Legal Help on Employee Theft Scams Providence RI

The best way to prevent employee theft is to use staffing agencies that offer pre-screening services. Background checks will save you money from employee theft scams. Please scroll down to learn more and get access to the litigation lawyers in Providence, RI listed below.

Andrew Kevin Hughes
202-373-6848
2800 Financial Plaza
Providence, RI
Robert K Taylor
401-861-8200
180 S MAIN ST
PROVIDENCE, RI
Katy Hynes
401-274-7200
1 CITIZENS PLZ CITIZENS BANK BLDG
PROVIDENCE, RI
Shannon Leigh Rand
401-331-3400
1600 FINANCIAL PLZ
PROVIDENCE, RI
Robert G Flanders Jr
401-274-2000
50 Kennedy Plaza, Suite 1500
Providence, RI
Louise Herman
401.277.4110
129 Dyer Street
Providence, RI
Andrew Beerworth
401-621-4677
10 Weybosset Street, Suite 900
Providence, RI
Nicholas Mancini
401-274-7200
One Citizens Plaza, 8th Floor
Providence, RI
Joseph Avanzato
401-274-7200
Adler Pollock & Sheehan Pc, One Citizens Plz Fl 8
Providence, RI
Christopher L. Ayers
401-274-2000
50 Kennedy Plaza, Suite 1500
Providence, RI
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Legal Help on Employee Theft Scams

Holiday temps make the best scammers

Posted by Robert Siciliano on December 9th, 2009

Robert Siciliano is a NextAdvisor.com Expert Guest Blogger

This is the absolute best time of the year to be a dishonest temporary worker. Holiday hustle and bustle overwhelms managers and supervisors and they can’t possibly see everything their employees are doing. It has been said that only 10% of employees are honest, 10% of employees will always steal and 80% will steal based on circumstances. Hiring temps during the holidays becomes the perfect storm for employee theft.

Estimates reveal that 40-50% of all business losses are due to employee theft. Employers need to first vet potential hires so as not to invite a thief into the workplace.

Prescreening

  • Either use a prescreening service or become a master interviewer. Watch for incongruities.
  • Resumes are often “false advertising,” sometimes including outright lies. Look for red-flags and exaggerations.
  • Appearance is telling. To be disheveled and unkempt at an interview is a reflection of one’s character.
  • Interviewees who are well-spoken and ace the interview process may have had lots and lots of jobs.
  • Use employment applications, and check and verify everything.
  • Background checks are only one small, but necessary, element of the screening process.
  • Criminal records checks are insufficient and do not detect employee theft unless prosecuted and convicted.
  • Juvenile convictions do not show on a criminal records check.
  • Drug and alcohol testing.
  • Reference checks.
  • Credit reports.
  • Physical exams.

Hire honest people.

Honest people live by the golden rule, “Do as to others as you would have them do unto you.” Honest people see stealing as demeaning. Honest people believe in karma. Honest people think of the consequences of their actions over a lifetime, not just in the moment. Hire honest people.

Perception is reality.

Assume that after an apparently honest person has been hired, there is still potential for stealing to begin. Orientation is the first place to discourage this behavior. Policies must be openly discussed. Employees are shown aspects of loss prevention and physical security in place. They are further told incidences of theft will be prosecuted under the fullest extent of the law. They are reminded that previous employees were caught and the expenses in fines and to lawyers in a criminal defense cost far more than the goods or cash that were stolen. In Singapore, Iran, Saudi Arabia, they put an average of 500 people a year to death for various nonviolent crimes. That’s perception equaling reality.

Understand the theft probability equation.

Chance of getting caught + consequences of action taken = Level of risk & probability of theft.

  • Low risk: high probability of theft
  • High risk: low probability of theft
  • A reputation for non-action breeds theft. If you fire thieves without prosecution, you will hire thieves in the future.

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