking the jacket she would not have been able to credibly accuse the coworker, so unless she was making these claims before seeing the video, I wouldn’t have grounds to call her a liar.

    1. Snark*

      “Which means in order to collect those packages, you would have to present i.d. ”

      Not necessarily, as I noted above. The new Amazon Lockers they’re putting in convenience stores are unlocked with a PIN sent to the contact email on the account. Punch in PIN, door pops open, and off you go. Now, you ARE on a camera when doing all this, so I assume the police are pulling those tapes. But you don’t necessarily need ID.

      1. WhiteBear*

        Well, gee, you Americans and your fancy pick-up locker technology! I could only dream (that literally sounds amazing)

        1. Snark*

          You can do returns with them as well. I got a pair of pants the wrong size, put them back in the box, returned them to the locker, bought some gummi bears, and got a notification on my phone that the return had been processed and refunded before I walked out of the store. It was one of those little moments where you go,”y’know, we don’t have hoverboards, but this IS kinda the future.”

            1. Snark*

              They don’t have them where you’re at? Maybe it’s a US-only thing. I adore it, because there’s one in the gas station a few blocks from my house, and I buy ALL THE THINGS on Amazon.

              1. Joan Callamezzo*

                Same. There’s an Amazon Locker right at the supermarket where I do most of my grocery shopping. It literally could not be more convenient.

          1. Loose Seal*

            It’s way more useful than a hover board, if you ask me.

            I am still waiting for my self-driving, all-knowing black Trans Am, though.

          1. GermanGirl*

            It’s great and I used to get my stuff delivered to the locker at the train station so I could carry it home from there.
            Except when the locker at the train station is full, DHL will just put your stuff in the next available locker which in my case was 3 miles out the wrong way from the train station, so I’d have to walk there and back and then home with the stuff.

        2. Anastasia Beaverhausen*

          They’re outside all the 7-11 stores in my neighborhood and they all have names. One is named “Truffle.” :)

    2. ChurchLady*

      Nope. My apartment building has a locker system. You get a code by email. You “sign” for the package and the locker is supposed to take a picture of you, but you can sideswipe that easily. I’ve never had an issue with a missing package, despite the shortcomings, but I wouldn’t count on it for an “investigation” necessarily

      There is also a large parcel locker, where multiple big boxes can be stored and you’re only supposed to take your own. Never had a problem with that either, because I don’t need to steal stuff, nor do my neighbors, apparently.

    3. Jessica*

      I’m not a thief, but I do work in e-commerce and am reasonably technologically adept. It would be fairly simple to:

      1. Steal the jacket
      2. Find the wallet, conveniently with ID and credit cards
      3. Set up a throwaway email address in Intern’s name
      4. Set up Amazon account in Intern’s name and order a bunch of crap
      5. When asked to define recipient, plug in the correct info of thief
      6. Designate an Amazon locker to pick stuff up
      7. Pick it up with matching ID

      Although why someone would be technologically comfortable enough to do those things, but not understand intrinsically that it leaves a giant flashing neon arrow pointing right at them for anyone to figure out with a police report and a call to Amazon, I have no idea. Not to mention that the thief would HAVE the ill-gotten goods in their possession, having conveniently picked them up with their perfectly legitimate ID.

      I’d be willing to bet that this isn’t the first time Coworker stole stuff, though. If she “volunteers” a lot, how many church people have had stuff mysteriously go missing?

    4. ABJ*

      I actually don’t find the idea that the CW thief might place amazon orders in her name with a stolen credit card all that fishy. My card was stolen once and the thief actually used it to pay their cable bill. Sometimes people are just stupid. Or in this case, seeing how she stole that jacket in the way that she did, brazen and stupid.

  25. Allison*

    If IT knows where the orders were placed, how do you not know who used that computer at the time the orders were placed? Also, whose account was used to place the orders?

    That said, it does strike me as odd that the intern left their wallet with their ID and credit cards in the pocket of their jacket inside the car. That’s an item that’s on me pretty much at all times. And the employee had motive to steal the jacket, but the credit card theft would have been a crime of convenience – if they just wanted the jacket, wouldn’t it have been smart to empty the pockets first? But stealing an item belonging to a coworker seems dumb, unless you plan on never wearing it to work, otherwise it looks way too convenient that you happen to have a new coat that looks just like the one that went missing.

    Thinking out loud, I guess. Whatever happened definitely wasn’t a perfect crime,

    1. Princess Consuela Banana Hammock*

      I don’t think the intern left their items in the car. It sounds like the coworker stole the intern’s jacket (which had her wallet in it) from her seat/area in the office, and then the coworker placed the intern’s jacket in the coworker’s car.

    2. Another Day Another Dolla*

      I believe the light-fingered co-worker was caught taking the jacket from the office to the car, so the intern left her jacket (and wallet) in the office…And I don’t think anyone understands what was going on in the co-worker’s mind in taking the jacket. BTW if this is a real change in personality/behavior, the co-worker should perhaps see a neurologist or other doctor; there could be a reason for the change.

    3. The IT Manager*

      The intern left her IDs etc in her jacket pocket at her desk. I leave my purse on, near, in my desk at work. I don’t worry about a coworker being a thief.

        1. Princess Consuela Banana Hammock*

          I think we all posted at the same time, and because the comment section is blowing up, it’s coming across as haranguing :( An inadvertent pile-on—apologies!

          1. Allison*

            Nah, it’s my fault, it’s everyone’s responsibility to get all the facts before commenting on the post, especially if you speculate like I did, which is also not great.

    4. MI Dawn*

      She didn’t leave her jacket in the car. The stealing coworker (SC) was caught on camera taking the jacket out to her OWN car. I’m assuming the intern left her jacket hanging over her chair at her desk or something similar.

      We don’t know when the Amazon orders were placed, but if it was the same day as the jacket, I’d wonder when they were placed – during the same time everyone but SC was in a meeting? Before then (so placed by intern)? After then? (so placed by SC)?

      I can see (because I have an evil mind) – one way the intern makes out. Intern places the orders, and, as she goes into the meeting, tells SC – you like my jacket so much, you are welcome to go ahead and take it. Comes out, cries theft, and is all golden. (Yes, I know SC supposedly admitted to the theft – but did she say “Yes, I stole the jacket? Or did she just admit to taking the jacket and no one believed the intern told her she could)

        1. teclatrans*

          Allison, it’s okay, folks misread posts all the time. (The corrections are usually being typed at the same time, then show up as one correction after another after another, which can feel a bit as though people are really hung up on the error.)

        2. MI Dawn*

          Sorry, Allison! You didn’t deserve a pile-on for a simple misread. (Says the Queen of Misreads- my friends CONSTANTLY tease me about it). When I started my comment, no one else had commented. Next time, I’ll make sure to refresh before posting.

      1. teclatrans*

        Hm, nice theory, but it falls apart when you remember that she took the jacket out to her car in the middle of the work day (while everyone was in a meeting). If Intern had given her the jacket, the reasonable thing to do would be to take it home at the end of day.

  26. Dumb crimes*

    Wow, what a mess. Who the hell STEALS a jacket from someone they work with?

    Also, speaking of dumb workplace crimes, in college I worked at a sandwich shop for about a month and then quit when I got a higher paying job at an office. A month or two into my new job, I went to buy something with my debit card and got declined. When I went to look at my bank account, I found that I was overdrawn due to a $500 check being cashed. When my bank sent me a copy of the check, I found that it was written to a former coworker of mine at the sandwich shop. She stole a check out of my purse and wrote it to herself.

    The funniest thing? When forging my signature, she misspelled my name. My name, spelled correctly, was on the upper lefthand corner of the check, of course. What a f***ing idiot.

    1. Snark*

      “Who the hell STEALS a jacket from someone they work with?”

      My college roommate’s best friend stole my ski jacket. I went to his room when his roomie was there and he wasn’t and stole it back.

      1. K.*

        I saw an episode of Bar Rescue in which a bartender stole a sweatshirt from the bar and was caught on video. She was fired, and she kept sobbing “You know I would never steal!” The owner’s girlfriend was like “I … don’t know that, because you just got caught stealing.”

      2. many bells down*

        I had a roommate whose boyfriend stole a bunch of stuff from people around the house and locked it in their bedroom. Including the entire mattress from my futon. When I broke in and took it back (because he’d been AWOL for weeks and we were all moving out), he suddenly came back and threatened to kill me for “stealing his stuff.”

      1. Collarbone High*

        Here’s one: in college I did bookkeeping for a place that employed a lot of teenagers. One payday, an employee and her manager complained that her check, and only her check, was missing.

        The payroll software confirmed I’d printed the check (it was a physical check, not direct deposit), so we waited to see if it would clear, and a couple of days later it did. It was deposited into an account that belonged to a man who’d had a job interview with the CEO, the day before payday.

        Apparently the CEO had been signing the checks when the candidate showed up, and put them to the side. The CEO left the room at some point and the candidate helped himself to a signed check.

        The dumbest part was, the checks were for part-time workers who made minimum wage. He got himself arrested and blacklisted from the industry for a check that was less than $200.

      2. Lora*

        Other than the college kids trying to steal the pure ethanol, all I have are white-collar crimes that actually injured or killed people, so…not really amusing.

      3. Apollo Warbucks*

        I know someone who was sacked for stealing 57 pence in lose change.

        And someone else who was sacked for stealing £11 and change from petty cash.

        And someone else who committed fraud to pay their own utility bills

      1. Dumb crimes*

        Yeah, I disputed it immediately (my bank seemed to agree that if I were going to write this girl a check, I would get my own name right) and filed a police report for the theft, but I don’t know what happened with that (probably nothing as I live in a big city with bigger fish for the police to fry). I called my former sandwich shop boss to tell him but he said she had just been fired a week before for an unrelated reason. She was telling former coworkers that I told her she could have the money for her mom’s medical bills. Ok, Gabby.

    2. Sunflower*

      I have a friend who’s roommate stole clothes from her, wore them right in front of her and claimed they belonged to her. So yeah there are people that dumb out there!!!

  27. Jill*

    So whose account was the order made on? Assuming the intern doesn’t keep her Amazon login info in her jacket pocket, they would each only know their own passwords. Which means the order could be made in the coworker’s name but on the intern’s account… which is pretty obvious framing. Or from the coworker’s account, which makes sense with the theft accusation

      1. Lily*

        I assume that it did get cleared up pretty fast, by the police, who is now pressing charges against the coworker. But the OP doesn’t have access to the police documentation, only to IT and to the coworker’s claims^^

  28. Rusty Shackelford*

    The employee is a good person who wouldn’t steal the intern’s credit card. Because that would be stealing. And the employee doesn’t steal. Except, you know, the one time she stole that intern’s jacket. But that doesn’t count, because she goes to church.

    I have a headache now.

    And yeah, I totally expected “IT discovered the employee was logged in when Amazon was accessed” or something along those lines, and am shocked that there’s no way of knowing who used that computer.

    1. Managing to get by*

      Maybe there’s actually no way of telling a nosy supervisor who was logged in to that computer, because IT is already working with the police on the issue?

      Much easier to tell letter writer “we have no way of knowing who was on that computer” rather than “we have the log in info but can’t tell you no matter how many times you ask”. Not necessarily the best way to handle it, but it is a possibility.

  29. la bella vita*

    “I want to discuss it with him because some of my other team members have concerns about this intern also.”

    OP – do you mean that you and other team members have concerns about the intern because of the credit cards or did you already have concerns related to their work prior to the incident?

    1. Snark*

      And, like….what concerns do you have about the intern? Why? And do you not also have concerns about THE PERSON WHO GANKED A JACKET ON CAMERA? Are those concerns not greater than the concerns about the intern? If so, why not?

    2. stitchinthyme*

      Yeah, I’m wondering what those “other concerns” might be. If they’re related to the intern’s work, that’s absolutely valid to bring up to the boss. But as Alison and pretty much everyone else has said, based on the limited information in the latter, we know only one thing for certain: the employee stole an intern’s jacket. That does tend to strain her credibility, and it’s not that much of a stretch to think she could have lied about using the credit card, as that might push her crime from misdemeanor to felony depending on the amounts involved.

      1. Magenta Sky*

        It might not even be based on the amount. Credit card fraud online may well always be a felony, based on location. It’s often included in identity theft laws these days. (And anything online can be federal, though for small amounts – as in, less than millions – the feds won’t touch it.)

        It’s very likely that it’s a plea bargain tactic. The more charges the DA thinks they can make stick, the less of a bargain will be offered. Dozens of orders, counted as separate offenses, can easily mean the difference between probation on the jacket theft, and actual jail time to drop all but a handful of the fraud charges.

        There are also reasons to want to avoid credit card fraud charges on one’s employment history, which would almost guarantee would preclude any future employment with access to company credit cards, or anything else of value. Stealing a jacket from a coworker can be minimized a lost more easily if she can lie well.

    3. vjt*

      This was my thought, too. Was there some other reason you already had a concern about this intern? Have you seen evidence of lying, manipulativeness, vindictiveness that would make it reasonable to suspect she would try to do something like this? I’m trying very hard to give you the benefit of the doubt that you have SOME reason to believe the word of a proven thief over that of your intern.

  30. Here we go again*

    I really hope that one day we live in a world where people who go to church aren’t automatically seen as “good people” and those who choose not to aren’t automatically seen as “bad people.”

    This mentality is outright harmful and dangerous.

    OP – Stop defending this coworker. She stole FROM AN INTERN! Period. Full stop. Her religious views are irrelevant. Her going to church is irrelevant.

    1. Temperance*

      Seriously, I’m an atheist and would NEVER even steal a pack of gum from an intern, much less a freaking jacket and use her CC.

    2. Lizcat Editor*

      Yes. All of this. I think the world you describe is closer than ever. With how far we as a society are moving from organized religion, it’s not going to be a reliable barometer soon (not that it is now, but people will have to stop considering it).

          1. vjt*

            Are you kidding? Most of history. In Colonial Williamsburg: “Every Virginia minister was required to read the “Articles, Lawes and Orders” to his congregation every Sunday, and, among other things, parishioners were reminded that failure to attend church twice each day was punishable in the first instance by the loss of a day’s food. A second offense was punishable by a whipping and a third by six months of rowing in the colony’s galleys.”

    3. Allison*

      Yes, agreed. I’ve met church-goers who are honestly good people and going to church probably helps inspire them to keep being good even when it’s tough, and I’ve met church-goers who feel righteous and justified doing bad things to others because they have this “Jesus loves me more, and wants me to be happy” attitude.

      1. stitchinthyme*

        And also, atheists who try to be kind to others are doing so because they know it’s the right thing to do, not because they expect a reward from some being in the sky (or are afraid of being punished by said being).

        1. Phoenix Programmer*

          Yes and according too many moral philosophies that makes is much more moral since we are doing good because it is right and not for any reward.

          1. Tiger Snake*

            Eh, I think that’s a slippery slope to start arguing here. For example, I’ve met a lot more atheists with a holy-than-thou attitude than Christians, because they’re expecting both immediate validation from people around then and because those individuals make a big deal about how they “make their own moral choices instead of having some religion guide them like sheep”.

            I think everyone here seems to agree that being religious or not, is not a good barometer for how good a person you are in either direction. After that, its probably best to agree to disagree and move on to other topics.

    4. Erin*

      I hear what you’re saying but would respectfully disagree. I equate “active with local church” as “active in local community/volunteers” which is something worth noting in a situation like this. It’s not a deal breaker and doesn’t mean she’s innocent. She obviously at minimum stole the coat. But it’s not a weird thing to mention here, either.

      1. Magenta Sky*

        It’s often used as a mitigating factor in sentencing, it’s true. But it really shouldn’t be. “I’m a good Christian, but I’m not very good at it” isn’t an excuse, it’s a reason to be harsher.

        “That ain’t how salvation works.”

      2. Temperance*

        It’s not the same, though. Otherwise, you would say that she’s active in the community and volunteers. People say church because they want to signal that the person is a Christian.

      3. OOF*

        I’m not quite sure I understand. I am an atheist but a good person who would never steal. Does the fact that I’m atheist put me as less trustworthy/worthy of a second chance/etc. than someone who is “active with the local church”?

        1. Loose Seal*

          I’ve been told to my atheist face more than once that I couldn’t have possibly learned morals unless I went to church. Others have said that since I have morals, I’m not really an atheist. Atheism in the U.S. South: Its literally damned if you do, damned if you don’t.

          1. Magentak Sky*

            Penn Jilette has a pretty good answer to end that sort of conversation. When told “Without God, you could rape and murder all you want,” he’ll answer “I *already* rape and murder all I want. The amount I want is zero.” The implication being, that if the questioner doesn’t desire the same amount, they are pretty messed up. You’ll never convince anybody of anything with it, except that they don’t really want to talk to you any more. Which is often good enough.

        2. Sylvan*

          I’m not an atheist, but also not a member of an organized religion. Guess we’re going to be thieves together.

      4. Samata*

        I am super involved in community and volunteer a ton with a few organization and chair a neighborhood committee.

        I go to services twice a year and have zero involvement with them. I don’t even know the name of one other member.

        People describe me as someone who is involved in their community. Does the fact that it’s not my temple family (gasp! – non Christian here!) that I’m volunteering with negate my contribution or make me less trustworthy?

      5. serenity*

        How is that relevant in the slightest? If someone is caught on camera stealing something, to whom does it matter if they are “active in the local community”? Certainly not the police or the courts. And what does “active” mean? And who gets to decide that?

      6. MCMonkeyBean*

        No, it’s actually not worth noting. Whether they do volunteer work is not in any way related to whether they are capable of theft.

    5. Sylvan*

      Her going to church says nothing more than that she can show up at the same place and time consistently.

      My grandmother showed up for church. She was a jerk. My father hasn’t been to a worship service in years. He’s a very kind person (and a Christian, whether he goes to church or not).

      1. OOF*

        “…she can show up at the same place and time consistently.”

        Ha! Thank you for making me laugh in the face of this disheartening Christians-are-better commentary.

  31. Alex*

    People who steal credit cards can absolutely be that dumb. Someone once stole my card and used it to *pay their Comcast cable bill*

      1. Semi Nonymous*

        I had some one pick up my wallet that I had dropped, and used it to order $75 worth of Domino’s pizza. They even had it delivered, although they delivered it to the house next door not their own. Unfortunately, since they also didn’t tip the driver at all for the large and difficult to deliver order, he remembered them really well, including that they walked across the lawn to the house next door once they had the pizza.

        The other funny part? They did in fact donate $1 to St Jude’s children’s hospital – but nothing to tip the driver.

        Seriously, if you find a wallet on the street, who’s first thought is “oh goody lets order Domino’s?”

    1. Malibu Stacey*

      I read online about a guy in my city who used a stolen credit card at a local gas station chain – with his gas station rewards card in his own name.

    2. Normally A Lurker*

      I just posted this up thread. Someone stole my card and opened an eharmony account in his name.

      who opens a dating profile with a stolen credit card?

      1. CmdrShepard4ever*

        A married person trying to hide it from their spouse? Or a really lonely thief looking for their Bonnie.

      2. the_scientist*

        Oh, that is good.

        Someone just recently stole my brother’s credit card and used it to make a donation to Oxfam?????

      3. AnonEMoose*

        I’ve heard that one of the ways credit card thieves verify that the card they have works is to send through some small charges (less likely to be noticed) first. Opening an account at a dating service is, apparently, reasonably popular for this. My best friend noticed a charge like that on her account, and since she caught it quickly, was able to (her bank told her) head off worse. They issued her a new card and such.

        1. Rusty Shackelford*

          Makes sense. When my CC number (not physical card) was stolen, there was an initial charge to an online bookstore. It was small enough that Mr. Shackelford assumed I’d bought a book and didn’t ask me about it. Next month was when the perps had their shopping spree.

          1. many bells down*

            Yeah that happened to me, too. A small purchase at a gas station. Only problem was, the gas station was in Tennessee and I had used my card in California only a few hours prior, so the card was already locked when the thief tried to buy $500 worth of cigarettes with it.

          2. la bella vita*

            Similar thing happened to me – I still physically had my debit card, but the number was stolen. Luckily, I happened to notice a random charge for less than $10 to a camping store when I went online a day or two after to see if some monthly bill had been deducted from my account yet and was able to get that card cancelled. The thing that sucked was that I was home for Christmas, so I had to run to the ATM and take out a bunch of cash before I called the bank because I knew I wouldn’t be able to go again until I flew back and got back to my apartment to activated the new card.

        2. Amy*

          Yeah , people used to do this where I used to work. Since it was service and nothing shipped our website was a good one to test card numbers on. We basically had a full time person who dealt with the fraudulent charges.

    3. Countess Boochie Flagrante*

      Someone who stole my credit card info (but not the physical card) used it to buy plane tickets. Which, you know, you need not just your real name but your effin ID to use!

      Come on, folks!

      1. Rusty Shackelford*

        Apparently so many stolen U.S. cards are used to buy train tickets overseas that it triggers an automatic fraud alert. At least it did when my mom ordered European train tickets.

        1. Bryce*

          Same thing happened when my dad and I drove me to college. Mom got a call about their joint card being used at gas stations and motels across the country.

          1. MCMonkeyBean*

            You card being used in another state is always a red flag. In general you should call your credit card company to tell them of any travel plans and they will note it on your account.

    4. FoodieNinja*

      My stolen card was used by someone to pay their traffic tickets. At least I got a chuckle out of the situation.

    5. Magenta Sky*

      Burglars who leave their wallets behind at the scene, bank robbers who write their note on one of their own deposit slips, armed robbers who fill out an application before they rob a store, a guy who tried to rob a gym during MMA class, the guy who tried to rob a uniformed police officer sitting in his black & white, there are a million stories of people who are, indeed, that dumb.

      Generally speaking, if they weren’t stupid, they probably wouldn’t be criminals in the first place.

  32. Stephanie*

    Oof. I’d pass this one over to HR and the police. You’re not going to be able to resolve this, or not without it being a huge distraction to your actual jobs and other coworkers.

    I’d follow up with IT as well. I worked in an open seating arrangement akin to a library and I’m certain if I did something like email proprietary info to a competitor (or some other form of gross misconduct), they’d find me easily.

    1. MCMonkeyBean*

      It’s already been passed to the police, and they clearly decided the coworker did it if she has already been charged with it.

  33. Becky*

    “All that said … it would be awfully poor judgment to use your own name when ordering on someone else’s stolen credit card! It’s like robbing a house and leaving a signed note behind. If anything here makes me wonder about the intern’s version of events, it’s this..”

    Which…does happen. Not a note literally–but I have seen a number of news stories about robbers who were caught because they logged into facebook in the house they were robbing.

    1. Rusty Shackelford*

      I know, right? “She has no history of trouble working here, has no criminal record…” Well, yes, she does. She absolutely does.

      1. Grumpy*

        Annnnnd that’s why the intern got the police involved. Intern likely knew that coworker would be believed and intern would be vilified.
        Also, not a lawyer, but wouldn’t jacket theft be a small offence but credit card theft be much more serious (and worth lying about)?

  34. Kvothe*

    Can you just imagine this from the intern’s point of view? Coworker A stole her jacket and then used her credit cards to buy a bunch of stuff from Amazon and now Coworker B is basically trying to get her job offer rescinded over the situation??? If the intern wrote this I’m pretty sure we’d all tell her to run for the hills

    1. NW Mossy*

      If I’m the intern, I decline the offer on the grounds that I don’t want to work in an environment where a professional colleague steals my stuff and other coworkers think I should be chill with that because she’s “a good person.” I’d be looking for something a little less dramatic in my life, TBH.

    2. Lilo*

      Yeah I feel very sorry for the intern. It sounds like coworkers are treating her badly because she was the victim of a crime and coworkers can’t accept the seemingly nice lady stole, despite video evidence.

  35. RabbitRabbit*

    A clinic I worked in had fired one of their employees who would, among other tasks, process credit card payments for patients’ bills. There were some patient complaints about unauthorized charges; the employee had copied the credit card information and used it to pay off her own utility bills. So yes, people can definitely be that dumb.

    1. Red Reader*

      Yeah, I once had my bank account cleaned out because I’d used my debit card to do a $5 down payment on a pre-ordered video game, the game store employee copied my info down, and went to another branch of the same store and used my card info to buy like $900 worth of used video game console and games. I’m not sure which I think is dumber, the guy who pulled the scam, or the guy at the second store who was like “Oh, okay, I’ll just type this handwritten card info into the system for almost a grand worth of equipment, that’s not fishy at all.”

      1. Countess Boochie Flagrante*

        Back when I worked in merchant services, I had so many conversations with business owners telling them not to do this! It drove me insane.

        “If they don’t have the card, don’t run it.”
        “But I can type in the numbers.”
        “Yes, but you shouldn’t.”
        “But then I wouldn’t have gotten the sale!”
        “Well, now you’re not getting the sale and you’re also out the merchandise and a fee.”
        “But that’s not fair! He had the card number.”
        “On a piece of paper.”
        “Yeah!”

        1. SusanIvanova*

          Although, to tie in to the discussion upthread, I’m glad a hotel was willing to take my memorized credit card number. I’d been at a conference in San Francisco and not noticed that the parking garage closed early in the evening, because what parking garage does that? You miss out on all the dinner and show crowds! So my car, purse, and cards were all inaccessible. It probably helped that I went to a hotel that some of my colleagues were already staying at, and I did have ID since I’d needed that to check in to the conference.

          1. MCMonkeyBean*

            I’m so baffled by this, I have never heard of a parking garage that closes at all. Why would it ever close?

      2. Magenta Sky*

        If a chain selling consumer electronics – *the* most common category of goods bought with stolen credit cards – has a computer system that will *allow* manually typed credit card numbers, the clerk is the least of the problem. Out system simply won’t allow it, ever (and we’re in a pretty low risk category).

        1. Starbuck*

          I imagine doing that is also a violation of the terms of service with the credit card companies for vendors who accept cards as payment…. no good reason to ever do it!

    2. Normally A Lurker*

      I worked at a restaurant that had to fire a waiter for stealing CC numbers and using them. They started getting complaints and tracked it all down to the same guy. Fired him and pressed charges.

    3. CMF*

      I worked at a bank where a CSR got catfished and stole $15,000 from the township’s accounts to give to her “boyfriend.” I forget the exact flow of the money, but it touched her account and was made into cashier’s checks.

      I think she thought that the township had so much money, they wouldn’t notice until her boyfriend had time to “pay her back” but they noticed before the end of the week.

      It was horrible. I’m genuinely shocked that the bank didn’t fire the entire branch, because she was also skimming small amounts from elderly customers and having tellers process the transactions, so literally every single one of us was inadvertently an accessory.

  36. PepperVL*

    I’m boggled at the idea that the intern still wants to work there. If it were me, I might take the job because I have bills to pay, but I definitely wouldn’t be looking to stay long-term at a company where I was stolen from and my co-workers sided with the thief.

    1. A person*

      I can’t imagine she’s going to have a good experience at a workplace where her colleagues side with someone who stole from her, and possibly even the thief herself if she isn’t fired (I don’t see anything about the thief being fired in the letter.)

      I hope the OP talks to management, because they need to know what the perception is so they can get the situation under control for everyone’s sake.

    2. Detective Amy Santiago*

      Can you imagine explaining that in interviews?

      Why did you leave your last job?
      Well, I interned there and was offered a position. Before I transitioned to full time staff, a coworker stole my jacket and used my credit cards to buy a bunch of stuff on Amazon. I couldn’t afford to be out of work, so I reluctantly kept working there, but my other coworkers thought I somehow framed her, so I really needed to get out.

    3. Wintermute*

      THIS OH MY GOD SO MUCH THIS!

      LW, serious, put yourself in the poor interns shoes and consider how this looks. You go to work at a new place, and very soon after someone steals something from you. Now, remember back to your intern days. You are a college student or a fresh graduate, quite likely living one step above poverty level if at all, and they victimize you, steal your stuff. Not only that, but they clear out your checking account too!

      You now have to cancel your credit cards and fight with your bank, the debit card money is gone, *poof* you’re never getting it back. Maybe you’re having to borrow money off people you would really rather not have to so you can pay bills that you counted on the money in your checking account to pay. You can’t use the disputed credit cards and your account is depleted and the rest went to pay bills you had no option to delay, so you might have legitimate trouble meeting basic living expenses until a paycheck comes (if it’s not gobbled up by overdraft charges immediately). You’re having to search couch cushions for change to by ravioli-Os here.

      And THEN, to add insult to injury, everyone at work suddenly gets really cold towards you. You don’t know why. Maybe it’s because they side with the thief, what else COULD it be? Do they think you had a choice about pressing charges? You had to file a police report because if not then you’d be stuck paying for all the fraudulent credit card charges and you’d have to take the credit hit and might suffer financially for years. As it is you may still suffer for months if not years! Once you filed that police report it was out of your hands, but they’re being cold anyway.

      None of your reasoning makes sense. She volunteers, okay, not to be hyperbolic but Ted Bundy worked for a suicide crisis hotline among other volunteer positions, still killed people. Is active at church? Pretty sure all the pastors, priests and reverends that ever robbed their flock blind were at church every Sunday (you know, since they were celebrating the mass). Has a family? So do many criminals.

      She doesn’t meet your prejudices about what a criminal “looks like”, but she IS a criminal, you know she stole at least one thing. Don’t subject your poor intern to the cruelty of having being ostracized for daring to be the victim of a crime, it doesn’t reflect well on your character.

      1. Candi*

        The debit money wouldn’t have been lost if she filed a report with her bank within their reporting period. (2-30, depending.) She might have been out $50 at somebody banks, but most would simply reverse the charges, although they’d want that police report yesterday.

        The rest still applies, though.

  37. Rusty Shackelford*

    Oooh! Conspiracy theory: The intern, sitting in the meeting with everyone else, watched the coworker take her jacket. (Knowing the coworker coveted it, she probably left it draped temptingly over a chair, one fashionable sleeve beckoning to the employee. Or tossed it on the floor. So careless! She doesn’t even deserve this nice jacket! The employee was doing it a favor!) So after the meeting, she ran to the computer to make the Amazon orders (probably had her wishlist all ready, prepared for just such an occasion) and *then* piped up about the missing jacket. She gets all the goodies, and the poor coworker sits in jail, sobbing and praying, because she did absolutely nothing wrong, if you overlook the fact that she stole a jacket. Obviously this intern is clever and well-prepared, and is going to go places. I’d offer her a full-time job. (And stay on her good side.)

    1. Lady Ariel Ponyweather*

      Honestly, I have known one or two people in my life who would have the audacity and quick-thinking to do something like this. Not that I think it happened in this situation, though.

  38. Q*

    Did this coworker get fired? They absolutely should have been, and OP doesn’t say.

    (Considering the tone of the rest of the letter, I assume they would have mentioned the firing, but it’s hard to tell).

    1. CS Rep By Day, Writer By Night*

      Yeah, I’ve never worked for a company where stealing from another employee wasn’t cause for immediate termination. One place I worked, someone was let go because they took someone’s lunch out of the break room refrigerator and ate it (not a mistake or misunderstanding from what I understand – they just though it looked better than what they had that day and helped themselves).

      1. abra*

        oh wow i *wish* i worked places where lunch thieves were treated that way. even serial offenders are just allowed to carry on pilfering. at one workplace, it was just Known that you could never bring a burrito for lunch because one particular employee, the Burrito Thief, would automatically take it.

      2. Oryx*

        Ironically, my manager at the prison was known for stealing other people’s food all.the.time and he somehow still had a job.

    2. GreyjoyGardens*

      Yes indeed! This wasn’t an honest mistake along the lines of “Coworker borrowed Intern’s pen and didn’t give it back” or “Coworker drank Intern’s juice from the fridge thinking it was hers.” Coworker stole – STOLE, took what wasn’t hers, filched, purloined, helped herself to – an item of Intern’s clothing that she knew damn well belonged to Intern.

      Eff this “oh but she’s a GOOD person, she GOES TO CHURCH” bullroar. Coworker is a thief and, furthermore, stole from someone lower-ranked and lower-paid. Fire her with extreme prejudice.

    3. Magenta Sky*

      Given that the thief is facing jail time even with the plea bargain, I’d say there’s little reason to rush through the paperwork to fire her. But I’d rather hope they did.

  39. Ramona Flowers*

    Okay, so here’s the bit that’s confusing me. Would the intern not have cancelled her credit card once she knew it was missing? Did she cancel the card? If not, that’s a bit fishy.

      1. Ramona Flowers*

        I’m just really curious as to why it wasn’t cancelled. That doesn’t mean I’m siding with the jacket thief.

        1. Snark*

          She might not have realized her wallet was in the jacket for a while. My cards live in my back right pocket, but my wife’s wallet tends to migrate between her outerwear, computer bag, purse, and car center console and occasionally goes on little solo adventures. And buying your entire Amazon wishlist doesn’t take hours.

          1. teclatrans*

            Snark, thank you for this delightful description of your wife’s wallet’s peregrinations. (Solo adventures, lol.)

          2. That Would Be a Good Band Name*

            My cards are also migratory. I can’t tell you the number of times I’ve texted my husband in the middle of the day to ask if he remembered seeing it somewhere. Because, uh, clearly it just went wandering on it’s own and may have walked past him at some point.

            1. abra*

              if this happens frequently, consider looking for a card that will let you temporarily ‘freeze’ your account when it goes missing? you don’t need to cancel it that way — you can put an automatic temporary hold on any and all uses of the card, to keep it safe until you find it again.

            2. teclatrans*

              My husband has received these calls. From now on I am going to imagine my cards on lunch dates and quests with other wallets & cards.

        2. Loose Seal*

          The thieving coworker was not in the meeting when she stole the jacket, right? And the online shopping took place at work? It’s not hard to imagine that the debit card fraud took place before the intern was out of the meeting (should be a timestamp on the office computer, the bank statement, and Amazon website, I would imagine) so by the time she realizes the theft occurred, the damage was done.

        3. Starbuck*

          I often go a day or two at a time without using my wallet, especially in the middle of the week, and sometimes I can’t remember right away which coat pocket/bag I left it in when I do need it again. It’s not an implausible scenario. I really should sign up for text alerts on my cards if I’m going to keep living this way.

    1. Temperance*

      This comment is really reaching. I wouldn’t have immediately canceled a card as soon as my wallet is missing, because I would be busy looking for my wallet and trying to find it.

        1. Fronzel Neekburm*

          You would, because you’ve been a victim. An intern, who’s presumably young? She may not have done it right away for many reasons. Maybe because she thought it was just this person stealing her jacket and being done with it. Maybe she didn’t think they’d be stolen so quickly. Maybe, maybe, maybe, maybe… I don’t know. We have one side of this story, the side that is trying to say that someone is a saint when she was caught on camera stealing. I tend to give the victim a little more benefit of the doubt when they’re the ones being stolen from, and it’s on camera.

          this isn’t a case of “Oh my jacket went missing and I FOUND it in this woman’s car.” That’s framing. She was caught. On camera. Stealing. Taking something that did not belong to her. The jacket in question was the property of another person, and she used her power imbalance to attempt to garner sympathy. “I’ve been here for a while and go to church, you’re an intern.”

          After that, little questions like “why didn’t she cancel her credit card in time” is irrelevant.

          Caught.
          On Camera.
          Stealing.
          Why is there other discussion about Staff vs. Intern behavior?

          1. Sarah*

            It could also be intern really needed that card to pay for stuff (interns are usually not making a ton of money), and so she was really hoping it would turn up safely/had been misplaced/etc. and she wouldn’t need to cancel it and get a new one. She also may just not be credit card savvy — I feel like at 21 or 22 or whatever I probably would not have immediately thought to cancel a stolen credit card, just because it would have never happened to me before.

            1. many bells down*

              I actually had to close a bank account once after some of my checks were stolen. I left enough in it two pay two outstanding checks of $X and $Y, and specified that those were the ONLY valid checks to be paid, and they were and I figured that was it.

              A few weeks later the bank hit me with an overdraft of $500 on the CLOSED ACCOUNT. Yeah, they still paid a check number *that I had told them was stolen* and tried to ding me for it. Fortunately I was able to clear that up, but sometimes even doing the right thing doesn’t protect you.

              1. Starbuck*

                Ugh, yes. I once had a bank atm somehow deposit a $3000 check into an account with them that I’d closed many years prior, rather than my currently active checking account. It took them almost a month to figure out where the money had gone and get it back to me. If I hadn’t saved that ATM receipt, who knows when/if they would have found it. Even showing them the receipt (printed with check images!) didn’t resolve things immediately.

                1. Can’t remember what name I used before*

                  Something like that happened to an ex BF of mine, only the deposit just disappeared into the ether. Worse, when he contacted his bank, they basically accused him of lying/trying to con them. He was not very organized, so he was panicking until we found the ATM, receipt- but we did, and it got resolved, finally. After which, he closed his account there, and told them exactly why. Not because of the glitch in the ATM, but because of treating him like he was a liar and thief right from the get go.

            2. ChurchLady*

              My debit number was stolen about a year ago. My bank didn’t offer a “quick” replacement — it took a week. I fortunately had my Target debit card, so I could buy almost anything I needed and get cash for gas, etc. Sometimes you have to deal with the bureaucracy. At 21 or 22, I never would have thought about these things. As a 40-something I cancelled that card ASAP.

        2. Natalie*

          Eh, I have too, but I’ve also temporarily misplaced cards and then spent a ton of time updating autopays and what not. Generally I try to determine that the card is most likely missing before canceling it.

        3. Jaydee*

          I wouldn’t because I have never been a victim of identity theft, but I have been a victim of my own ADHD many times. Debit card not in wallet? Where did I use it last? Oh yeah, I went to the grocery store yesterday and I was wearing my red hoodie. Get home from work, look in pocket of red hoodie, find debit card.

          1. Elizabeth West*

            I lost a debit card once after going to Walgreens. Called them; nobody reported it turned in. Called the bank immediately and canceled the card, and I ran into the branch where they made me a new one.

            Several months later, guess what turned up in the crack between the driver’s seat and the console of my car? Now I make SURE I stick it back in my wallet immediately after using it.

            1. ChurchLady*

              Lost my card once at an electronics store during Christmas shopping. Didn’t notice for two days, then cancelled. The store found it and called a week later. Lucky, lucky me no charges.

              I have also left cards in the back pocket of my jeans then found them in the laundry (hi, I put them there after swiping at the gas pump!)

              I have *finally* learned to put them away every.single.time.no.matter.what.

              1. Can’t remember what name I used before*

                I’ll stick my card in my bra on occasions like that. Worst case scenario, it falls out on my bedroom floor when I’m getting undressed that night. If I go somewhere else and realize it’s not in my wallet, I know exactly where to look for it, and there’s certainly no chance it’s going to accidentally fall out (or get pickpocketed! )

                I have severe executive function disorders that went undiagnosed until I was almost 50, so it was coming up with little tricks like this that kept my life from completely falling apart at the seams.

          2. Starbuck*

            Bingo! I sometimes worry about the odds that if I ever get pulled over for whatever reason, will I have my ID on me? It’s about 50/50 currently.

      1. Ramona Flowers*

        So not it’s not ‘really reaching’, I’m just saying most people will cancel a lost card because you need to cancel it in order to not be liable for fraudulent purchases made on it.

        1. Marillenbaum*

          I think people will cancel a lost card once they’re sure it has, in fact, been lost. If you’re at work, that might mean waiting until you get home to make sure it isn’t on your desk, or in your other jacket from when you ran to the corner store, or…
          Essentially, it isn’t unreasonable for the intern not to have immediately called it in.

          1. Delta Delta*

            I totally agree with you. Since we don’t know the timeline exactly, maybe coworker took the jacket in the morning, and intern didn’t realize it was gone until the afternoon when she went to put it on to go home. Meanwhile the amazon shopping bonanza happened. Even if she cancelled the card at that point, the shopping was done already.

          2. Jaguar*

            Yup. I’ve “lost” my credit card numerous times and haven’t cancelled it because, invariably, it turns out I left it at home / some weird place (I can’t count the times I’ve hung up a pair of jeans on a clothes hangar and the credit card I didn’t realize was still in it fell out). I’ve never actually lost card, and given my experience of constantly misplacing it, I’m weighing the options between “if I cancel, I won’t have a card for X number of days” vs “if I don’t cancel, someone might make purchases on it, which I’ll have to dispute” against the odds that it really was stolen or I just misplaced it. The result is that I cross off every single place that I could have placed it before calling in, and I’ve never gotten to the point of calling in.

            I can see where someone who has had their identity stolen would be vigilant about it, but that’s not many people’s experiences.

        2. Temperance*

          I’ve had my card stolen a few times as well, and the first thing I would do is look for it. The second thing I would do is cancel it.

        3. Lily Rowan*

          That’s not true. I’ve noticed fraudulent charges on my bill (so, days/weeks after the fact), then called the company and THEN had the card cancelled, and was definitely not liable for the fraudulent charges.

          I’ve experienced all the kinds of credit card fraud/identity theft, AMA.

          1. Sarah*

            Agree, I have always had charges refunded (and very easily, like one phone call to clear it up), regardless of when/whether I reported the card stolen. I’m not saying that’s ALWAYS the case (clearly some people get screwed over by credit card theft/fraud) but certainly it’s been my experience with the big credit card companies.

          2. Annabelle*

            Yeah, this happened to me earlier in the year and that’s exactly how I caught it. If the intern didn’t need her card that day she may not have known it was gone until the thief was already using it.

          3. ChurchLady*

            This happened on my work’s credit card. There was a charge of ~$1500 no one at work would have made. I got the card cancelled that day, and a fraud investigation started, even though I was not a named cardholder, but the office manager. We were not held responsible for the charges.

        4. Rusty Shackelford*

          most people will cancel a lost card because you need to cancel it in order to not be liable for fraudulent purchases made on it.

          But you’ve got a grace period. Thirty days, I believe. Because you might not even know until you get a statement.

        5. LBK*

          I once lost my wallet in a cab and waited a few days before cancelling my cards because I was hoping it would turn up. If I thought my wallet was just missing rather than stolen I’d probably keep an eye on my accounts but not actually cancel anything until I’d either given up looking for it or fraudulent charges started showing up.

        6. Ainomiaka*

          Most people will cancel the card, yes. But before that many people will double check at home and in the car to be sure the wallet isn’t just in another coat. Waiting to be able to do a full check. . . just isn’t suspicious behavior.

        7. Loose Seal*

          You are only liable for $50 if you report the loss in 48 hours. Most banks will even waive that for you. You are only liable up to $500 if you report the loss more than two days after but within 60 days of receiving the bank statement that would show fraudulent activity. Look up the Electronic Funds Transfer Act (assuming you’re in the U.S.).

          Don’t get me wrong; there’s been times in my life where I couldn’t have afforded the $50, much less the $500. But it’s not quite as dire as you make it out to be if you don’t notice it’s missing right away. Sure, if you are mugged, report it right away; you know it’s gone. But taking a few hours to search for a possibly misplaced card isn’t gong to cost you more than taking two days to search.

          1. abra*

            depending on the company’s policy, you may not even be liable for that. i’ve had my card numbers skimmed a few times now, and each time my card company has notified *me* of the fraudulent activity and either declined/frozen the pending transactions or waived the full charged amounts on my statement.

        8. MCMonkeyBean*

          You don’t have to have already cancelled your card to report charges as fraudulent. Someone made fraudulent purchases on my Macy’s card. All I had to do was call them and say “I didn’t place these charges” and they sent me a letter in the mail to sign swearing they weren’t my charges.

      2. blackcat*

        Yeah, I might not do it within 24 hours because the one time I lost my wallet, it showed up at my house about 12 hours later. Everything was still inside along with a note to the effect of “Hi! I found this on X street, and checked your ID to find your address.” I definitely kept a close eye on charges for a while, but not having to cancel all cards/get new ones was really nice.

        I have multiple friends who have experienced the same thing with lost wallets, including having a wallet be mailed to them.

      3. Lilo*

        She could have done it before intern realized it was taken. Intern probably initially assumed someone moved her jacket, not that it was stolen. Some people also do not immediately jump to cancelling and if you can’t remember some card info off the top of your head, taking time to do so can be a decent chunk of effort. Nothing suspicious in that.

      4. TootsNYC*

        the intern may also have been preoccupied with haranguing security to see the tape, and calling the cops.

        And, once she saw the security tape and knew it was the coworker, she may have thought it wouldn’t be difficult to get the wallet back, because she may have assumed the coworker only wanted the jacket, and wouldn’t go so far as to use the credit cards.

    2. Cat*

      I don’ think it’s that suspicious. First of all, there could have been a gap between the theft and her discovering the jacket was stolen. Most people aren’t keeping track of their jacket the entire time at work. Second, most people won’t leap immediately to “theft” when their jacket is missing–and cancelling cards is a huge pain in the ass–so it wouldn’t surprise me at all if there was a period where Intern was looking for the jacket assuming that it was just misplaced, but hadn’t cancelled their cards yet.

    3. Rusty Shackelford*

      It sounds like it all could have happened pretty quickly. Employee snags jacket, runs it out to her car, finds wallet, runs back inside and places orders while the intern is still in the meeting with everyone else.

      1. LavaLamp*

        Amazon has this nifty feature that will use your phone camera to read a card so you don’t have to type it in. Coworker could’ve done the ordering while at her car.

    4. OhNo*

      Depends on how long it took her to a) realize that it was missing, b) realize that it was stolen, and c) get a hold of her bank/credit card company.

      I had to deal with this recently – a friend had his car stolen. Took him until the morning to realize that it had disappeared, another hour or so to realize that he’d left his wallet in the glove compartment, and about three more hours to actually get through to each of his credit card companies to actually cancel the cards.

      He got lucky, in that the thief hadn’t used them. But if they had? They would’ve had anywhere between four and twelve hours to hit every store or shopping website they could. Especially with online shopping, someone can place a LOT of orders within just a few minutes.

    5. Roscoe*

      I mean, I keep my wallet in my pocket most times. But I can imagine that if I did leave it in a jacket, and the jacket when missing in the office, I wouldn’t cancel my credit card immediately. I’d look around the office (maybe I didn’t leave it where I thought I did). I’d ask to see if anyone grabbed it by accident. And at the end of the day, if I still couldn’t find it, I’d cancel it then. But I wouldn’t do that right away.

  40. Nervous Accountant*

    I just don’t know how OP can gloss over “A staff member really liked the intern’s jacket and would often comment saying so. When the jacket went missing, the intern went to security and the footage from the lobby and parking area showed the staff member taking the jacket to her car when most other people were in a meeting.” and then say the CW is credible?

    Something else is going on here, but this is so….how can you gloss over that ??

    1. Geoffrey B*

      That got my attention too. How many times can you compliment the same jacket before it starts feeling creepy?

      Alison mentioned that it’s unusual that somebody would be stupid enough to use their own name with a stolen credit card, and usually I’d agree, but it feels like the same kind of stupid as being really obvious about your interest in a jacket before stealing it on camera.

    1. queenbeemimi*

      Right?? What is this mythical item that can drive a supposedly-reasonable person to blatant thievery? I myself am very prone to covetousness but it’s never even occurred to me to steal like that!

      1. Elizabeth H.*

        I too am very prone to covetousness of clothing. If there is something I like enough I will attempt VERY assiduously to find it on eBay. I am obsessed with this pair of yoga pants (matches with top of the same pattern) actually from Lucky Lotus that my roommate has, but I can’t find any at all of their yoga pants online.
        I can understand being so obsessed with some article of clothing that you fantasize about stealing it. It doesn’t even need to be expensive or fancy. But actually stealing it is wrong.

      2. Grumpy*

        I’m embarrassed to admit that I remember Lohan doing this with a fur coat at a club. The rightful owner got it back and gave an interview to the NY Post.

          1. Cruciatus*

            Dear Ask A Manager,

            My brothers tried to kill me for being dad’s favorite, but eventually I landed on my own two feet thanks to dreams I have that helped me convince a country to prepare for famine. I’m now at the top of my career but my brothers are visiting and they don’t know who I am. Can I put a goblet in young Benjamin’s sack and accuse him of thievery to see what they do and if they are now honest men?

            1. Ex-Academic, Future Accountant*

              Dear Ask A Manager,

              My boss just fired me from my baking job and had me thrown in jail. What should I put on my resume? P.S. I keep having this dream where I’m carrying baskets of bread, but it all gets eaten by birds.

              1. Chinook*

                Depends – were you wearing a distinctly technicolour coat at the time of the alleged crime or was this after it was stolen by your brothers? Also, next time the boss’s wife attempts to assault you, you need to make sure that there are witnesses who won’t stab you in the back to get ahead.

                On the plus side, those dreams mean you are going to do great things and get to rub it in the faces of those jacket stealing brothers.

            1. Candi*

              “Sure as bananas need the sun
              We are the criminal guilty ones”

              This is amazing. :)

              I… might own the DVD. :p (And Cats)

    2. NW Mossy*

      For those watching the current season of Project Runway, I’m imagining it as one of the ones that Claire and Shawn showed in their audition – a leather moto/bomber thing with a giant crystal tiger on the back.

      1. Adlib*

        I didn’t even see their audition! Have 2 people ever been more annoying in the history of the show, or of television itself?

    3. LCL*

      The part of my brain that stores stereotypes is picturing a heavyset older woman stealing a jacket from a slim younger woman that older woman couldn’t wear anyway because she couldn’t get it zipped. Also Dana Carvey as Church Lady doing something like this…

      1. ChurchLady*

        I had a fabulous, classic, wool, Ralph Lauren jacket years ago. I was much heavier, so I couldn’t even wear it now, really. But I am still sad I donated it.

        That being said, I still wouldn’t steal it (or one like it)!!!

    4. Daffodil*

      I’m wondering how unique it must have been to be recognizable on security camera. One of my former coworkers – a very straight-laced lady – wore a classically styled but bright lime green raincoat. I always loved seeing it.

      1. Elizabeth West*

        Our corporate HR person at OldExJob had the most amazing tiger-print jacket. She said it was a sports fan thing, but it looked like a trench. I loved it and said so. But I would never STEAL it!!

      2. Adlib*

        I still have a bright, shiny PURPLE leather moto-style jacket I got in college! I haven’t worn it in years, but I am so going to because I have stopped caring what people think. :D

    5. Alleira*

      I’m really hoping that it’s an electric blue suede jacket with large rhinestone accents. (My mother owned this exact jacket in the 80s. It may also have had fringe, but I am not 100% sure).

      1. Ex-Academic, Future Accountant*

        One of my (female) professors in college had this red motorcycle jacket with some zip-up pockets (probably big enough to hold a wallet, in fact). I was picturing the intern’s jacket as something along those lines.

      1. LavaLamp*

        I have a very distinctive, heavy black and purple motorcycle coat (it’s actually got padding and stuff for protection) and it’s very distinctive.

    6. vjt*

      OP, I so hope you don’t feel too piled-on. I sincerely would love to hear an u pdate from you, and a reaction to the commentariat’s opinions.

  41. Fronzel Neekburm*

    I’m glad Allison posted this letter as a prime example of the problem all advice columnists face, which is that they’re just getting one side of the story.

    The person who stole the jacket – I’m sorry, was seen on the security camera stealing an intern’s jacket – is a “good person” with no other problems, who is active in the church, has a great family, and is a few steps away from sainthood while this poor intern – who, as an intern is making less, if any money – had their jacket stolen, and then immediately sought revenge other than getting the police involved, and therefor lied to them! Because revenge!

    LetterWriter: your employee is not the saint you make her out to be, she stole a jacket, and then she committed credit card fraud. She used her real name so she could pick it up at the offsite location (she needed to show her ID) Your intern is the victim. There are bigger issues with your employee, who stole something from an intern, you just haven’t noticed until now.

  42. Temperance*

    LW, if you and your staff have actual concerns about this intern, please do raise them with your boss. However, I will say that I find it pretty unkind that you’re willing to believe that statements of a known thief and her straight-up RIDICULOUS claims over the victim of a crime.

    Stop talking to the thief and her husband. Hopefully the thief was fired. It doesn’t matter one iota that the thief is “active in her church”, because, well, she certainly isn’t obeying those 10 Commandments that y’all are so keen on. I also wouldn’t use that as proof of the thief’s good character, because it just comes off as religious prejudice to me.

    1. Amy*

      I’m wondering if there is some resentment on the side of the other staff for the intern taking this to the police and getting the co worker in trouble. Especially since some of them see to think she “only” stole a coat and didn’t commit credit card fraud as well. I’m guessing some of them think she should have brushed it aside and been happy with getting the coat back. I mean the co worker is a good person who goes to church.

      1. Temperance*

        Oh I definitely think that this is the case. I mean, the allegations against the intern are frankly so outlandish that I’m kind of side-eyeing any adult who believes them.

      2. GreyjoyGardens*

        This is the mentality that allows abuse to continue. “Don’t report her, she’s a good person who didn’t MEAN to steal your jacket!” “Why did Jane report Fergus for sexual harassment, he’s a great guy, a family man, an amazing co-worker, and she’s a slutty slut who wants to get back at a nice man! Let it slide!” “Why did Sam report Lucinda for embezzlement, she’s such a sweet lady who needed to feed her family! Sam is so heartless! Let it slide!”

        I don’t know if this is the case, but if Intern is an outsider in some way (race, sexuality, disability, not going to church), or just maybe disliked/unpopular, and Coworker is much better liked by others, it might explain why LW is leaping to Coworker’s defense and thinking that Intern must be behind an elaborate revenge plot.

        1. Lady Ariel Ponyweather*

          Thank you for this. I was trying to figure out what was bothering me about the OP’s language/tone and this is exactly it. Maybe OP was still in shock when she originally wrote the letter and perhaps she’s changed her mind. But yes, this is exactly that sort of mentality. The mental gymnastics of ‘well, maybe it was this other thing’ or playing devil’s advocate, despite the evidence.

          I do get the impulse to back-up someone you know and like, but yes, let logic take over and look at the facts.

        2. Lison*

          I’m probably wrong and we don’t have a timeline but I’m imagining it like 1) jacket went missing then intern may have made accusations 2) charges showed up on interns account with coworkers name and intern starts asking more questions 3) co-worker says “intern is trying to set me up by ordering stuff in my name but I didn’t do it. LW buys into this narrative 4) intern asks for tapes/ involves the police and it becomes clear coworker took the jacket. 5) LW is so invested in the intern is setting me up thing that even when it’s “yes I did steal the jacket” they still want to believe the set up thing. “Yes I did take the jacket but there was no card and even if there was I wouldn’t do something like that, you know me”

      3. Candi*

        To sort of quote Alison: the intern didn’t get the thief in trouble, she got herself in trouble, via her sticky hands. The intern simply reported the matter.

        Of course, you’re likely right LW and co don’t see it that way.

    2. Engineer Girl*

      I’m wondering if the OP started searching for problems with the intern AFTER the intern reported coworker. Clearly the OP has a strong relationship with the coworker so this kind of after-the-fact problem hunting seems to justify the OPs position.

      This reminds me in the old days when women reported sexual harassment. All of a sudden their work was sub par and they “couldn’t get along” with others.

  43. WhiteBear*

    I love that the intern whose jacket was stolen is automatically assumed to be lying to the police. I guess she should think twice before leaving the house wearing clothes that others might like.

    The thieving coworker is facing jail time for credit card theft. Of course she has motive to state she only stole the jacket, that reduces it from a white collar crime prison sentence to misdemeanor/petty theft slap on the wrist.

    1. queenbeemimi*

      That’s the opposite of what happened. They’re hiring someone whose jacket was stolen.

      (I agree it seems more plausible for an intern to commit an outrageous act, but that’s not what went down this time. It was an established employee committing theft, which is causing aspersions to be cast on the victim-intern because… Reasons?)

      1. Here we go again*

        It is not more plausible for an intern to commit an “outrageous act” such as stealing. People of all ages, races, backgrounds etc. steal. Interns may not be attune to the workings of an office environment. This is not about working in an office environment. This is about being a criminal.

      2. AKchic*

        Um… hello? She was ASKING for it to be stolen. You DO NOT come to work as an intern flaunting such a nice jacket like that. Linda even said she liked it. More than once! Rules of office etiquette decree that if a paid staffer declares that they like your jacket (and more than once!) that an intern must gift the coveted jacket upon the admirer. Didn’t you know that? Especially if the coveting staffer is a church-goer and an upstanding community member. You must ingratiate yourself with staffers like that. They might be able to point you towards more influential employees who can benefit your career (so you can replace that jacket later in your career, when you are worthy and important enough to own a nice jacket from a lowly intern).

        She deserved getting that jacket taken. She didn’t understand the rules. The credit card fraud? Pah! That was merely an extra punishment for not knowing her place in the pecking order. How dare she have a nice jacket that Linda didn’t have and not gift it when she clearly should have. *eye roll*

  44. Lauren*

    Were the amazon purchases made from a specific account?
    If the packages were ordered from the account of the coworker that stole the jacket, that would mean the intern would have had to hack into her coworkers amazon account in order to make the purchases and frame her coworker (unless the amazon login information was saved to a communal computer) which seems highly unlikely.
    Could be an easy way to clear things up: whoever’s account was used was probably the one who made the purchases (either coworker or intern). Assuming an account was used at all of course.

    1. Magenta Sky*

      The orders were sent to “a pick up point near our office.” Seems likely there was an ID check in there somewhere (though there’s not enough details to be sure).

      I’ll bet the cops know for sure, though.

  45. Corporateville*

    So upon realizing some of her most important monetary possessions are missing the intern immediately logged on Amazon to order items under the name of someone she isn’t even sure took them?
    Not to bring age into this but I could believe that the staff member would be less electronically savvy than an intern (totally assuming the staff member is older and the intern is younger judging by the info on the staff member). She might not have known that her name could be linked to the order.
    Also, I’m not sure about anyone else but I literally need my card in front of me to make orders. I do not know any of my card numbers off the top of my head. If the card were in the staff member’s possession at the time.
    I also find it incredibly naive for someone to believe a person that was confirmed to steal a jacket. Who cares if she’s involved in the church? She literally STOLE a jacket from an intern AFTER complimenting it numerous times. You would think someone wouldn’t steal something they’ve been known to compliment so her putting her personal info on the Amazon orders isn’t far fetched.
    Furthermore, the police don’t just jump to conclusions and they probably have greater info that they can’t disclose until after trial which they know for certain the staff member made the orders.
    How convenient for the staff member to only own up to the things that were caught on camera.

    1. Lauren*

      Oooo excellent point about needing your credit card in front of you to make a purchase. I don’t think I even have the last 4 digits of my credit card memorized.

        1. Aphrodite*

          Yes, Amazon does save your credit card information. But if you change your address you have to input the entire card number, the expiration date and the code on the back again before the company will ship the order to the new address.

      1. Government Worker*

        I was about to post that plenty of people have their payment information saved in their Amazon accounts… but it makes you re-enter the card number if you change the shipping address, including changing the name on the shipping address. So intern would have had to have the card number memorized or have a copy of the card. Plenty of people do have their card numbers memorized, but I stopped having mine memorized a few years ago when we entered the age of massive security breaches where credit card issuers replace cards all the time.

      2. Joie De Vivre*

        With Amazon you can save your credit card number and select it as the method of payment. Easy to do even if your card isn’t in front of you.

        1. Sarah*

          But then it could not have been shipped to the co-worker’s name/pick-up point. (It makes you re-enter the full number to ship to a new address, to prevent someone breaking into your account and shipping things to themselves.)

          1. Magenta Sky*

            Of course, if you have that person’s entire wallet, you have their driver’s license, with the home address. (Which, BTW, you also want, because all online merchants use AVS, which verifies the numeric part of the street address and zip code for the billing address.)

        2. Lauren*

          If I’m trying to frame my coworker for credit card fraud I’m not going to make purchases from my own personal amazon account where I have my credit card information saved because it implies that not only did my coworker steal my jacket, and my wallet, but she also hacked into my personal amazon account to make the purchases, which is a little far fetched I think. (Which, if she can hack into your amazon account and your credit card information is saved, she didn’t need to steal your credit card in the first place).
          Which means I need to use a new amazon account to make the purchases, and I need to have my credit card information memorized (which is why the whole “intern-framed-coworker-theory isn’t very plausible)

    2. Amber Rose*

      I could probably get account numbers by logging in to my online banking, but it wouldn’t have the CVV, which many places require now. Also… why? Like, why put yourself into a position where you’re out a ton of money which you presumably need to pay bills, and may not get back any time soon? Just for revenge? Seems like it would be more painful to the intern.

      1. Akcipitrokulo*

        My online shows it as “**** **** **** 1234” – they don’t display the full thing.

        And yes, it is possible to memorise it… but not very likely…

        So now we have an intern who memorised her card number in advance, realised her coat was missing, either magically intuited that co-worker had taken it or rubbed her Machiavellian hands together that co-worker had fallen for the bait, got onto a PC without leaving any trace, logged into co-worker’s amazon account or created a new amazon account just for the occasion…

        Sorry… this is not getting past my suspension of disbelief. I mean it’s *possible* …

        1. Snark*

          I feel like this is a corollary to Ockham’s Razor: between two scenarios, the one that does not involve people behaving like the villain in a Reese Witherspoon movie is probably the most plausible one.

        2. Polar Bear don't care*

          I have my VISA memorized. Expiry and security code too. I do too much online shopping. So that part doesn’t seem outlandish to me.

          But the rest? This is all on the thieving coworker and I don’t believe the intern did anything.

          1. Tau*

            I have mine memorised, but memorising long sequences of random information in an absurdly short time is something of a freak skill of mine so I’m never sure how viable this is for most people.

            Agreed that coworker’s version of events seems dubious. I’m trying to imagine the frame of mind you’d have to be in to realise your jacket had been stolen and go “I know! I’ll hatch an elaborate plan involving fake Amazon orders in order to get the thief into even more trouble!” It is… rather harder to imagine than someone stealing a jacket, realising there’s a wallet in the pocket and thinking of their Amazon wishlist.

            1. BPT*

              When you realize that most people used to have a lot of phone numbers memorized (I used to be able to remember at least 20 friends/family numbers), I think most people can probably memorize a credit card number. But even so, the coworker’s story seems implausible.

              1. DArcy*

                Phone numbers are relatively easy to memorize because they’re seven digits, which is exactly what most people’s digit memory span is (ie, the number of digits you can reliably memorize and repeat on the fly). This is in fact WHY phone numbers are that length and why they split area codes to keep them that length instead of going to eight or nine.

                Credit cards are sixteen digits, not impossible to memorize but vastly harder, and for most people impossible “on the fly”.

          2. Elizabeth H.*

            I don’t do a really huge amount of online shopping, I have a pretty great but not freak memory, and I have my visa, expiry, security code perfectly memorized. It always amazes me how or why anyone doesn’t.

            1. Brittasaurus Rex*

              I don’t use my cards that much, so I don’t have them memorized, not even the last four digits.

        3. TootsNYC*

          yeah, I can’t get the full account number from my online screen. I know, because I tried to do that once.

    3. queenbeemimi*

      Well, if I’m signed in to my Amazon account, it remembers my cards for me. It’s also not entirely impossible for someone to have their credit card number memorized– when I was doing a lot of online purchasing and only had one card, I knew mine.

      But that’s all moot, since I think it’s unlikely the intern set up this elaborate cat-and-mouse game, whatever her other character flaws. It’s just too absurd, and I’d need to see some kind of corroborating evidence before I even considered it.

    4. Becky*

      Amazon will save your card information automatically making your purchases easier, but if you try to have an order sent to a new address it will always ask you to enter a credit card manually.

  46. neverjaunty*

    OP, even your friend admits she stole the jacket. She wasn’t exactly stealing bread to feed her starving children: she swiped a jacket from an intern for no apparent reason other than that she liked it, putting her job, her credibility and her family at risk.

    If you want to be a loyal friend, instead maybe think about what motivated her do so such a thing, which according to you is at odds with her entire character. That’s much more productive and likely to lead you to ways to help her than buying ridiculous conspiracy theories about the person she stole from.

    1. LCL*

      Yeah, the simplest answer is that jacket stealer isn’t the person everyone thinks she is. But it’s also possible something is going on with her. If the company is going to allow her to continue to be employed, someone should talk to her and dig deeper for an explanation. Could be gambling, drugs, incredible stress or illness or something the company doesn’t know about.

  47. Some2*

    The stealer has 0 credibility here. In fact, depending on the value of the amazon orders, it could push the charge up from some petty theft misdemeanor up into felony status. If I was the coat thief I’d be doing everything I can to obfuscate my role (if any) in that as well.

  48. Former Retail Manager*

    Pretty sure I’m in the minority on this, but I am astonished that the police were called over a stolen jacket that was caught on tape. I can see calling the thief into HR, showing her the tape, demanding she return the jacket, and promptly firing her, but calling the police….over a jacket….meh, seems a bit dramatic to me. I realize that the intern was well within her rights do so, but as an intern presumably hoping to secure permanent employment, I don’t think I’d immediately jump to calling the police to deal with a jacket. But maybe that’s just me?

    As for the credit card theft, I think the answer will lie in the Amazon account used to purchase the goods and who shows up to pick up the stuff, if anyone.

    Also, I realize that OP seems to think this was a one-off, rare occurrence for the thief. I’m inclined to believe otherwise. Depending upon the nature of the thief’s job, I’d be inclined to consider whether she could have done anything unethical related to her work in the past and review that work accordingly. If you’ll steal a jacket from a co-worker you see regularly and have a decent rapport with, what else will you do?

    1. Amber Rose*

      Some companies have a policy about that. I know when I worked at Walmart, for example, we got the LP lecture about how company policy is to call the cops over everything, whether it’s an expensive electronic or a 99 cent piece of candy.

      1. New Girl*

        Walmarts in my county have a new policy/agreement with law enforcement that they only call for shop lifting over a $100 value, or the person is a notorious/known shoplifter because it was clogging up law enforcement time and courts.

    2. Former Retail Manager*

      I just realized that the police may not have become involved until the Amazon issue came to light. In which case, I would have done the same.

      1. Manders*

        Yeah, it may even be possible that the intern’s bank notified the police–sometimes when you report credit card fraud to your bank, that can get a criminal investigation started. I’ve heard of people being afraid to report their friends and family members for fraud for this reason, there isn’t usually an option for “I know who stole from me and I want my money back but I don’t want the police involved” once you report a crime.

    3. blackcat*

      I can see going to the police if the jacket was valuable and if the employer didn’t respond appropriately. And, frankly, if the employer didn’t respond appropriately, I might not want to work for them anyways.

      The timeline is a bit unclear, though. If it was
      1. Jacket went missing
      2. Amazon purchases discovered
      3. Police called

      that makes a lot of sense to me. If the amount is in the hundreds of dollars, I’d definitely involve police. Plus, my credit card nominally has the rule that if I know who committed the fraud (or suspect someone), I have to press charges to get the funds repaid. Now I’ve never actually dealt with this so I don’t know if they’d enforce it, but I wouldn’t at all be surprised if the credit card company or amazon got in touch with the police directly.

      Just a jacket would be different, I think.

      1. nonymous*

        The one time I had fraudulent charges, the CC company asked for the case number for the police investigation (I didn’t have one b/c the CC company actually altered me and they quickly said their internal investigation meant I didn’t need it).

        Re: the jacket theft, it could be that intern is claiming this on her HO insurance (it would have to be a really expensive coat, though). You definitely need verification like a police report or fire report or photographic evidence in that case.

      2. Doreen*

        When I reported the fraudulent use of my credit card, I didn’t have to file a police report- but the written report to the card company required me to agree to cooperate with any prosecution if the card company/police identified the culprit- and if I didn’t the charges would go back on my card.

        1. Ramona Flowers*

          Police did not give a flying monkey when I had someone buy stuff on Amazon using my card. Even though they could have gone to the address it was ordered to.

          1. Former Retail Manager*

            Yeah…this it the situation with the police in my area. Even if the coat and Amazon purchases combined were into the thousands, you wouldn’t even get an in-person meeting with an officer. They’d tell you to file a report via telephone and to contact your credit card company. Bigger fish to fry.

          2. Can’t remember what name I used before*

            After my father died, I found out my brother had stolen his information, got 4 or 5 credit cards in their shared middle name, and run up more than $20k in charges in about two weeks. I did everything necessary to get the cards shut down, the credit reporting companies to flag my dad’s info so no new ones could be applied for, bla bla whole nine yards. I also filed a police report.
            They never followed up on it and nothing was ever done.

      1. Normally A Lurker*

        This though. If this were a $1000+ designer jacket, I’d’ve called the cops too. If it were a $50 Loft jacket, and she was fired, I would prob let it go.

    4. Amy*

      She might have only called the police after she saw the CC charges. And I could see calling the police if the company was like “Well, Sansa gave you your coat back so everything is A-ok now” and didn’t fire her. I posted above I’m guessing some of the resentment to the intern is related to her getting the police involved and “getting” her coworker in trouble. It may not have even been her choice. If she called her CC company up and confirmed she new her card was stolen because she had video evidence they may have gotten the police involved. And don’t forget even if it was incidental the coworker did steal her wallet along with the jacket.

    5. Etak*

      this doesn’t surprise me. As a college student my wallet was stolen, and in order to get a new college ID without being charged $50, I had to present a copy of the police report.

    6. Eva*

      I don’t think the police were called because of the stolen jacket, they were called because of the wallet and credit cards in the jacket.

      1. Owl*

        Yes, this! People keep getting the intern’s story and the thief’s story confused. According to the intern, her jacket, which had her wallet in it, was stolen. So she called the police, because her wallet was stolen. She didn’t necessarily wait for fraudulent charges to show up.

    7. lisalee*

      I could see the police being called over a stolen jacket *and* cash and cards, though. Personally, if my jacket were stolen I would assume someone was after my license and money, not the clothing itself. It could also be a situation where clients and customers are in the same area as employees so anyone could have stolen it and not necessarily a coworker.

      But yeah, there seems to be some weird dynamics in this office even proceeding the theft.

    8. Temperance*

      I think the most likely scenario is that the intern approached security, freaking out (reasonably!) because her jacket and wallet were taken. Security likely pulled the video and called the cops, because, well, a wallet was stolen and credit cards.

      1. Anastasia Beaverhausen*

        That is a good scenario because in a large city, the police are more apt to investigate a theft complaint reported by a security entity than an individual. Sad but true. And then, in a small town, police are more apt to investigate any complaint at all because they are not as bogged down. I am in a large city and I am certain the police would not respond to a garden variety complaint of a stolen jacket, but might if it included ID theft and credit card theft, and probably if presented by a security entity – especially if you brought them the evidence on a silver platter, which seems to be the case. I know this from experience.

    9. Jules the 3rd*

      1) Wallet was in the jacket, which would make me call the police
      2) The post doesn’t say whether the police were called before or after the intern discovered fraudulent Amazon charges. I could totally see the intern checking her CC statement online, seeing pending Amazon charges, and calling the police.

      1. Solidad*

        We also don’t know if the intern called of her own volition or if the response was from the security guard or the HR dept or the CEO.

        There’s absolutely no info on whose call this was in the moment it happened.

      2. Student*

        Even if the police don’t do anything else about a particular crime, having a police reports can be very handy when recovering from a crime.

        For example, credit card companies are usually pretty reasonable about cancelling charges, but a police report pretty much ensures they won’t give you any grief about it. If she needed to file an insurance claim (not likely here, but not impossible – I’ve left jewelry with my wallet on occasion that would merit a claim), she’d really need a police report. If her employer starts behaving irrationally and fires her due to crazy conspiracy theory/victim-blaming, having the police report to back up her version of events would help with the unemployment office.

        I called the police when somebody broke into my apartment once. They didn’t take anything – probably got interrupted mid-break-in. Having the police report meant my apartment complex repaired the busted window they’d used for entry, instead of trying to force me to pay to repair it – even though I didn’t need police to recover anything or really expect them to find the culprit.

    10. McWhadden*

      I think the co-worker has likely done this before and gets away with it precisely because police *aren’t* called most of the time.

      Most people can’t find their jacket/hat/scarf and assume it went missing. They don’t even get HR involved never mind the police. Although a jacket is a bigger item to misplace than most and would cause more concern. But, still, most people just wouldn’t even think it could have been a co-worker.

      Many people see some weird charges on their credit card and call the credit card company. And the card gets cancelled. No police involvement. Data breaches happen so often that no one assumes it was a co-worker. Just someone got hold of your account information.

    11. DArcy*

      Given the attitude displayed by the OP, it’s quite likely that the intern was concerned that HR would not handle the matter fairly despite the video proof.

    12. Daria Grace*

      In some fields like financial services, any theft of any amount by a staff member has to be taken super seriously due to the nature and risks of the work

  49. Amber Rose*

    Trustworthy, respectable people do not see someone’s jacket and decide to steal it instead of, for example, asking where it was purchased from.

    People who do stuff like that are thieves or children. I personally grew out of that behavior at around age 8 when I developed a healthy sense of risk aversion. And in hindsight, I am both horrified and amused at what I got away with as a child who was “above suspicion” because I was quiet and spent most of my time reading. Nobody would’ve guessed, LW. Nobody would have guessed about the secret box with absolute massive stash of really random items under my bed.

    My point is, nearly every time someone is convicted of some crime, the neighbors are on TV saying, “I never would have guessed, she seemed like such a nice person.”

    The evidence is before you. Believe it.

    1. Former Retail Manager*

      Your comment brings back memories. I had a similar personality as a child and you are sooo right…no one ever suspected a thing. All those packs of gum and candy went unnoticed, even by my own parents. I have found that most people who engage in unethical behavior do their very best to make you believe that they would never do such a thing.

      1. Amber Rose*

        I tended to raid the drug store for baby things for my dolls. But also stickers, small toys and keychains, and some cheapy costume jewellery. Despite suddenly having more toys, my parents never realized.

        It helped that my childhood playground had a strong trading economy, so it wasn’t unusual to trade a hat for some marbles or something.

        Being a kid was weird.

    2. Allison*

      My cousin stole a small wizard figurine from me when we were very young. I think I suspected her but didn’t feel like I could say anything, but the adults got it back to me one way or another. I think her mom found it in her room.

    3. LCL*

      Hah. I was the exact opposite of you when I was a small child, in regards to stealing things. Because my parents let my sibs and I run wild, and told us we would face unimaginable punishment and loss of freedom if we were ever caught stealing. So guess which rough, noisy, girl who seriously never stole anything was always the first accused? Yup, holes in my jeans and messy hair, I must be the thief. Grrr.

  50. Rusty Shackelford*

    However one of them has created a situation where she lied to the police

    I love the way the OP never refers to the theiving coworker as a liar. Not once. She stole a jacket and is pleading guilty to the credit card charges, but she’s never called a liar (or a thief, for that matter). But the intern isn’t just “suspected of lying,” she LIED. Seriously, OP, if you’re reading this, take a good long look at the assumptions you’re making and the fingers you’re pointing.

    1. Fronzel Neekburm*

      it’s telling that the phrasing is “one of them has created a situation where she lied to police.” That bothers me.

      She did not create anything. A full time employee stole a jacket from an intern. The employee caused the situation.

      1. Observer*

        To be honest, that jumped out at me. I was going to post about it, but decided to read the comments fort.

        OP, you make it sound like the intern somehow caused your coworker to steal. Do you realize just how ridiculous that sounds?

    2. Solidad*

      Honestly, if I were her boss or HR and she came to me with this narrative, it would impact her career b/c I could not trust her judgment.

      OP really needs to read the comments here and take a serious self-inventory about how and why she’s coming off so badly. If we who are strangers see this so differently based on her own presentation of the facts, what will her company’s leadership think?

      1. Just Jess*

        We can’t be sure how company leadership will react since we just had that letter and update about the coworker who was begging everyone in the office for various loans. That organization decided to promote the serial beggar borrower and hire her husband onto the team even though it was against company policy to have a married couple in a supervisor-direct report situation.

  51. Intel Analyst Shell*

    Eh, I work in the prosecutors office in our investigative divisiin and if the defense attorney is urging her to take a plea they most likely already know who signed for the packages, what email address the Amazon account was linked to, etc. “A trial would not be good for her” usually means “they have so much evidemce you’re an idiot if you think a jury is gonna buy your lame story”. The CW just isn’t sharing this information with the OP. My guess is that this is just the first time CW has been caught, probably “borrowed” a credit card from a friend or family member before and made small enough charges for it to not be noticed or the CC owner let it slide because CW “is just having a though time right now”. So she’s panicking and making up any excuse she can.

    1. Temperance*

      Seriously, “I only stole the jacket and didn’t want the other items” might be the most ridiculous defense, especially because, well, she’s guilty AF.

    2. Rusty Shackelford*

      Yeah, I don’t buy this woman pleading guilty to a crime she didn’t commit just because “a trial would not be good for her.” Particularly when it seems like it would be fairly easy to prove you didn’t make those orders, or at least shed some reasonable doubt. In this case, I think “a trial would not be good for her” doesn’t mean she’s a delicate flower who can’t stand the stress of being questioned. I think it means “because she’s guilty and there’s plenty of evidence to prove it.”

    3. MicroManagered*

      Now, I’m not a detective, but I do watch a lot of Law & Order (heh) and that was my first thought. If Coworker’s attorney is advising her to take a plea, it’s because she’s likely to be found guilty at trial.

      In order to frame her, Intern would’ve had to notice the missing jacket, go to security and view the footage to see Coworker leaving with the jacket, then run to a computer (in an open office without assigned seating), create a fake Amazon account, and place orders with her credit card. Then she would’ve had to report the card stolen — which some companies require an affidavit to do — and lie to the police. When you hear hoofbeats, look for a horse. This is a zebra.

      Dun-da-duhdun-DUN!

      1. Temperance*

        The woman has no credibility. There’s video of her stealing a jacket from an intern. “I stole this one thing but not those other things” is a seriously awful defense.

    4. Solidad*

      Lawyer here. My experience is that cops and prosecutors do not move forward with any credit card theft or any online theft without pretty dead-bang evidence b/c it’s so difficult to walk a jury through these types of cases.

      So, my guess is, the situation is both very clear and easy to prove.

      I also agree that this woman likely has ongoing issues.

    5. Kalros, the mother of all thresher maws*

      This was my thought, too. There is probably a good deal of evidence against coworker that OP is not aware of, but the lawyer is (to say nothing of the implausibility of the “placed Amazon orders in my name” story). Trying to litigate this in the office is not going to accomplish much when there’s been an investigation and legal professionals have given their opinion on the matter.

      OP, if this situation is the only reason you have to mistrust your intern, you should reconsider your opinion of her.

    1. Kate LJ*

      Yep! I was just thinking about how Ted Bundy used to volunteer a lot.
      Some years ago I volunteered at a place that did a lot of stuff – crisis hotline, homeless outreach, elder abuse investigations, help with accessibility ramps, etc. However, the CEO, pillar of the community… embezzled a ton of money from the charity! He was caught and pled out. As I recall there were letters to the editor in the local paper defending him since he was such a *good person.*

      1. Elizabeth West*

        Ted Bundy used to work on a suicide hotline–with crime writer Ann Rule. Who was one of Seattle’s first female police officers. And who was halfway through writing about the case before she realized the mysterious “Ted” was her friend Ted.

        I can see where the OP’s blind spot may lie, but Coworker isn’t anywhere near the level of Ted Bundy or Dennis Rader* in terms of her ability to escape detection.

        *Who, incidentally, is the person I based my literary serial killer on.

        1. Kate LJ*

          LOL of course Coworker is not really like Bundy, Rader, or Gacy…as far as we know! It’s just the “volunteering/church=good person” mentality is ridiculous when there are all these truly evil, famous examples to the contrary, as well as several more mundane ones. The CEO of the place I volunteered with is about on Coworker’s level.

  52. Hey Karma, Over here.*

    “However one of them has created a situation where she lied to the police…”
    Please say this to yourself in the mirror. Can you look yourself in the eye and accuse the victim of theft of “creating a situation” and “lying to the police”?
    If so, please speak to your manager and/or HR and explain that you feel the intern is in the wrong and you won’t be able to work with her. Because your personal feelings about her are going to have serious affects on your working relationship and possibly your career.
    Coworker is taking a plea and going to jail. GOING TO JAIL. This is who you are backing. Not the coworker who goes to church and has a nice family. The thief who is going to jail.
    Step away from this.

  53. Spooky*

    Just a question, but when you enter a new shipping address inn Amazon, doesn’t it make you confirm via email or something?

    1. Kelly L.*

      IIRC, whenever I enter a new shipping address, what it asks me for is the 3-digit number from the back of the card. So Co-worker would have this number if the cards were in the jacket, and Intern would have it if she still had the cards the whole time.

      1. Hey Karma, Over here.*

        It made me enter the whole number. I typically send presents to my nephew’s five year old son, so I use his name with the address. I wanted to send a present to my nephew’s wife at the same address. Even changing the first name from baby nephew to mommy’s name required re-entering all 16 digits. Kind of annoyed about that.

        1. Elizabeth West*

          I don’t think it does that for stored addresses, though. I had my sister’s stored, and also the address of a website I donate music to occasionally. You just choose your shipping address. Either way, however, the coworker would have to enter in the new card number if it wasn’t already on her account.

      2. Karo*

        FWIW, I have my credit card number memorized and also saved somewhere. The intern not having her cards doesn’t necessarily prove that she didn’t do it.

        (I still believe the Intern’s version of events, but it’s not as cut and dry as whoever had the cards ordered from Amazon.)

    2. Becky*

      No it does not make you confirm via email, but it does make you enter your full credit card number when you attempt to ship an order to a new address.

  54. Aphrodite*

    I apologize in advance if this was covered as I am posting my answer before reading all the ones before me. One way to check the truth on this would be if the prosecutor’s office or the police could get a warrant and compare the ordered items to items the two women had previously ordered, seeing if there are similarities. But your company couldn’t do that.

    1. Jessie the First (or second)*

      I really do not think this would prove what you think it proves.

      There are plenty of times I have ordered something off Amazon that I have never ordered before – something entirely different.

      The police did investigate, and got whatever it was they felt was needed, and charged the coworker, and seeing the evidence against her, the defense attorney is telling her to accept a plea.

      Really, we should not be encouraging the OP here to go “check the truth on this” – the OP needs help understanding that what happened has in fact been figured out, and she needs to back off the victim of the theft here.

      1. Candi*

        I have stuff for me and my kids on my Amazon account. My dad doesn’t have an Amazon account, and has me order stuff with his card when he needs/wants something.

        We all have few overlapping interests. Even the sci-fi my son and I each like differs greatly. (Although Scalzi is a riot.)

  55. paul*

    OP, you are not being objective at all here.

    You *know* your coworker stole fromt he intern in one instance.

    The cops, so far, think your coworker was stealing from the intern repeatedly (via CC fraud).

    Yet you’re still trying to blame the intern.

    No. Stop. Your coworker is, 99% likely here, the party at fault, not the intern. Stop trying to pin your friend/coworkers screw ups on a third party.

  56. the_scientist*

    So the intern, upon noticing her jacket had gone missing, immediately suspected the co worker (reasonable, given coworker’s fawning over the jacket), clued in to the fact that her wallet was in there and rather than searching in vain for her missing wallet IMMEDIATELY hacked in to coworker’s Amazon account (since it’s trivial for the police to determine what account the orders were made from) and purchased a bunch of items as part of a deliberate revenge/framing of the coworker for credit card fraud, all while dealing with an HR and police investigation over the initial theft of the jacket. Either the coworker is a liar liar pants on fire or this intern has a very productive espionage career in her future.

    Hint: it’s probably the first option.

    1. Owl*

      Okay, I don’t believe this happened either, but the story is that the intern’s wallet was NOT in the jacket, and she just pretended it was.

      1. the_scientist*

        Which in a way is kind of worse, right? Because then she had to put together missing jacket + must have been coworker + sudden, nefarious plan to frame coworker for serious crime. I just don’t think most people would jump from “Bish stole my jacket” to “I’m going to pretend she took my wallet and credit cards and ran up a bunch of charges from Amazon”…….like that’s pretty devious.

        1. fposte*

          And it doesn’t get her anything more. If she could figure out a way to keep the stuff without paying for it, that’s another matter; that’s more like taking advantage of the situation the way people goose their insurance claims by claiming something super-valuable was damaged in the car wreck. But this is a very big and elaborate revenge plan to hatch within only a few hours of discovering there’s a theft.

  57. Akcipitrokulo*

    I’m not seeing any logical timeline where the intern could have done this – particularly since the wallet and cards were found with the jacket, so at the time the purchases were made, she did not have her card with her … but putting that aside for a moment…

    She stole a jacket. Which keeps people warm and dry. From someone who may not have the means to replace it.

    This is not the act of a good person.

    (It may be she has other mental health issues going on to mitigate her crimes – but it shows zero empathy.)

    1. Sarah*

      This is so true. And although obviously theft is bad regardless, there’s something extra icky about a full-time employee choosing to steal from an INTERN, who is particularly likely not to have extra cash laying around. We don’t know if this is a paid internship or not, but even if the intern is paid, these are typically not well-compensated positions.

      1. Akcipitrokulo*

        Yep. I can see someone living with being cold until next payday… or longer… that’s a shitty thing to do.

    2. Alton*

      I guess it’s possible that the intern could have had her card numbers written down somewhere, or maybe could have accessed the numbers from her credit card company or something?

      But I was thinking the same thing–if the coworker had possession of the cards at the time, that’s definitely suggestive.

  58. Emily*

    I don’t see how the intern could have placed the orders.

    She gets her jacket stolen. She noticed the jacket is gone, along with her wallet. Oh crap! She says, My wallet and jacket are gone! At this point, she doesn’t know who stole it, and doesn’t find out until there is an investigation that shows that the coworker stole it, right? I think it is really implausible, unless there is some serious backstory here, where the intern found out her stuff was missing, decided immediately to order stuff on amazon in the coworker’s name, and THEN it came out that the coworker was really the one who took it. I mean, *maybe* if they were already arch enemies or had a history of major conflict and the intern had every reason to think the coworker did it? But it’s still a risky leap.

    Unless the police told her that the coworker stole it and then waited around for a while before arresting the coworker, there would have been an extremely small window of time (if any at all) where the intern KNEW the jacket had been stolen by coworker, but the coworker had not yet been arrested, and could have plausibly placed the orders in the coworker’s name in order to frame her.

    If the orders were placed before the intern knew who stole it, I don’t think there’s any good reason here to think the intern is lying. If they were placed after…maybe? But still likely not.

    1. Lisa*

      Agreed, I can’t see any way that the Jacket stealers revenge scenario makes any sense. Like the intern was just waiting around to concoct some weird scenario which doesn’t benefit her in any real way. The level of mental gymnastics the LW is going through to believe her work friend is mind boggling.

  59. JD*

    The BTK killer was a active church member who worked for the church. Ok this is not the same but point is that volunteering and being a perceived good person does not mean someone did not commit the crime. That is silly logic.

    1. Temperance*

      RIGHT? I mean, John Wayne Gacy was a regular volunteer and pillar of the community. He visited hospitals as Pogo the Clown to spread joy to kids, and also murdered many men and buried them in the basement.

      1. GreyjoyGardens*

        And Ted Bundy lured his victims under cover of being a “nice,” clean-cut guy. Further back in history, William Burke of Burke and Hare corpse-selling fame was considered a “nice guy” and had a reputation of helping the police – and that’s how he lured victims.

        “Nice,” well-liked, churchgoing people can and have used that as a cover. People like that can get away with a lot more than the surly outcasts of the world (who are often suspected even when innocent).

      2. Lora*

        This was what I thought of too. Dr HH Holmes, Dr Harold Shipman, Dr Michael Swango, Dr John B Adams, Dr Marcel Petiot, lots of doctors and nurses. Ted Bundy volunteered on suicide hotlines. Richard Angelo was a nurse, volunteer firefighter and an Eagle Scout. Karl Denke played music for his church. Philip Markoff the Craigslist killer. Dorothea Puente ran a group home for disabled and elderly people. Robert Lee Yates was a prison guard and went to church.

        I get that it’s hard to see someone you think you know turn out to be an a-hole and you feel all stupid that they were able to pull the wool over your eyes for so long. Believe me, I get it – I was close friends with someone who turned out to have Munchausen’s Syndrome By Proxy and it only turned up when an ER doctor noticed the long history of concussions and seizures in her son, brought him in for evaluation as an inpatient for a full week, and found enough prescription drugs in the kid’s system (prescribed to mom by a sketchy public health clinic doc) to kill a horse. It’s HARD. It’s heartbreaking. But realistically I think the chances of the intern being at fault are slim to none.

    2. Solidad*

      I’ve done a lot of work with child victims of abuse and rape. Most of the perps are “good” family men.

      We get so caught up in framing people as “good” or “bad,” “us” or “them,” etc. that we forget to focus on the actions taken.

    3. LCL*

      BTK was also a municipal employee. He was fired after he was arrested and placed in custody. He wasn’t fired for being suspected of the murders, he was fired because he was in jail so was a no-call/no-show.

  60. Dulf*

    For some reason, I’m reminded of the letter about the employee whose clothes were nicer than her coworkers’ and who (gasp horror) paid to stay in nicer hotels on business travel. I suspect the letter writer is brushing off the credit card theft because she or he already has some gross opinions about how the intern is spending her money.

  61. bikes*

    I have so many questions. Was the coworker fired or did she cross paths with the intern after the her jacket theft was discovered? Was the wallet ever recovered (I’m assuming not…)

    For a while I’ve been wanting an update to the ghosting letter but now my most fervent wish is that the intern write in with her perspective. Internet, make this go viral so this can happen!

  62. CMDRBNA*

    Sorry, I’m having a hard time understanding how someone who stole a jacket from an intern is credible. Also, unless there’s more information that you’re not sharing other than what’s in your letter, how do you know the intern lied to the police?

    I’m getting the feeling maybe the OP is friends with the jacket stealer? Stealing clothing from a coworker is frankly bizarre, IMHO, and I’m not sure why the OP thinks the jacket stealer’s extracurricular activities have anything to do with her stealing from her coworkers. A lot of people volunteer and go to church. I volunteer a lot, but that doesn’t mean I’m less culpable than someone who doesn’t if I do something bad.

    1. Temperance*

      That’s pretty clear from the fact that OP has been chatting with the thief’s husband about her defense. I mean, WTF.

      1. Hey Karma, Over here.*

        This, too. LW is far too invested in this entire situation.
        What’s next? Protesting the court house?

  63. Rusty Shackelford*

    Anyone else dying to know what the CC thief bought on Amazon? Was it more jackets? Boots to go with the jacket? Nice wooden hanger for the jacket?

    1. Essie*

      Soooooo much. Could the items help ID the person? Like, clothing for someone in different sizes than the intern wears, or sci-fi DVDs when the intern only likes comedies, or who knows what else. So many possibilities!

  64. basschick*

    Regarding this: “All that said … it would be awfully poor judgment to use your own name when ordering on someone else’s stolen credit card! It’s like robbing a house and leaving a signed note behind. If anything here makes me wonder about the intern’s version of events, it’s this. ”

    Years ago, someone stole the number of one of my mother’s credit cards, changed its address to what turned out to be their own address and ordered tens of thousands of stuff to be shipped to their own name and address. The police told me it happens all the time. I also knew a guy through a co-worker who stole his father’s credit card (they had the same first and last name), grabbed a buddy and ran off to spend three days at a very expensive hotel eating room service. The only reason they were only at the hotel for three days is that they were arrested in the room – the card was flagged as stolen so the hotel notified the police.

    While I don’t have any idea of who did what in the OP’s situation, I wouldn’t let the part about using the name influence me one way or the other.

    1. Temperance*

      Something like this happened to me, except it was a client of ours whose receptionist went into my purse, stole my debit card, and tried to buy hundreds of dollars worth of stuff from Cabella’s. Cabella’s was super awesome and immediately canceled the order when I called them, but yeah, people really can be this stupid.

    2. sunshyne84*

      Someone tried to buy a phone card from Wal-Mart with my card, but it was expired anyway. Another person made two Domino’s order back to back from across the country with my card. I had to call the store and cancel it. It’s really dumb because the order emails still come to me. smh

    3. Sarah*

      I once had my credit card number stolen to place an order for…home internet service. Which obviously had the person’s home address tied to it, because of the nature of the service. Thieves can be really, really dumb.

    4. Kate*

      Yep. Someone stole my ex-boyfriend’s credit card number and ordered Proactive to be delivered to their own name and address. So yeah, it definitely happens. I would also say it shows poor judgement to steal a jacket that you have been openly coveting in broad daylight in front of multiple security cameras. Honestly, I hope the intern runs far far away from this company. She was the victim of a crime, yet her colleagues think she is less trustworthy than the admitted thief? This does not seem like a good environment for her.

    5. McWhadden*

      Nobody ever thinks they’ll be caught. They don’t have to worry about name/address hiding because no one will ever find out.

      It’s insane but it is what motivates most thieves.

  65. KJDubreuil*

    In order to support the thief’s version of the story, the intern would have to have possession of her wallet with all her cards in it but lied and said it was in the jacket. Unless she knows her credit card information by heart or has it written down somewhere or used her own Amazon account with the information already stored in it. If the thief’s story is correct, the intern would have no reason to cancel her credit and debit cards, get a new driver’s license etc.

    Did the intern get her jacket and wallet back from the police? When in relationship to the placement of the Amazon orders?

    Or is all that stuff still missing? Has the intern applied for a replacement driver’s license, cancelled all her cards, and so on? Because to validate framing the jacket thief the intern would have to destroy all her items and replace them. If she used them after they were supposedly stolen and never returned that would mess up her story.

    1. Kalros, the mother of all thresher maws*

      Seems like there’s a lot more to mess up the jacket thief’s story than the intern’s. To have “placed an order in [jacket thief’s] name,” intern would have to have access to her Amazon account. Or I guess she could’ve placed the orders on her own account and just popped jacket thief’s name in the address line, but that would be embarrassingly obvious.

      But this is all beside the point. There’s been an investigation. Trying to Nancy Drew the situation is a waste of OP’s time and energy. Moreover, intern doesn’t owe her employer any information about when and how she’s dealing with her credit cards, etc., and it’s not OP’s place to interrogate her. The police have done their job, and the lawyers will do theirs, and nothing in the letter suggests that the intern is lying except that OP wants her to be.

    2. Bow Ties Are Cool*

      The theory about the intern making revenge purchases is totally not credible, BUT tbh I do have the # and CCV of the credit card I use the most memorized. It happens, if you shop online a fair bit. :)

  66. Middle Name Jane*

    I find it interesting that the LW immediately concluded that the staff member–who was caught on tape and admitted to stealing the jacket–was framed by the intern for placing fraudulent Amazon orders. Wouldn’t Occam’s razor suggest the thief is the one who placed the orders? Although, I have to admit it’s bugging me that the orders were placed in her (the staff member’s) real name. But the staff member has every reason to lie about the Amazon orders because that would just land her more criminal charges AND there’s no way to prove she placed the orders (unlike stealing the jacket, because the security footage showed she took it).

    Was the staff member fired?

    1. Grumpy*

      Wonder if CW was having a psych episode and didn’t care about the details. Seriously. And if the intern had previously complained about odd behaviour and was brushed off, and if the husband knows about his wife’s tendencies and is used to doing clean up.

  67. Jules the 3rd*

    Just one point: I think the OP thinks the wallet was never in the jacket.
    “The intern got the police involved and *told them* her wallet with all of her ID and credit/debit cards were in her pocket”

    So, the scenario that OP thinks happened seems to be:
    CW steals jacket
    Intern figures it out with video, etc.
    Intern still has wallet and decides to use it to punish CW by placing bogus orders under CW’s name.

    The problem is: someone has the physical cards. If they were in the jacket pocket, the scenario above falls apart, and *any* Intern Revenge scenario becomes much much harder. If the orders came from the office, either CW had to type in card #s with the card at her desk OR Intern logged into Intern’s account and added CW’s name and a drop spot.

    I still lean *strongly* towards CW is lying to cover the credit card theft. Because yeah, stealing the jacket is the one thing that’s known, and it demonstrates CW is not an honest person. There’s no evidence in this letter that Intern is not an honest person.

    But dang, that’s brazen – to type in card #s at a desk at work, when anyone could walk by.

    1. Anonymous1*

      If the intern is malicious, she could just destroy or get rid of the wallet and cards and then it’s a she-said-she-said with the police never knowing who had the cards.

      I absolutely agree that it’s incredibly unlikely the intern did this, but just pointing out the OP could think this is the case as we were never told where the cards were at any given time.

    2. Bow Ties Are Cool*

      Smartphones. Take that stolen credit card, go to your car/the bathroom/a handy locking conference room and order away on the Amazon app. Done, and no one sees you with the card.

      1. Just Jess*

        She probably stashed it in an oversized purse or bag. Alternatively, if she took it while everyone else was away then she could have walked it to her car or stashed it in a drawer immediately and then been the last person to leave for the day.

        However, thank you for the hilarious mental picture… OMG, please let it have been monogrammed with the intern’s name!

    1. ThisGuy*

      I don’t know if I’d say “good for her,” but you almost have to say, “well done.” If the intern did frame the staff member, which I do think sounds very convoluted and unlikely, she’s definitely not someone to mess with. Hers is a lunch no one should risk stealing from the fridge.

    2. Can’t remember what name I used before*

      Actually, if the intern did frame the staff member, she’s a criminal too and no better than the person who took her jacket.
      What a thing to say!

  68. Sara*

    Even if you think the intern is framing her (which would be a bizzare reaction), I’m sure the police checked into this before your friend was arrested and arraigned. The fact that there’s jail time being discussed means there’s a lot more to this than you clearly know about. Stop blaming the victim for it.

  69. livingtheneweconomy*

    let me tell you a story.

    “Ralph” was a sterling member of our town. He was in a position of trust in our community, even briefly serving as an elected official. He was a small business owner and philanthropist too. Gave a lot of money to charity and built Habitat houses and other stuff like that..

    Then “Ralph” got caught in a small lie. After some investigative journalism ferreted out solid evidence of the misbehavior, Ralph admitted it, apologized profusely, and asked forgiveness. Then we had another small lie. …and then another…. basically when things all came out, this person had an entirely secret existence that involved lots of criminal behavior. Honestly, you could have knocked us all over with a feather. There had never been the slightest hint of a problem. I personally would have gone to court and vouched for this guy as a character witness, given him my checkbook to manage, AND let him be my kid’s guardian, that’s how convinced I was that he was an honest dude. I even thought that after the first lie–“well he made a mistake.” Then the mistakes started piling up.

    When it all came out he had a carefully crafted house of cards in our community that hid bigamy, drug dealing, tax evasion, embezzlement, arson, and even suspected murder. He went on the lam and at last account was in another country.

    Some people are really good liars. My point being you DO NOT REALLY know. In our guys’ case, he admitted only to what he knew he could not explain away or lie through–and not one thing more. He only fessed up to the other activity when the evidence was overwhelming and incontrovertible.

    1. Snark*

      “bigamy, drug dealing, tax evasion, embezzlement, arson, and even suspected murder.”

      Wow, that’s breaking bad with a remarkable style. Some commitment there, my dude. Like, screw petty credit card fraud, I’ma sell some meth, burn stuff down, try to kill someone, and keep a harem. Let that freak flag FLY.

    2. hbc*

      I have a relative who is really pleasant to spend time with. He’s friendly, helpful, he volunteers at the local hospice, regular churchgoer. He also secretly ran up gambling debts, lies to people about his employment status, got hooked on crack and went on a tear so bad that his dealer showed up at his house to check in on him (that’s how his wife found out about his habit), made sure to tell the few people who heard about the drugs that it was cocaine because [minorities] use crack, and actually managed to escape from court-ordered rehab. Which seemed to have no consequences, probably because he’s a white, church-going family man.

      Seriously, you just don’t know. Until you catch them stealing a jacket, that is.

  70. KatyO*

    If this woman has a decent attorney they’d demand a better investigation into the credit fraud charges. Even with open desks do the employees not each have their own sign on? If they have surveillance cameras, can they tell who was at that pc at the time? Yes, she stole the jacket but credit card fraud is an entirely different matter and I agree that she’d have to be pretty stupid to order stuff in her own name and have it delivered near her office. They should have let them be delivered and then watch who tried to pick them up. All in all a bad situation but I definitely wouldn’t want to work with someone so shady they’d frame someone else for credit card fraud.

    1. Dulf*

      I’m curious, since you seem to be one of the very few (maybe even the only!) commenters here who believes things went down as the LW suggests. Can you elaborate on what makes you believe that Intern did, in fact, frame Church-Lady-Jacket-Thief for credit card fraud?

    2. Jessie the First (or second)*

      “If this woman has a decent attorney they’d demand a better investigation into the credit fraud charges.”

      Why do you assume there has not been a good investigation? Why are you jumping to the idea that there’s been nothing?

      The OP is an outsider to all of this so she’d have no idea what the investigation is – the police are not updating her. The employer is not updating her other than saying they have no idea. She is getting her info from the thief and the thief’s husband.

      But the actual police did in fact investigate. Just because *we* don’t know what the evidence is (beyond the obvious) does not mean it isn’t there. Just because the company is saying they can’t tell who logged on does not mean AT ALL that there was not actual evidence 0 like, for example, FINDING THE CARDS IN THE JACKET/checking time and date of amazon orders/checking the amazon account the orders were placed from/interviewing people involved and checking inconsistencies.

      But you go right to “well no one investigated and this person was framed”?

      1. Jessie the First (or second)*

        To be clear, I’m not saying the above evidence is what the police have – I have no idea, just like OP has no idea. It’s the sort of thing the police would have checked, and as prosecutors don’t press charges without evidence, it’s just flat-out not reasonable to assume there is no evidence. The lack of work log-in information does not mean there is no evidence currently in existence at the DA’s office.

        1. Former Hoosier*

          But we don’t really even know if there isn’t log in information. The OP says there isn’t but she may not know everything that has gone on and the CW may have said that to get her to believe CW’s story

          1. Jessie the First (or second)*

            I feel like you’re missing the point of my comment here? KatyO appears to think that the OP is right, that the intern is the perp and not the victim. I am saying no, intern is the victim, because even if the company doesn’t have log-in info, there is actual evidence of the crime that the police and DA would have. Sure, if there is ALSO log-in evidence, then that is even more evidence. My point is that it is really, really strange that OP and KatyO seem to conclude that for some reason the police have not investigated and have not collected actual evidence that coworker did commit a crime.

    3. Solidad*

      ” to be pretty stupid to order stuff in her own name and have it delivered near her office”

      Thieves do this all the time. Ask any criminal defense attorney.

      “should have let them be delivered and then watch who tried to pick them up. ”

      We don’t know what the cops did and did not do. There’s nothing in the narrative to suggest they didn’t thoroughly investigate.

      Also, if there is a case proceeding such that the defense attorney has recommended a plea, they have investigated enough to have pretty irrefutable proof.

      I do not understand why you think this is all so unrealistic. I can only guess you have very limited experience in this area.

      (1) Criminals are dumb. They leave trails. Many used credit cards to buy things in their own name.
      (2) Cops do not move forward on a case like this without pretty substantial evidence.
      (3) Prosecutors do not bring charges in cases like this unless they are sure they can win.
      (4) Defense attorneys do not make recommendations to take this type of deal unless they know the trial is likely to not run in their favor and the outcome will be worse.

    4. fposte*

      It’s also possible they did do a deeper investigation of the credit card charges; the OP isn’t necessarily privy to what the police did here, and the co-worker isn’t credible. It’s quite possible she pled to the credit cards *because* of what the police had.

    5. Temperance*

      I’m a lawyer. If I have a client who is clearly guilty of a crime, and clearly untrustworthy, I’m going to advise her to take the plea bargain. Because frankly, this woman would have NO credibility on the stand, even if the intern did manage to pull this together.

      This woman was stupid enough to steal someone’s jacket.

  71. Countess Boochie Flagrante*

    Man, and I thought it was bad when my ex-coworker tried to grab my skirt while it was still on me! At least she didn’t actually make off with it!

    (I am also not in the habit of taking my skirt off at work, so maybe it was merely a lack of opportunity.)

  72. eplawyer*

    Let’s review here. So far this summer we have had:

    1. an intern who had profanity written on her cast — and was made to work that day.
    2. an intern who was in a car accident and had her arm broken — yet the driver of the vehicle is still employed.
    3. an intern who had her jacket stolen by a permanent employee.

    People stop abusing your interns. Just stop.

      1. Ashley Toth*

        I shared an office with an employer that hated me, her job, and life. My department placed an industrial copier on my side of the shared office 6 months into the job.

        She saw it and flipped out – yelling down the hallway throwing a temper tantrum because she wasn’t consulted and “printers have carcinogens” so it was a “health issue”.

        I was asked not to quit and given my very own office!
        #savetheinterns

  73. Where's the Le-Toose?*

    In the spirit of AAM’s mantra of being constructive, here it goes!

    OP, even assuming everything in your letter is correct (i.e. the coworker only stole the jacket, didn’t touch the intern’s credit card information, and that the intern framed the coworker for credit card fraud), the problem with saying anything to your employer, or anyone else for that matter, is that you don’t have proof. You only have the word of the coworker who was caught stealing on camera. I’m sure you can tell from the reactions here that in deciding who to believe, almost everyone would choose to believe the crime victim and not the perpetrator. Your going to look very out of touch to your employer if you were to share with them your beliefs that the intern plotted revenge.

    As for the intern coming to work at your office, now as an employee, I’m concerned that you won’t give the intern a fair shake. If you can’t see past this event with the jacket, then the best thing for you, and the best thing for the intern, is that you could ask that the intern not be assigned to work for you. You don’t have to share the reason why, you could just tell your employer something like: “After the terrible experience the intern had here, I would like the intern to get every chance to succeed. Placing the intern in an area of the office where the intern’s things were stolen might not be the best location for the intern. Jane in Teapot Design has an opening. Maybe that would be a better fit for the intern.”

    And let it go at that point. If you had concerns about the intern’s work as an intern, and since you’re a supervisor, I assumed you expressed them. If so, then your management team felt that the concerns were not enough to withhold a job offer and the intern deserves a chance to succeed.

    1. KV*

      This is a very constructive comment, but all I can do is laugh because someone else out there remembers “where’s the le-toose?”

  74. DJ*

    Your company has an employee who has been criminally convicted of stealing something while on company time at the company’s office from a co-worker, and is still presently employed?

    Ya’ll hiring?

  75. hbc*

    Please OP, please listen to the unanimous response from the commenters here. Unless you’re leaving out some really important stuff, the extent of your evidence against this intern is the word of a known thief who believes a jury will find against her. Not good enough by a long shot.

    If you’ve got some other reason for suspecting her, you’ve got to include it. You’ve seen vindictive behavior from her before (and not just in retrospect), there have been incidents around the office that coincide with her time there but have never been nailed down, the wallet and/or credit cards were found in a place that could not have been accessed by the jacket thief, etc.. Otherwise, you and your colleagues look like a crazed clique at best, and (reading between the lines) people discriminating based on religion.

  76. Sheworkshardforthemoney*

    The intern would have to know that the Jacket Thief took her jacket before she (the intern) placed the bogus orders. If she placed them AFTER the jacket was stolen and she knew it was JT then a check of the timeline for when the orders were placed will show that she was framing for JT for credit card fraud as well as simple theft.

  77. DCnative*

    Not that it’s even remotely comparable, but the BTK serial killer was the president of his church. Going to church is entirely irrelevant to the question of whether someone is reliable and trustworthy.

  78. Justin*

    So um. Why didn’t this thieving coworker find out where the intern bought it and just go buy one?

    And yeah, I bet a trial “wouldn’t be good for her,” because I doubt this lady is capable of facing up to her acts.

    Anyway, I haven’t a clue why the coworker is being trusted over the victim.

    1. Temperance*

      Jesus.

      In all seriousness, it’s clear that the LW is friendly with the thief and the thief’s husband, and they probably go to the same church.

  79. JoJo*

    1. Why would you give the proven thief the benefit of the doubt?
    2. Wouldn’t getting someone arrested for theft be enough?
    3. Why go to all the trouble to frame them for credit card fraud?
    4. What does church attendance have to do with anything? You have the woman on video stealing the jacket, she is not a good person.

  80. Student*

    So, you want to punish an intern… by withholding a job from the intern… because your friend stole from the intern… and the intern dared call the police on your friend for stealing from her.

    Can you really not see that your friend is not a reliable, impartial source of information on this incident? Is probably using you to try to insulate her from further consequences of her theft?

    This is retaliation (in the literal, not legal sense) and blame-shifting. Your friend did a very bad thing. You don’t want to admit your friend isn’t exactly who you thought. You want to hurt the person who hurt your friend, even though the intern was doing exactly what she should’ve in the circumstance, because your friend robbed her.

    If I were your boss, and you brought this to me, I would fire your friend for stealing from a co-worker and I would fire you for incredibly bad judgement. “We should fire the person my friend stole from” is really, really poor judgement.

  81. Althea*

    I really thought the “but” in the email was going to be “but the coworker is now claiming that the intern lent/gave her the jacket in order to set her up for the CC crime.”

    Then I got to the end.

    1. LN*

      First of all, I’m not the stealing type. But if I were, I wouldn’t steal at my workplace. HOWEVER, if I found myself in this situation, that’s definitely the excuse I would use. The fact that she’s straight-up just admitting she stole the jacket but wants people to believe she DIDN’T use stolen credit cards is…well, I guess it speaks to a well-placed confidence in her workplace’s opinion of her. Because it appears to actually be working. And that’s the most mind-boggling part.

      1. Anastasia Beaverhausen*

        I thought she might have tried to get out of the stealing the jacket accusation.. like, oh, as I passed by I dropped a cup ‘o soup and was taking it to be dry cleaned.

    2. AW*

      I was waiting for some explanation of why she had the jacket, then I was waiting for some proof that she couldn’t have made the Amazon orders.

  82. Jane k*

    Whether or not the intern “framed” your coworker, your coworker is in the wrong for stealing someone’s jacket which started his whole mess.

    It sounds like the OP has some bias towards a younger workforce and is siding with her coworker. This intention of framing sounds like rumors and the OP cannot simply make conclusions without knowing all of the facts. Similar to how judgement can be different after a jury hears a case than what the news media reports.

  83. Imaginary Number*

    This is the park that really irks me about this letter: “However one of them has created a situation where she lied to the police,”

    OP has already decided that the intern lied, despite the fact that there’s no evidence of that while there IS evidence that the staff member committed theft and credit card theft.

  84. McWhadden*

    I do have sympathy for OP. It’s hard dealing with the fact that someone you know and like isn’t everything you thought you were. And sometimes genuinely good people do really bad things.

    But think through the story you are being sold. First of all, whose Amazon account was used? You have to sign into your account in order to make a purchase. And then you have the option of putting in a new credit card. It doesn’t let you check out as Guest.

    It clearly wasn’t the intern’s account because the police believe the story and prosecutor’s are going forward. Having access to her wallet wouldn’t give access to the intern’s Amazon password. So there are two options. 1) When she saw her jacket missing she concocted a revenge scheme, as you do. She created a burner email. Opened an Amazon account using the burner email and the staff member’s name. Went through and selected various items to purchase using the staff member’s name. Used her own credit card. All from a work desk where anyone could walk by and notice at any time. 2) It was the staff member who you know stole the jacket. And she changed the credit card at the end.

    Even if she wanted revenge why wouldn’t she buy something on one of the many internet sites that allow you to check-out as a guest? Why would she want revenge so badly? She got her jacket back. The staff member has presumably been fired (please tell me she was fired.)

    And the co-worker is already pretty stupid in stealing a jacket she openly complimented with cameras around. Her name would have to be on the packages to be able to pick them up. So even the stupidity angle doesn’t work so well here. Her behavior was already irrational and stupid.

    She probably thought that even if she did get caught (and clearly she didn’t think she would) that the intern would be too scared of jeopardizing her potential job to call the police. Do not let that fear come to fruition. You want your staff and interns to feel safe in their office.

    Honestly, she’s probably done this before and never got caught. She got cocky.

    1. NMFTG*

      *First of all, whose Amazon account was used? You have to sign into your account in order to make a purchase. *

      Given the really crappy IT set-up at this firm, it’s not wholly impossible that either the intern or the jacket thief was already logged into their Amazon account, pre-meeting. The one ordering would have needed access to the CCN, either by memory or physically, to change the address/pick-up, and the log-in would have had to have been recent, but it’s possible, since there is no real IT control at this office (and because people are careless and don’t log out when they should).

      It’s even possible that accessing the intern’s Amazon account accidentally was the push – as in “Ooh, lookie, Amazon account already open, free goodies for me! Hmmm, maybe the wallet that was available needs to go away. Oh, I know, I’ll hide the jacket in my car and intern will think it’s stolen or that she left it somewhere.”

      As for the ID at pick-up, would the ID be for the account? Would’nt it be for the picker-upper? Let’s say the “this is a gift” box is ticked?

      And yeah, still more likely that the coworker was responsible for the order.

  85. Granny K*

    Are you sure your staff member is credible and has never stolen something before? Because if it were me, I’d check my wallet, and start locking up my personal belongings from now on.

  86. Narise*

    I really want to know what was ordered off of Amazon. Sometimes the purchases can help identify who bought an item. The problem with committing one crime such as theft is that it leaves you open to be accused of committing other crimes such as identify theft. Her lawyer is advising her to take the deal and he has seen the prosecutor’s case. While its possible she’s innocent regarding ordering items from Amazon there may not be any way to prove she didn’t order the items which is why her lawyer is advising her to plead.

  87. zsuzsanna*

    I don’t want to speculate, since I’m put off by the OP’s speculation. But OP, is it possible you just don’t like this intern? Or maybe resent that she has been promoted to staff while others have not been promoted within? Or is this just a blind loyalty to someone who’s been there awhile?
    I am a bit offended myself at the suggestion that people who go to church are more moral (I don’t go to church, and would never steal a jacket from anyone, let alone an intern). Maybe the intern is abrasive in some other way that makes the OP side with the admitted thief? It’s really, really hard to accept that someone you like and have trusted and worked with would behave this way – but that isn’t speculation now. You know she did it. Now, that doesn’t mean she’d commit murder or embezzlement or even credit card theft. But it does raise questions about how well you know her.

  88. Ada Lovelace*

    This is mindblowing. Of all the things that strike me about this, I hope the coworker was fired. Normally, a person accepting a plea deal for a crime committed on their work site is grounds for firing. I work in volunteer management at a library. We fired a volunteer (17 year old kid volunteering for school hours) in his first week. A patron left his phone charging and it went missing. Cue the cameras-volunteer strolls by, sees phone, puts in in his pocket, continues working his shift for the rest of the day and leaves. Volunteer never batted an eye – didn’t even pause to look for a camera. When the staff member saw the video, they called the volunteer and asked him about the phone. The volunteer returned to the branch to give the phone back and was met with police.

    I also had a coworker at the blue “great purchase” retail store that was arrested for stealing about 8-9 Iphones and some androids 5 years ago. The value of the stolen Iphones alone pushed it from a misdemeanor crime to a felony. That was stupid.

  89. Anon120575*

    Why can’t you just find out who’s account placed the Amazon order? Even if the intern had “setup”
    the coworker wouldn’t it have to have been done through their own account? Or vice versa?

    1. Jessie the First (or second)*

      “Why can’t you just find out who’s account placed the Amazon order?”

      And how do you think the OP could possible do that?

      I mean, it can be done in general, and in all likelihood it actually has been done – by the police. The police already investigated, and they’re not new to investigating so they most likely did that exact thing already. They brought their evidence to the prosecutor, who looked at the evidence, evaluated it, and decided it warranted bringing charges. So, co-worker has been charged. Defense attorney has looked at the evidence the state has, and is advising coworker to take a plea.

      So why are we saying this like it is some new thing no one has done? And to suggest somehow the OP could or should be involved in it?

    2. LN*

      I could set up a dozen Amazon accounts right now under anyone’s name, and make it look real, if I have their email and home address. I agree it’s a weird detail to leave out of the letter entirely, but ultimately it probably doesn’t lead anywhere that’s relevant to the investigation. (Of course, if it does, the police will figure that out. Despite the OP’s attempts to rationalize a different version of events, this situation seems pretty straightforward.)

  90. Hics*

    The only way I can see suspecting the intern of lying is if the order of operations was as follows:
    1. Coworker steals jacket
    2. Intern notices jacket is missing. Goes to security/video and figures out coworker stole it.
    3. Gets jacket back.
    4. an undetermined amount of time later, Intern goes “You know, my wallet was in my jacket when it was stolen, and I just double checked and a bunch of fraudulent purchases were made on amazon. You committed credit card fraud Coworker, I’m calling the police.”

    So theoretically, the Intern COULD have made the purchases on amazon after getting the jacket back before making the accusation against the coworker/calling the police. But even if all of the above was true, my first instinct wouldn’t be to claim that the victim was lying and the admitted thief was innocent…

    1. Jules the 3rd*

      Nah, you create a burner email and burner Amazon account. It doesn’t have to be from either Intern or CW’s regular accounts.

      If it was, that’s more evidence, and I *think* the police can get the info with a warrant. If the account was Intern’s, CW would not plead. Burner account, could be either.

      1. Jules the 3rd*

        whoops, that was to Anon120575’s comment.

        To yours: OP seems to think the wallet was never stolen. “The intern got the police involved and told them her wallet with all of her ID and credit/debit cards were in her pocket.”

        Not, “The intern’s wallet was in here pocket,” but “the intern *told them* the wallet was in the pocket”, which eases some logistical issues.

  91. Friday*

    I ‘m guessing here, but I think there’s more to it than OP’s insistence that church-going = good… Coworker might go to OP’s church and their families might interact frequently, as OP also said Coworker was a great family person. It sounds to me like a “but this person is LIKE ME” bias, and conversely, intern must not be “like” the OP. Maybe intern is of a different religion or no religion, maybe intern is estranged from her family, etc. etc. This is an unfortunate human fallacy, and a large reason for when you see a company with a bunch of white exec men who share hobbies and an Alma-matter. Many people are naturally comfortable with people they decide are “like them” in certain ways.

    1. AKchic*

      “But she goes to church!”

      Yes, where she can ask for forgiveness of all of her sins. As soon as she walks out of that church, she can go back to killing and fornicating with all manner of creatures, lying, cheating, stealing, gambling, wearing mixed fabrics, and eating meat on Friday! And by George, come Sunday, they’ll be back next Sunday to beg forgiveness again and sure enough, all will be forgiven!

  92. Ramona Flowers*

    In other news, going to church doesn’t make you honest, any more than going to macdonalds makes you a hamburger. It’s what you say and do that matters.

  93. plynn*

    The wording of this letter is incredibly strange – the writer describes footage “show[ing] the staff member taking the jacket to her car”. As if “taking it to her car” is a perfectly reasonable thing that could be explained in many ways – Why maybe she was taking it for safekeeping! Or just wanted to take it for a ride!

    This church-going staff member STOLE the jacket.

    Also, the intern “got the police involved”. Well, she had proof that a coworker stole her jacket, which had her credit cards in it, which were used to make fraudulent purchases, so…gold star for the intern for being quick and decisive.

    Seriously, this letter writer is twisting themselves into knots to find a way to pretend Staff Member didn’t do anything wrong and Intern is at fault for all of this. Maybe if she hadn’t enticed Staff Member with her fancy jacket! What did Intern expect, dressed like that?

    Take this as a lesson that even if we like and trust someone, they can still do things that we don’t expect – often things much worse than stealing a jacket.

    1. PB*

      Yes, I kept waiting for some kind of explanation, like the intern gave it to her and then lied to say she stole it. It sounds like the theft isn’t even a question. The OP is saying, “CW definitely stole the jacket, but she wouldn’t have stolen credit card numbers!”

    2. Miss Betty*

      Perhaps someone else has said this and I’ve missed it – but I keep thinking the OP isn’t a co-worker at all. I think the OP is actually the person who stole the jacket as trying to find a way to retroactively cover her butt at work. Telling everyone you’ve been framed by the intern, who – can you believe it! – lied to the police, might work in some places.

      1. Tuxedo Cat*

        Granted, people do use advice columns and message boards to affirm their beliefs, but I don’t know what the point of this would be if the OP were the thief. AAM isn’t where she works. The thief has a lawyer- that person has to have far better advice on this matter than all of us combined.

    3. ArtK*

      There’s a lot of use of the passive voice in that post and other deliberate language to relieve the coworker of any culpability at all.

    4. Noobtastic*

      ” Maybe if she hadn’t enticed Staff Member with her fancy jacket! What did Intern expect, dressed like that?”

      Is it just me, or is anyone else getting icky trigger feelings about rape, and the way people respond to rape charges being made against anyone whom they don’t actively already hate?

  94. Elder Dog*

    I doubt very much the police came because the intern’s jacket was stolen. I think the police came because she told them her jacket *with her wallet and credit cards in the pocket* was missing. It’s the wallet and credit cards the police would investigate. They usually don’t spend much time on used clothing.

    I’ve been trying post this, but the page keeps moving, and my comment gets inserted as a reply to other unrelated comments. I hope it hasn’t posted repeatedly.

    1. LN*

      Yeah, I agree – the way the OP worded it, it sounds as if they police showed up some unspecified amount of time after the jacket theft was discovered, and only then did the intern mention that her wallet was missing. It is far more likely that’s the reason why she called them in the first place, and if the OP wasn’t privy to it, it’s because the intern may have suspected that there would be favoritism involved and it was unwise to discuss the finer details of the case with anyone until the police had their investigation going.

    2. teclatrans*

      Yes, this page in particular has been really hard to post comments onto, with the freezing and jumping around.

  95. Former Hoosier*

    I once worked for a pathological liar. He lied about everything and a lot of people believed him and thought he was a good man. Because I worked closely with him, I finally unraveled his lies. However, I was not believed and was later fired because I tried to point out to the board of directors that he had lied. I am still suffering from the psychological damage from that job. Even now I have to remind myself sometimes that what the man told me were lies.

    I truly understand that it is devastating to learn that a close friend or co worker is not who you thought they were. The truth is that none of us are all good or all bad as the many stories in the comments attest. Most of us wouldn’t steal anything from someone at work of course.

    It does seem remarkable that the co worker is still employed but I have seen it before. People don’t want to believe that someone who appeared to be a “good person” did something so wrong as stealing. It can seem easier to believe that an intern whom you don’t know well may have set up the co worker. However, that is very unlikely.

    It is unclear that the OP actually has any power to change anything but she/he should be very careful about making any accusations about the intern because this could backfire on her and harm her credibility.

    1. Jules the 3rd*

      I’m with you, it *sucks*. I quit a job because I was backup to the accountant, and I could see some of the ‘errors’ she was doing. I documented, I took it to her supervisor, I took it to the VP (small non-profit). When they dismissed it, I started job hunting. My resignation letter repeated my documentation. I really should have taken it to the board, I knew someone on it, but I didn’t want to take advantage of that friendship.

      She was fired within the year for embezzling. I hope my documentation at least got them to check on her.

      On the plus side, I went back to school, got an MBA, and came out making more than double my prior salary. I probably would have waited longer if I hadn’t quit that job. I hope you also end up with a better ending than the current one.

  96. Lady Phoenix*

    Allison if you are surprised that the coworker would be stupid enough to buy stuff with a stolen credit card under her own name… then allow me to introduce you to radio deadair and their show WTFIWWY (What the Fck is Wrong With You). They deal with a LOT of stupid criminals.

    Just this week they dealt with a girl who, while charged with shoplifting, decoded to slip out of her handcuffs, steal with a cop car, went on a high speed chase, and then try to use a ahot gun when she got caught.

    1. paul*

      Yep. Some people are incredibly dumb, and that includes criminals. A friend of mine was complaining about a client of their showing up high *to court* for god’s sake. On a possession charge.

      I’ll also remember that story from down state where a woman was drinking while driving, decided to flash the other cars (WHILE DRIVING)…and wound up rear ending a cop.

      Just because it’s incredibly stupid doesn’t mean people won’t do it.

      1. PB*

        I once watched a driver try to make an illegal three-point turn in the middle of a busy street and get stuck partway through, only to realize they were right in front of a police car.

      2. Floundering Mander*

        My favorite was the time I was turning on a green arrow from an overpass onto the highway when someone coming the other direction decided to tear out in front of me and down the ramp, almost clipping my car. Fortunately the car behind me was a cop.

    2. Construction Safety*

      Pasted to the fine / payment office at the local city court building: “If you have had your driver’s license suspended or revoked by the court, do not drive away from court”

      1. Anastasia Beaverhausen*

        A friend works at such a court. The judge always questions the offenders as to how they arrived at court and plan to get home, to make sure they have a driver or other arrangements and to reiterate they have no driving privileges. They always say someone drove them, took a taxi, et cetera. Then he sends the bailiff out to observe how the they leave the premises and quite often they are arrested forthwith.

    3. FD*

      Many people also think the internet is more private than it really is, so I do believe that someone might think they could get away with this.

      Remember this person stole the jacket in front of security cameras, so trying to use the credit cards isn’t really that much more stupid.

    4. AW*

      OMG, Radio DeadAir! I haven’t watched that in forever; I should go look them up.

      Speaking of ridiculous criminals, there was a Judge Judy case where a guy admitted to car-jacking a woman because it was cold and he didn’t feel like walking home in the cold. Quote: “I was just trying to get home.”

  97. AKchic*

    Staffer STOLE a jacket.

    Credit cards were used on Amazon. Who’s account was used? Was it the intern’s Amazon account? The staffer’s Amazon account? What address did the packages get mailed to? Did the address have any affiliation with either of them?
    I think the LEOs and prosecutors have been doing their due diligence and would not have charged the staffer with credit card fraud without evidence of her actually using the credit cards.
    You may not want to believe she did it, but you already have videographic proof that she committed one crime (stealing the jacket, which is where it’s claimed the cards were). It may have been uncharacteristic of her based on what you know of her, but that doesn’t mean she didn’t do it.
    I would stop slandering an intern (and now a new staff member) because of the choices another staffer chose to make. Stop helping spread rumor, and allowing others to think poorly of a VICTIM OF A CRIME because you happened to like the criminal.

    I kind of hope the intern/new staffer finds a different job. She deserves better than working with people who make excuses and side with a thief.

  98. Lady Phoenix*

    So lets say you DO bring up that “intern lied to the police”…

    The boss and intern will probably bring up the pokice investigation, point out the police were involved BECAUSE the intern’s wallet went missing, point out coworker is facing criminal charges… and gives the intern a chance to report you for defamation of character.

    You are trusting a liar who has given you no reason to trust them over an intern wwho is head deep in the investigation who has all of the information.

    Chances are you would be fired.

    Like I said, stop being blind already.

    1. President Porpoise*

      I doubt OP would be fired. Maybe she and her boss would end up having a uncomfortable discussion about professional behavior, getting along, and minding you own business, but firing would be dumb.

      1. Lady Phoenix*

        OP is claiming the intern lied to the police and framed coworker for fraud. Higly illegal acts that could hurt the intern’s job and reputation. If the OP is not fired, then I would expect a serious talking to or a write up for slandering the intern.

      2. Lilo*

        How would you trust OP to manage her or other interns after it? Fired, maybe not, but serious doubts would be raised.

  99. Observer*

    The staff member is credible, she has no history of trouble working here, has no criminal record and is a good person who volunteers and is active with her church and her family.”

    While there is a remote possibility that someone who stole is credible in general, there is NO possibility that someone who was caught red handed stealing is credible about anything they say about that theft, unless they are confessing.

    She has a criminal record NOW – she was seen on tape stealing a jacket.

    I hesitate to tar someone as “good” or “bad”. But stealing from an intern is NOT the act of a good person. It’s a very bad thing in fct, and against the religious principals of every Church that I know of. Perhaps it’s a one off, but it shows that the CW is 100% capable of doing very bad things.

    1. Zip Zap*

      It makes me wonder if she has a history of doing similar things and getting away with it. Maybe her confidence was inflated from having gotten away with things and that was why she was so careless about being caught on tape and ordering things in her name.

      1. LN*

        Yeah, I wonder about this too. Despite the way the OP is framing things, it actually doesn’t sound like it will be hard to prove it if the jacket thief did use the cards. I’m certain either IT or Amazon themselves could provide exact timestamps of when the orders were placed, and OP already said they know what workstation was used. Unless that part of the office is completely off-camera, they shouldn’t have any difficulty catching her on video, even without unique employee logins. It’s probably just taking some time to get everything in order, because it’s not quite as straightforward as “here you can see her literally walking away with my jacket.”

        The whole thing is just very brazen. She didn’t think she would get caught. Maybe she didn’t even realize that’s where the wallet was kept, but once she had it, she decided to use the card and figured it would never catch up to her. Ill-gained confidence can do very strange things to your brain.

  100. Charlie Bradbury's Girlfriend*

    1. OP: please leave this to the police and the lawyers, and do not accuse the intern of some kind of nefarious plot. If you have separate concerns about the intern’s work, you can bring those up. But don’t try to lump your coworker’s theft of the intern’s jacket into a discussion of the intern’s work. If you can’t separate the two, you shouldn’t say anything at all.
    2. Commenters: Thank you for the true crime/ world’s dumbest criminals stories. You light up my life.

  101. Murphy*

    I’m not clear on whether the credit cards & wallet were actually found with the jacket. If they were…then come on. The co-worker has absolutely no defense.

    If they weren’t, that still doesn’t put co-worker in the clear. Being a thief and all.

    But I agree with Alison…the police have got this all covered.

    1. Zip Zap*

      The letter says the credit cards were in the pocket of the jacket and that because of this, the intern was alarmed about the jacket being missing.

      1. Murphy*

        I’m not saying I believe it, but the way I read the letter is the the intern said they were in the jacket. The letter also says that the intern contacted security prior to where it mentions the cards. That the co-worker “doesn’t know anything about the card” could be read either as not having used the card, or as not knowing she had the card.

  102. CatLadyinSpandex*

    If the office knows which computer placed the order, would there be security footage from the time the order was placed? Do people not have to log in to the computers at all?

  103. Phoenix Programmer*

    So someone just hacked debit card and they used it to… Pay there phone bill. Yes there own utility. Criminals really can be that dumb!

  104. Zip Zap*

    Holy victim blaming! I mean, innocent until proven guilty, of course, but LW is jumping through all kinds of mental hoops to justify siding with the jacket stealer when the facts strongly suggest that she’s guilty.

    How about some sympathy for the intern? What an ordeal to go through in a new job. And to have a higher up (your manager, it sounds like?) side with the person who stole from you? And then accused you of framing them and lying to the police? LW needs to seriously reconsider their way of thinking.

    The company should back off, let the police handle it, keep an eye out for other possible incidents, and make sure the new hire feels safe working there. And be ready to go out of their way to make it up to her. I wonder what kind of an impact this has had on her life, financially and otherwise.

    1. Temperance*

      That’s only in a court of law. Besides, the thief plead guilty, so we can say that she’s guilty.

      I disagree with your last statement, unless it also includes firing the thief.

    2. Observer*

      How about just stopping to blame the intern for Co-Worker’s actions? The OP is blaming the intern for the fact that the co-worker stole her jacket!

  105. RVA Cat*

    Something else leaps out at me: “dozens of Amazon orders were placed with the intern’s credit card in the name of the staff member.” DOZENS. Even if they were low-cost items, this easily gets into felony territory, and leads me to believe she intended to re-sell the stolen goods. (It also makes it a whole lot of work for such an unlikely “revenge” campaign.)
    If your workplace is sane, the *only* reason they haven’t fired the thief yet is that they are awaiting the outcome of the police investigation. I’m also wondering if the employer and possibly the police could be monitoring the thief’s actions at work, because their lax IT security could make it easier for her to commit more crimes. Who’s to say she isn’t also stealing the identities of her co-workers and customers, or embezzling cash from the business itself?
    I get it, OP. You considered this person a friend and thought you knew her character, but you didn’t. Also, you should probably check your possessions and accounts to see if she may have taken something from you.

    1. Noobtastic*

      Wait, wait. I had to re-read that. I first read it as “dozens of Amazon items,” as in, one purchase with dozens of items on it. As in one splurge session on Amazon, then, “Woop! People are coming. Better check out now.”

      But dozens of ORDERS? As in, the person logged in dozens of times? Over how many hours/days?

      Good grief.

      Someone has no shame or brains. And IMO, it’s not the intern.

  106. I'd Rather not Say*

    It’s possible that the LW doesn’t know details of the investigation that the police and management do. There was a former employee at our company who was convicted of embezzlement committed over the course of many years. The the police were involved as soon as the fraud was uncovered, but the investigation took close to a year before it went to court. During the investigation information was made available to us on a “need to know” basis. Those who did know details could not divulge them or risk compromising the case.

  107. AnonAndOn*

    This makes me think of the Starbucks barista who stole a customer’s credit card information and used it to buy groceries. When confronted by the customer, the barista said that she [barista] was a good person, in school, and played soccer. Just like in this question going to church doesn’t make the thief a good person, being in school doesn’t make someone a good person either.

    1. Noobtastic*

      “and played soccer.”

      Soccer? How random is that? I get the “But I’m a good person!” bit. I even get, “But I’m a poor student!” bit. Poor student, couldn’t afford to feed herself, so she had no choice but to steal money for food from other people.

      But soccer? What does that have to do with the price of tomatoes?

  108. Apollo Warbucks*

    How do credit cards work in the US? In the uk you need to know the billing address and zip code to validate the transaction is that the same in the US?

    1. Lauren*

      Some places require the billing zip code but for online orders it’s common to require the full billing address. However typically people’s primary/mailing address is their billing address so if you have the card and know their home address, it’d be pretty easy to place an order with the card without an issue.

    2. Lisa*

      I seem to remember whenever you add a new account or a new card to an account you have to confirm by an email sent by Amazon to your email address. They should be able to track that with the company email system.

      1. Apollo Warbucks*

        I know when I’ve ordered stuff to be sent to a new address or collection point I’ve needed to re enter my card details. Although it might be different for a new account.

      2. AW*

        If the co-worker used a personal email address and opened that email on a smart phone it won’t be in the company email system.

        On the other hand, the co-worker apparently ordered the stuff in their own name so they probably weren’t that careful.

  109. Lady Phoenix*

    I think I can make out the story:
    1) Coworker compliments Jacket and notices intern put wallet in jacket
    2) Waits for people to leave for meeting and slips away to steal intern’s jacket
    3) Steals intern’s jacket, opens up Amazon, makes some purchases, then leaves to put jacket in car
    4) Intern gets an alert about stolen credit card and contacts security and or upper staff (manager/hr/ceo).
    5) They see the tapes and spot coworker in tapes. They call the cops.
    6) Cops, Lawyers, and Credit Company investigate further and discover amazon purchases
    7) The charges go from misdemenor to felony

    That’s what I got. Granted, the order of 4-6 might be slightly different… but I think I have the general story.

    Eitherway, gonna be hard for the intern to place a ton of Amazon orders under the coworker’s name given this chain of events.

  110. OperaArt*

    Wait. You say the intern “created a situation?” The victim? When you know for an absolute fact that coworker is a thief? A thief who stole from someone she knew personally? A thief who stole from someone much farther down the org chart than her? And you believe the thief over the victim? And you are trying to prevent the victim from keeping her new job?
    OP, you really, really need to step back and look at this objectively. And then let the police and court system do their jobs.
    That poor intern.

    1. Montresaur*

      Oh, I too am dying to know what this mystical outerwear looks like, but Could We Even Handle It? Already it’s driven several credible, upstanding, and rational people to madness.

      1. Montresaur*

        Seriously, though, LW’s framing of the situation has me thinking this workplace (or whatever bizarre cult of personality may have developed around Jacket Thief?) is super toxic.

  111. Lauren*

    The thing that stands out to me is that, unless I’m mistaken, the intern would have no real way to know who stole the coat (or even if it was actually stolen) prior to anyone else in the office knowing. Like that’d be a pretty big risk to frame your coworker for something so serious and then have it turn up in the break room. If the orders were placed after the coat was discovered then that will hopefully come out early in the investigation, and if she tried to view the security tapes before the police you’d think that might come out too (though I can’t see why would she be able to view them to begin with).

    I just can’t see the intern being SO sure that the coworker did it, based on some compliments and particularly if she’s as unsuspecting as OP claims, that she’d be willing to risk it all to frame that person without any hard proof they had the jacket to begin with. The intern would have to know that the footage would turn up of the coworker crossing the lot and therefore that she’d be caught for the coat theft and easy to accuse of wallet theft. If she’s that good at seeing the future you may actually want her on your team haha But in reality I just can’t see it. I could be mixing up the timeline though.

    Basically I feel like framing someone in a way that involves police and lawyers and potential jail time would be extremely risky and therefore more unlikely than OP seems to think. There’s too many ways for it to backfire especially when you have a very limited window of time to plan it out. Meanwhile the coworker had lots of time to see the jacket and observe the intern putting her wallet in the pocket, etc. She had more time to think about the crime before acting and therefore it feels like the more likely scenario is that she did it, didn’t expect to get caught for the jacket theft, and then when she did saw an opening to flip suspicion onto the intern who is more of an unknown to her coworkers. She stole a jacket so she clearly is capable of lying, as others have pointed out, so it seems silly to just take it all at her word that she’s being framed, even if obviously none of us can say for certain what took place.

    (I also just have trouble imagining someone so cold that they’d want to see a coworker (or anyone) wrongly go to jail for credit card fraud over a stolen jacket. Even if you hated them, that’s extreme and hurts the innocent people around them too (her husband, potentially kids or other dependent family, etc). But I guess sadly it’s not totally impossible. Hopefully the truth will come out and everyone can find some peace.)

    1. AW*

      This is an *excellent* point. The timing doesn’t work for the intern to be able to do the frame up if they don’t do it until after she knows who stole the jacket.

  112. Tiger Snake*

    Assuming that this letter is true; OP, you are in denial.

    And that’s normal.

    Humans like to trust other people. More than that, we measure ourselves and our qualities partly by the people we chose to associate with. Its the old Birds Of A Feather concept; I like this person and chose to associate with them because we are similar and have something in common. I am a good person, and so they are also a good person..

    Discovering your co-worker is a thief – not the person you thought they were – is both a breach of trust and, at a more subconscious level, feels like a slight against your own character. And that can’t be right, because everyone wants to believe that they and everyone they chose to befriend are fundamentally good people.

    Its hitting you on two levels, and now you’re in those stages of denial and bargaining. There has been a mistake, she was framed / Yes, she did something wrong, but it was only a small thing – the intern committed fraud and that’s worse.
    (You might have heard these described as the stages of grief, but trust me, its just a matter of the degree of reaction. Humans react to every unexpected possibly negative outcome with some subset of these stages)

    Take a deep breath, and step back from this. Give yourself some time to process the events. Spend less time with your co-worker so that things can sink in and you can make a more rational decision on how you’ll define your future relationship with her.
    Never mind the she-says/he-says of your co-worker and intern – none of it is not a reflection on your character.

  113. MJ*

    “One of them has created a situation where she lied to the police” – the intern did not create this situation. She was the victim of a crime. Surely you don’t suggest this was her fault?

  114. WeevilWobble*

    Late to this but to me the most interesting thing is the co-worker claimed she was framed. But it was her husband who told OP that she’d take the plea because a trial wouldn’t be good for her.

    I am pretty sure the husband was trying to tell OP that this was over and not to keep up the fight in a very delicate way.

    Husband knows she’s guilty. And is saying it without saying it.

    1. Helena*

      All the husband said was that the lawyer advised his wife to take the plea deal. It doesn’t say if she accepted it or decided to plead guilty.

  115. Buffay the Vampire Layer*

    All that said … it would be awfully poor judgment to use your own name when ordering on someone else’s stolen credit card! It’s like robbing a house and leaving a signed note behind. If anything here makes me wonder about the intern’s version of events, it’s this.

    Awfully poor judgment or the sign of a criminal mastermind a la Catherine Tramell.

  116. Looc64*

    The coworker admitting that she stole the jacket isn’t really a sign of credibility. She got caught on camera, so she had to come clean about it.

  117. Maolin*

    I haven’t read through all 1150 comments so it’s possible someone else has already pointed this out: Were the purchases made from the intern’s usual Amazon account with shipping to the pickup address in co-worker’s name, or from coworker’s usual account adding the intern’s card to payment methods (how could she correctly use the CVV authentication unless card was in the jacket? If a frame job, how could intern log into coworker’s account?), or from a new account in coworker’s name that could have been created by either the intern or coworker (which would need intern’s bill to address but coworker’s name as well as an email account to confirm the new Amazon account)? Do the dozen-some purchases provide any clues pointing to either? Assuming the purchases were not made and discovered until later (which seems unclear – was the jacket video looked at the same day it disappeared, and was the credit card used or found around the same time the jacket went missing or later?)? Was any surveillance available at the delivery address that would identify whodunit?

    I know most of the commentariat think the coworker made the purchases, but I think I’m leaning towards the intern framing the coworker on the purchases – it would take some work for coworker to get everything set up to be able to use that card, including setting up a dummy email & Amazon account with the correct billing address & CVV.

    I hope we get an update on this one!

    1. DArcy*

      Those are good questions. All of which were no doubt asked by the police as they investigated this matter, came to the conclusion that the jacket thief was also responsible for the credit card theft, and charged her with those crimes.

    2. HRish Dude*

      Considering her wallet was in her jacket, the billing address would be on her driver’s license and the CVV would be on the actual card she used. Not really that hard to piece together..

  118. Jessen*

    Can I advocate for Biblical restitution, since she’s a churchgoer? The one where you get to pay back 7x what you stole.

  119. DMC*

    I think the intern used the credit cards too (not because of the church deal LOL) but because there is a BIG difference between taking a jacket and committing credit card fraud…

    A lot of people can rationalize walking off with a jacket …a credit card theft is another animal…and the fact that she would add her name to the Amazon order is beyond stupid…plus to receive the purchases she has to put her own address…that isn’t just something you would be able to see on the credit card but on the amazon account as well…yes people commit dumb crimes all the time…but this is too dumb…set up dumb

    1. HRish Dude*

      “The intern got the police involved and told them her wallet with all of her ID and credit/debit cards were in her pocket.”

      Her address would be on her driver’s license.

      1. DMC*

        right but why would you order stuff to send to someone else’s address…you would send to your own…that is a pretty huge papertrail that leads back to you

    2. Blossom*

      I really don’t think that “a lot of people can rationalise walking off with a jacket” – especially when it’s not just “walking off with” a jacket that you find abandoned on a park bench, but knowingly taking your colleague’s jacket and sneaking it into your car when she’s not looking.

      How does a normal person rationalise that? And where is the big leap between rationalising that and using someone else’s credit card?

      I think the gap between most people and thieves is quite large, and the gap between different types of theft is pretty small.

      1. DMC*

        They can. Don’t get me wrong, it’s still stealing and I am not defending it. But some people view stealing differently…ie food out of your work refrigerator that isn’t yours, magazines at the dentist office, your coworkers jacket…all these are stealing…

        Just because a person would take lunch of your work refrigerator-does not mean they would log into an account, steal your credit card, and order a bunch of sh*t-those are different crimes…

      1. DMC*

        Where did I say it was okay…I said some people can rationalize different levels of stealing…the rest you assumed.

        1. Rainy*

          Sorry, but if you say stealing stuff from people is okay as long as it’s not a credit card, I just don’t have a lot of faith in your ethics. *shrug*

          1. Can’t remember what name I used before*

            That’s not what she said at all.

            She said that some people can completely rationalize some kinds of dishonesty, but still never dream of engaging in other types of dishonesty. Including being able to excuse some types of theft, but not others.
            I agree with her. I’ve seen it over & over again throughout my life. People are enormously complex and cognitive dissonance is a thing. To assume that just because someone committed (even admitted to) crime X, must absolutely mean they definitely are capable of committing [similar but far more serious] crime Y, is just as simplistic a manner of thinking as assuming that church going family-persons must assuredly be honest and upright.
            Being aware of that doesn’t mean I condone any sort of crime or theft, or think ‘lesser’ crimes should be overlooked. It means that I understand that people & situations are seldom as cut & dried as most of us would like them to be.

    3. Observer*

      It’s far more likely that someone who stole is lying about the rest of it, to avoid the repercussions of what she has done.

      Sure, it’s stupid. But she IS stupid. For one thing, she made her interest in the jacket clear. For another she actually had the jacket out in view of the cameras at work! Any thief with a half a brain would have had some reason to have a shoulder bag, shopping bag or SOMETHING to put the jacket into so it’s not obvious what she’s carrying. But, not she had it out and put it in the car for security and the police to see.

      On the other hand, for the intern to do this would have required some pretty tight timing – tight enough that I doubt she could pull it off.

      1. DMC*

        I mean that is the reasonable assumption which is why if the intern had been behind it is a good plan…most people would assume the person that stole the jacket would also do this-but that doesn’t mean it’s true. My gut instinct says she stole the jacket and the intern did the rest.

        It’s interesting that her coworker’s loyalty lies with the jacket thief. If this women has been coworker all along…has anything been missing…in the office…

        1. Can’t remember what name I used before*

          While I think the most likely story is that the coworker did it all, I’ve run across enough people who I can fully see saying “I’ll teach that #%!@$ to steal from ME!” and doing something even worse back in revenge, that I cannot understand the people who don’t even think it’s PLAUSIBLE that it could happen.

          1. Elspeth*

            Yes, however, the DA would not go ahead with a trial unless there was some pretty convincing evidence that the coworker did, in fact, order the stuff.

    4. MCMonkeyBean*

      There’s an even bigger difference between *having your jacket stolen from you* and committing credit card fraud! You think the coworker is innocent because taking a jacket isn’t a big enough crime? What crime has the intern committed to make you think she could commit fraud (which is what she would be doing by filing false reports with the police and with her credit card company).

      I am appalled that anyone could jump to the conclusion that the intern did anything wrong here.

      Yes, this is a dumb crime, so dumb in fact that it would be *extremely* easy for the police to figure out exactly who placed the Amazon orders. Which they presumably already did, before bringing up charges against the coworker. So they obviously found evidence supporting her using the cards.

  120. teclatrans*

    ….yeeeeah, no, I am with Blossom on this one. Rationalization of taking home an apparently lost item without doing due diligence? Okay, I can see that, though it’s still a lapse in moral judgment. Making off with something your co-worker wears all the time, in the middle of the work day when you see an opportunity to grab it unobserved? Thats neither a lapse in judgment or a rationalization of the situation in your favor, it’s straight-up theft. And it’s stupid theft, given that presumably the intern knew she had been wearing it earlier in the day, and likely other coworkers had seen it that day too, and it doesn’t sound like an office setup where some anonymous member of the public could be blamed. This makes it a *stupid*, arrogant theft, and perfectly in line with ordering Amazon purchases in your own name.

    Unlike much of the commentariat, I have seen and experienced lazy policework and railroading of defendants, so I am willing to reject the plea bargain as a data point. But Occam’s razor really does point away from a frame job. (Or, Oxfam’s razor, as suggested above by autocorrect. I will be laughing over that one for a long time to come.)

    1. DMC*

      I mean I don’t think it she was rationalizing a lost item, she stole it. She saw the jacket and took it and probably didn’t consider the cameras or didn’t know about them. But people walking off with stuff that does not belong to them does not mean they would engage in credit card fraud especially credit card fraud where they order items sent to their own address. That is pretty easy to trace.

      1. Observer*

        Why would you think she didn’t know about the cameras? You really stretching quite hard to find a reason to pin this on the Intern. Why?

        1. DMC*

          I am assuming if the coworker knew there were cameras…she may have been less leery to steal the jacket. I think that is a reasonable assumption. But it is possible she knew and took it any way.

          I don’t think so. I am just not making the assumption- that because the intern was stolen from that that doesn’t mean she isn’t capable of doing something awful as well.

      2. DArcy*

        I believe you’re drawing a distinction which does not actually exist. A person who is willing to commit theft is willing to commit any sort of theft they think they can get away with, and credit card fraud is *easier* to get away with than visibly walking off with a distinctive garment in front of cameras.

    2. sap*

      Hey, you gotta get the wool off those sheep somehow. Oxfam’s razor: for the shepherd who likes to live dangerously. (I know Oxfam doesn’t give people actual animals like heifer international, but.)

    3. Observer*

      It’s not just the police, though. She has a defense lawyer who is urging her to take the plea, and her husband seems to be on board with it. Sure, it’s not 100%, but significant. And along with everything else just makes the case against her stronger.

  121. sap*

    OP, have you considered that intern discovered that coworker stole jacket *because of* the credit card fraud? It sounds like you’re assuming the timeline went like this:
    -intern discovered missing jacket
    -intern immediately reviewed security footage and saw coworker steal jacket
    -intern then framed coworker for cc fraud

    I don’t know intern, but just based on who I am and the regularity with which I lose my jacket in my own office, car, or bedroom, that seems like an odd timeline to me. I’d more likely have a timeline like this:
    -I discover jacket is missing with my wallet, etc. in it
    -I become frustrated with myself, check all of the places my jacket could have been
    -I then log on to my credit card accounts and find fraud, oh, my jacket was stolen
    -I call my credit card companies to get information and discover that someone has bought a lot of stuff… in my coworker’s name??
    -I review the security footage.

    Asking for security footage of my building absolutely *would not* be my go-to here, I assume it would take 2-3 days for that to get approved, if approved at all, and I would assume that it would be an extremely low priority item for the security personnel if my stated reasoning was “someone stole my jacket” without HAVING ALREADY gone to the police or discovered massive credit card fraud that I could tell the security people about. Security people usually have more serious tasks on their plate than tracking down misplaced clothing, and I’m pretty sure that absent the story about existing fraud, they would assume I just lost my jacket and was jumping to conclusions. In that timeline, it would be a PRETTY BIG risk for Intern to assume it was coworker who stole the jacket, decide to frame her for credit card fraud, and then review the video to confirm that coworker had, in fact, stolen the jacket (and pretty lucky for intern that she hadn’t just left it in a conference room on accident).

    In sum, your timeline seems pretty implausible, and I suspect you pieced it together from secondhand things you’ve heard in the office rather than directly from Intern as far as when and what actions she took.

    1. DArcy*

      For that matter, most security departments won’t hand over surveillance footage to anyone but the police, and reluctantly even at that. So the order of events that the OP has constructed is less likely in that respect also — it’s much more likely that the police pulled the surveillance footage as part of their investigation, after the victim noticed the credit card fraud on top of the missing jacket and called the police.

    2. many bells down*

      And even if I thought someone HAD taken my jacket, my first response would probably be to … ask people. “Hey, did anyone grab my hoodie by mistake? I left it in the break room Friday.” Although if my wallet were in it I might ask security to help me look for it, at least.

  122. Candi*

    Okay, three things I love, with the second and third overlapping on the Venn Diagram with the first: history, true crime stories and real-life tales of criminal events, and weird and unusual facts. Love ’em all.

    And based on my reading for years of these topics… the stats fall on the coworker being the credit card fraudster as well as the jacket thief. The intern having some weird revenge plot going is the thin edge of the tiniest part of the bell curve.

    The stats also fall on this not being the coworker’s first rodeo. I wonder how many things at work, church, and her friends and family’s have gone missing or been lost. A history there may well have been part of the reason she plea bargained.

    History: Rodrigo Borgia, a notorious pope. Known for buying off the other candidate cardinals so he would be a shoo-in, nevermind all of his other crimes. There were also several other popes in the Renaissance whose wordliness took definite dominance over their godliness.

    More, there have been multiple splits and sect creations in Christianity. Some were over things like icons and indulgences, but some were over members of the congregation realizing/seeing the leaders of that church as committing crimes against God and/or man, and not having it. It’s wonderfully complex, and spans centuries. I’ve barely scratched the surface.

    The pillar of the community, the personification of virtue, paragon of goodness, who helps the poor and widow, worships at the local shrine/temple/etc., nice and settled and a family man/woman, who turns out to be a horrible person who commits variuos crimes and destroys hope, is an ancient trope that far predates Christianity and shows up in stories from all corners of the world. It can be part of the Hero’s Journey to out and/or destroy this wolf hidden in the flock. Community and religious standing has never been a guarantee of character; the clever criminal hides in plain sight, and even when someone sees his lack of clothes, so many do not want to acknowledge the revelation of the dark parts of his heart, allowing the parade to go on.

    Criminals may lack intelligence, knowledge, and/or wisdom; they can’t all be Frank Abagnale (pre-reform) or Richard Kulinski (aka the Iceman). But their most self-defeating aspect is far too many engage in magical thinking -that the way they want things to go is the way they will happen- and have very poor abilities to consider the long-term path and effects of their actions. Now, today, is important; tomorrow will be handled when it comes. Inability or lack of desire to consider consequences hampers their ability to be clever in the moment.

    In the 1980s a series of books to help crime writers came out, the Howdunit series. One of the authors was a woman who specialized in fingerprinting crime scense and analyzing and identifying them back at the lab. Now, the rarest of fingerprints is the tented arch; less than one in 1,000 people have even one. Even fewer have two, and the odds of having three are astronomical.

    Well, a crook in the author’s precinct had hit the genetic lottery; he had TEN tented arches.

    And he never wore gloves.

    1. Candi*

      I woke up this morning, and my brain pointed out the perfect Biblical tale for this. David and Bathsheba.

      King David is on his rooftop in the evening (fine, no air conditioning), sees Bathsheba on another roof bathing (erm, okay), and decides to find out who this lovely woman is (fine).

      Finds out she’s married. Invites her to the palace anyway. The huge power differential means that even the politest “will you?” would leave minimal room for “no” especially under the patriarchal systems and customs prevalent across the world.

      David wound up committing murder to kill Bathsheba’s husband Uriah and try to hide his twice (thrice?) -over flouting of Mosaic law, then married Bathsheba. Prophet Nathan chewed him a new one over the entire situation.

      (Regardless of what my childhood storybook said, that child was not Solomon. That son died within a week. On my first reading, I wondered if it was a severe congenital defect that couldn’t be healed. Bathsheba’s second son was Solomon.)

      Do you see, LW? David was regarded as a good man, but did something awful. He repented, but throughout his infant son, Tamar’s rape, and Absalom’s rebellion, paid a terrible price.

      Good people can make mistakes and commit crimes. It’s their response that’s important in the end -and your coworker’s is telling.

  123. brambleshark*

    Okay, with the understanding that I 100% do not believe the OP’s account of convoluted revenge plots, despite my deep love for convoluted revenge plots, here’s my explanation for how the OP’s sequence of events makes sense:

    1) Intern discovers her jacket is missing
    2) after somehow getting the security department to show her the surveillance footage based on a misplaced jacket (unlikely) and seeing coworker stealing her jacket, she takes this evidence to the OP
    3) OP says, well, but CW is a GOOD PERSON who VOLUNTEERS and GOES TO CHURCH and basically tells OP that CW will be getting a slap on the wrist at most.
    4) Bizarrely not satisfied by this, the intern THEN goes and makes a bunch of orders in the CW’s name, THEN “gets the police involved”, because cc fraud is a serious enough crime that OP/the company wont be able to just brush her off, and thereby has “created a situation” where she has “lied to the police”

    If true, OP has left out that crucial detail of “I already told her too bad so sad” that would explain why the employee would feel the need to frame the CW after the fact.

    Again, the above is really far down on the scale of plausibility, but it’s the only explanation I have for the OPs specific phrasing besides just “OP is conflicted and in denial and hoping that via the passive voice she can pardon the CW”. I get it, it sucks to realize someone you thought you knew is much different, is capable of “doing bad”, but… come on OP. Stop trying to make this somehow the intern’s fault.

  124. Tiberius Chicken*

    Almost everything’s been covered about the story (and IMO the co-worker definitely made the charges) but one thing I’m not seeing addressed is the OP talking to the boss about withdrawing the intern’s job offer.

    I disagree with Alison’s advice that the OP should mention any of this to the boss even with the caveat that it has no veracity. OP should in no way, shape or form bring this up with the hiring people. The only things OP should mention are things that are specific to the job and why the intern isn’t suitable for the job. With documentation.

    Intern is often late? Mention. Intern makes others finish her work? Mention. OP believes with absolutely no proof except for the word of someone being prosecuted for stealing from her that the intern framed said thief and therefore shouldn’t be hired? DO NOT MENTION.

    If the intern is hired, I think HR should sit down with the OP and the whole department and scare them to within an inch of their lives about professional behavior because it sounds like a mob is a-brewin’. And worst of all, it’s against the victim.

  125. ss*

    (pretending to be a CSI sleuth….) As part of the investigation, the police should have waited to see if the intern applied for a replacement driver’s license (or an id card if she doesn’t drive). If not, then it is unlikely that her wallet was taken. They could have waited to see if she purchased alcohol or some other action that required showing her id and if she did use her license then they’d know that she lied about the wallet. On the other hand, if she did apply for a new license along with new credit card, then it would support the intern’s version of events.

    1. Elspeth*

      Which I’m sure the police already did – there was obviously clear evidence the co-worker stole and used the cards or the prosecutor would not have gone ahead with charges/setting a trial date.

  126. Did I misread?*

    Wait a minute . . . The coworker left with the jacket, THEN stuff was ordered from a company computer?

  127. mlu007*

    The OP suffers from a serious case of a confirmation bias. Despite all signs pointing to the contrary, she is deluding herself into thinking that her co-worker was innocent and that she did not charge the Amazon orders to the intern’s card. The OP ought to step back and re-examine the idea that she had made herself of her co-worker. The evidence overwhelmingly supports the co-worker’s culpability.

    OP’s argument can be summed up as: the co-worker “has no history of trouble working here, has no criminal record and is a good person who volunteers and is active with her church and her family”.

    The objective facts are:
    – the co-worker admitted to one of her crimes;
    – the intern complained to the police;
    – the police investigated and found sufficient evidence to warrant a recommendation to prosecute to the D.A.;
    – the D.A. has initiated a case against the co-worker;
    – the co-worker is considering a plea bargain, therefore admitting her guilt, at least partially.

    With regards to the co-worker’s credibility, the OP is clearly missing the mark here. The co-worker admitted to stealing the jacket. Whether that discredits any of her subsequent statements in the matter of stolen credit cards is best judged by the people who know her best. However, common sense would dictate that the co-worker has lost all credibility from the moment she admitted to stealing the jacket.

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