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View Full Version : Best Buy employee loses job for going after computer thief



Teh One Who Knocks
05-05-2011, 01:03 PM
By GREG TUTTLE Of The Billings Gazette Staff


http://i.imgur.com/YCDWN.jpg

It was a split-second decision that cost Roger Kline his job.

Until Tuesday, the 51-year-old Kline worked in the computer department at Best Buy in Billings. He had held the sales job for over three years, he said, and was among the store's top performers without so much as a blemish on his employment record.

"I believe I was one of the highest-regarded employees there," he said.

But Kline ran into problems on March 28 when a would-be thief tried to run out of the store with two laptop computers.

Kline said his instincts took over, and instead of letting the man dash away without paying for the $1,600 in merchandise, Kline grabbed him and threw him to the ground.

The man, 45-year-old Brent Carter Latendresse, was arrested and has been charged in Yellowstone County District Court with felony theft and misdemeanor drug possession.

Latendresse is awaiting trial. Kline said he is taking a few weeks off before looking for a new job.

"Everybody is asking the exact same question," Kline said about his firing. "The problem is, I don't have an answer because the decision had nothing to do with morals."

A spokeswoman for Best Buy said the company could not comment.

The crime

According to court records, the incident at the West End store began when the manager heard an emergency alarm sound on a back door. The manager said he saw a man carrying two boxed laptops running from the back door toward another door at the loading area.

That door was locked, so the thief dashed back through the store headed for the front doors.

As the man neared the front doors, he tripped, falling face first into the glass. Court records state that the man was held until police arrived.

Kline has a similar account, with a few additional details.

Kline said he was standing near the front doors when he heard the store manager announce on the speaker system that someone was running through the store trying to steal laptops.

Kline saw the running man and began to move toward the front doors. The man fell before he made it out of the store, slamming into the floor and the first set of glass doors.

That gave Kline enough time to get outside the second set of doors just as the man tried to make his final escape.

Kline described his next act as a "spontaneous thing."

"As he stood up, I grabbed a hold of him and threw him to the ground," he said.

Kline landed on top of the man and intended to hold him there until police arrived.

But the store manager approached and told Kline to back off.

"Roger, you have to let him go," Kline said he was told.

Kline followed his boss's direction, while an unidentified customer took Kline's place and held Latendresse until a police officer arrived.

Kline said he didn't have time to think before he grabbed the fleeing thief, but he recalls clearly how he felt at the time.

"Someone steals from you, you stop them," he said. "That's the way I was brought up. I felt like the guy was stealing from me, not just the company. I guess I took it a little personal when I saw the guy run out of the store with two computers."

The fallout

Kline says he knew better than to interfere with a crime-in-progress. It is against company policy at Best Buy to intervene in such cases. Kline said he accurately described his actions in a written statement he was asked to give by his boss the same day.

He was told that his actions would be reviewed.

Kline said he knew he could be fired for doing what he felt was right despite the policy. He even agreed to amend his statement to include the fact that he was aware of the company policy against such actions.

Then days days stretched into weeks without word.

"They had me in a holding pattern for a month," he said. "I was going to work every day just to greet the manager to see if I had a job because no one said anything to me about the whole process."

Kline said he did speak to someone about the incident by telephone, but he's not sure whom he talked to. He thinks it may have been someone from a company hired by Best Buy to investigate incidents.

After three weeks passed, Kline said, he sent an email to his boss asking about the status of his employment. He was told that a member of the company's review committee had taken some time off, but that a decision was expected soon.

Then on Tuesday, Kline was called into the manager's office and handed an "involuntary separation notice."

"Roger, you admitted that on March 28, 2011, you pursued a shoplifter and engaged in physical force to apprehend this shoplifter," the one-page notice reads. "This is a violation of Best Buy's Inappropriate Conduct Policy which states that employees are prohibited from 'pursuing shoplifters under any circumstance or using physical force to detain shoplifters' and ground for termination. Your employment with Best Buy is terminated, effective immediately."

Losing his job was hard, Kline said, but he does not blame his former boss, who he said was just doing his job.

But waiting a month to learn his fate from a committee of people he had never met or spoken with was hard.

"I'm more twisted because they took so long to make the decision," he said.

Acid Trip
05-05-2011, 01:07 PM
This is par for the course for most companies.

"If anyone robs or steals from the company do not try to stop them, that's what we have insurance for". I've heard that exact phrase many, many times.

MrsM
05-05-2011, 01:08 PM
I understand Best Buys policy - but they treated this guy like crap. Hopefully his actions will get him another job quickly.

Acid Trip
05-05-2011, 01:18 PM
I understand Best Buys policy - but they treated this guy like crap. Hopefully his actions will get him another job quickly.

Interviewer: "Why did you get fired from Best Buy?"
Roger: "I opened a can of Whoop Ass on someone robbing the store"
Interviewer: "You're hired!"

redred
05-05-2011, 01:26 PM
what a crazy world we live in knowing we shouldn't do the right thing , i think maybe 20 years ago you'd get a pack of beer and turned into a manager or something now you have to open the door to let the thief run out

FBD
05-05-2011, 01:38 PM
Political Correctness, destroying lives, wealth, morals...I dont buy from places like this who get taken over by PC, its all I can do. *blacklists Best Buy*

Loser
05-05-2011, 01:48 PM
While I agree that political correctness needs to die a horrible death, it's not to blame here. The laws to blame here.

If that thief had been hurt in the altercation, Best buy would be legally liable for the action of their employee. Lawsuits would be flung around, and in the end, that idiot thief would of won a hell of a lot more then 3200$ worth in laptops.

FBD
05-05-2011, 02:33 PM
and you dont think PC-ness is the root to that branch? ;) its no different than a burglar tripping over your shoes and breakin his wrist in the fall and then suing you for having an unsafe house!

Acid Trip
05-05-2011, 03:22 PM
While I agree that political correctness needs to die a horrible death, it's not to blame here. The laws to blame here.

If that thief had been hurt in the altercation, Best buy would be legally liable for the action of their employee. Lawsuits would be flung around, and in the end, that idiot thief would of won a hell of a lot more then 3200$ worth in laptops.

That's what is fucked up. We've got lawyers out there suing everything under the sun. A ROBBER gets hurt during a ROBBERY and it's the companies fault? Someone explain that shit to me. Common sense says the robber would have never been hurt had he not tried to rob the store.

I read a story a few years back about a guy who feel through a skylight while breaking into a house then SUED the homeowner for his injuries. He WON. What the fuck is our world coming to...

PorkChopSandwiches
05-05-2011, 03:38 PM
Political Correctness, destroying lives, wealth, morals...I dont buy from places like this who get taken over by PC, its all I can do. *blacklists Best Buy*

Dont forget the lawyers and insurance companies

Godfather
05-05-2011, 03:39 PM
I agree with loser... the laws are to blame, not Best Buy


As some of you know, I've been working in the insurance industry now for a while. You start to see things with a different lense :lol: Liability is a mammoth issue. Ridiculous or not, this guy broke a well known rule that could have had huge ramifications for his employer. Best Buy shouldn't be demonized; the lawyers who have created this culture of the thieves being entitled to even a penny are....

How did it even get this bad? The wordings of any insurance document in the world state that if you're doing anything criminal, you're not covered (in many, many more words). How we got to the point where you're concerned about liability to petty thieves I'm not sure... it's dribble.

And this guy might have done something brave, but it was pointless and stupid. Companies like Best Buy spend tens of thousands for property insurance. Do you want to risk protecting a billion dollar empire over a broke guy trying to make a few hundred bucks stealing a laptop? Meh...

FBD
05-05-2011, 03:59 PM
The wordings of any insurance document in the world state that if you're doing anything criminal, you're not covered (in many, many more words).
yup x10. "if someone gets hurt on your property, you're liable. period." is what PC dictates. I cant imagine having somebody break into my house to steal things, hurt themselves, and I would wind up having to pay. I would NOT. PAY. A. DIME. PERIOD.

Hal-9000
05-05-2011, 04:58 PM
So Best Buy is using liability as a defense...why did this occur?

"Kline said he was standing near the front doors when he heard the store manager announce on the speaker system that someone was running through the store trying to steal laptops."




Do they make the announcement so employees can go on break out the other door? :lol:

Acid Trip
05-05-2011, 05:03 PM
So Best Buy is using liability as a defense...why did this occur?

"Kline said he was standing near the front doors when he heard the store manager announce on the speaker system that someone was running through the store trying to steal laptops."

Do they make the announcement so employees can go on break out the other door? :lol:

That announcement sounds like a call to action if you ask me. Hopefully the manager is also fired.

Hal-9000
05-05-2011, 05:05 PM
That announcement sounds like a call to action if you ask me. Hopefully the manager is also fired.

Seemed that way to me :thumbsup:

saved the store 1600 in inventory and lost his job....I'd hire a loyal dude like Roger in a heartbeat

Acid Trip
05-05-2011, 07:03 PM
I'd hire him if he moves to Texas.

Hal-9000
05-05-2011, 07:20 PM
If he lived in Texas, he would have shot the guy 6 times before he made it to the door :lol:

Goofy
05-05-2011, 07:33 PM
*sigh* What a fucked up world this is......

Acid Trip
05-05-2011, 07:43 PM
If he lived in Texas, he would have shot the guy 6 times before he made it to the door :lol:

Touché! Well played Sir.