Lazy coworker "Chad" accuses employee of "throwing him under the bus" in meeting with CEO, employee pulls out receipts: 'Chad denies it, vehemently'

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  • "Don't try to throw me under the bus. I have the receipts."

    This was quite some time ago, in my first corporate job. I was hired to streamline the department, assign workloads and generally improve procedures. I had a coworker, male, about my age,
  • with the company longer and just generally full of himself and lazy (let's call him...Chad). I instituted monthly meetings with the CEO,
  • our head of dept and the entire department. Basically a monthly (one hour) check in on matters assigned to the team, mini progress reports. One matter assigned to Chad. Chad specifically requested this matter
  • (high profile). Meetings set for Thursdays. Mondays I email out link to Word document with a chart listing all the matters for review (1st, 2nd and 3rd reviews).
  • Each matter clearly stated team member with carriage. Reminders sent out on Wednesdays. Chad didn't like filling out the chart (for distribution within the department only -this was a failsafe in case life interrupted
  • and someone was out ill etc., someone else could briefly report on the matter, based on the notes).
  • Meeting time, high profile matter is up for discussion and CEO asks the status. Chad is silent. No one else speaks. I look at Chad, he smirks and says "Well, looks like this one slipped through the cracks and didn't get assigned
  • out (he looks at me), I'll look into it after the meeting and update you ASAP". CEO looks at me and says "OP, didn't you assign this out?". "I did. I assigned it to Chad
  • as per his request and he signed for ownership and receipt of the paper files." Chad denies it, vehemently.
  • Young coworkers stare each other down in a jokingly antagonistic manner.
  • After the meeting, CEO comes back with us to our department to discuss. Chad still denies everything, despite the 10 files sitting on his credenza. I pull out the Matter Tracking binder (yes, all done by paper back then),
  • show the email print out from Chad asking for the matter as it is "very high profile with CEO and I want the extra exposure", Chad's initials for the receipt of the files and effective date of handover.
  • "But I never got the files!" Chad says. I simply pointed to the pile of files on his credenza. CEO requested that I handle the files and move forward as quickly as possible.
  • HR put Chad on a PIP. He refused to work with me (supervising as per the PIP) as I had "throw him under the bus". No Chad, you did.
  • He was failing the PIP (refused to attend the mandatory weekly 1- on-1s, submit weekly progress reports, etc., the usual) and resigned before he was fired.
  • Department worked great without him, productivity increased and we surpassed all our targets.

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