- 
            "Got my bosses fired"Despite declining to name the company for legal reasons, u/Burnandmurder did update the post with more details about the sort of work they do. "I work in the firearms industry. We handle loaded and unloaded firearms as a rule rather than the exception. Safety is important." 
- 
        
- 
        
- 
        In an updated edit to the post, u/Burnandmurder went into additional detail about "the incident" and how their drunk bosses put people's lives in danger. 
 "We have green and red zones. Green=firearms, ammunition, and loaded firearms are allowed, red=unloaded firearms only absolutely no ammunition under any circumstances. Both are marked by ample signage. Drunk bosses handled a loaded firearm in a red zone, had an ND [negligent discharge] which passed through an interior wall, exiting 3 inches from my coworkers hip and continuing into an open area where a local youth sporting team was...before embedding itself in a cinder block wall."
- 
            The comment section was grateful for OP's initiativeNegligent bosses are annoying at best and dangerous or abusive at worst. The comment section was full of supportive messages and similar stories. 
- 
        Some pointed out that OP might have even done their bosses a favor. "Not only that," u/imgrandojjo added, "he probably saved his ex-bosses from going to jail for negligent homicide." 
 Another redditor mentioned that getting fired might not be the end of their punishment. "Depending on the circumstances and any evidence," u/IronJarl83 noted, "perhaps some manner of DUI or reckless endangerment is possible for criminal charges. Maybe a civil suit could be possible instead, an extra layer of sticking it to those assholes."
- 
        
-