He Lives In A Hotel And Realized That Someone Had Been Forging His Name On Documents, So He Reached Out To The Hotel Staff, And Now An Employee May Lose Their Job

aberenyi - stock.adobe.com - illustrative purposes only
aberenyi - stock.adobe.com - illustrative purposes only

This guy currently lives in a serviced apartment located in a hotel, and his rent is paid for by the company that he works for. So, the only expenses he’s responsible for are utilities and any extra services.

While the hotel reportedly “tries very hard” to provide a nice living experience, though, he claimed that the property is still quite disorganized.

“Usually everything is fine, but sometimes, there are miscommunications that disrupt my schedule or worse,” he explained.

“But I’m usually pretty understanding, and I never lose my temper or shout like some other guests.”

Even so, there was recently one issue that actually might cause him to get one of the hotel’s employees fired.

The problem had to do with his rent, which, again, he does not pay. However, he is still required to sign a document every single month that includes the rent amount.

“And then that document is sent to my employer, who pays the bill,” he detailed.

Well, he realized that there was a mix-up by the hotel, and he actually hadn’t signed that paperwork for the past two months.

So, since his rent kept getting paid anyway, it was obvious that someone at the hotel must have signed the document for him– because it wasn’t signed by anyone at his company.

aberenyi – stock.adobe.com – illustrative purposes only

“There’s nothing for anyone to gain from signing my name other than saving time instead of trying to find me,” he admitted.

Nonetheless, he still emailed the hotel and asked the staff to look into the issue.

Afterward, he heard back from the hotel staff, and it became clear that one of the employees had “definitely screwed up.” He also learned that if an employee was found to have deliberately signed his name on the document, then they would be fired!

He told some of his friends about what happened, too, but they believed that he should just drop the topic before anyone loses their job.

“Because they weren’t stealing anything, and if someone did sign my name, they only did it to speed things up,” his friends reasoned.

Still, the whole situation has left him feeling pretty bothered and unsettled.

“If they would do that, what else would they do?” he vented.

But, ever since getting some pushback from his friends, he can’t help but wonder if getting someone fired for forging his name was really a jerk move.

Do you think that he’s overreacting? Or does he have a right to be concerned about someone forging his name? Would you drop the issue if you were him or pursue further action? 

You can read the original post on Reddit here.

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Katharina Buczek graduated from Stony Brook University with a degree in Journalism and a minor in Digital Arts. Specializing ... More about Katharina Buczek

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