12 comments

[ 2.9 ms ] story [ 46.8 ms ] thread
He forwarded the photos to his own phone from the victim's phone. Doing this in the first place is the height of stupidity. Not removing your tracks? He deserved to get caught.
He deserves to get caught for abusing public trust to do disgusting and awful things. Would you be fine with this if he hadn't been caught?
No one should even consider doing this in the first place. I can't imagine any reward that would make it worth my while to even think about such a thing. It is totally a lose-lose situation, and throwing yourself into such a situation is the height of stupidity.
not "he deserved to be punished for victimizing people and creeping on their nudes."

instead "he deserved to be caught."

yikes

Not everything should be taken literally word-for-word.
and not every comment should go unapologized-for

this is an inappropriately patronizing tone, especially under the circumstances

You seem to be saying if he did it more carefully, he wouldn't deserve to get caught. And that this is merely "stupidity" and not an act of evil.

Please clarify.

Of course it's evil. What I'm saying is if you are going to be evil, at least put some thought behind it.
It's so easy to make an unambiguous condemnation of sex crimes, as you were asked to do. I think we got the clarification we were looking for. Congrats on being "edgy".
The law enforcement agencies tend to only capture the stupid criminals.

What we don’t know is how many of these malicious low level employees are out there. Minimal background checks, low pay, minimal qualifications, and long hours tend to attract the worst people. Add in that these stores are minimally supervised with maybe 1-2 people on the floor during business hours.

It’s a recipe for disaster.

T-Mobile is getting the heat. But there is at least a few of these stories every year from all types of retailers (Apple, Best Buy, Microsoft, Verizon, and even third party repair shops, …)

I imagine this is pretty common though.