Download >>> https://byltly.com/2812aa
If your name is Richard Stahlschlussel, the best way to find work in the steel industry might just be to put out an advertisement for new employees on Craigslist. For some people, it's difficult to make new friends or form relationships. Richard Stahlschlussel however found what he looked for in the steel industry, and his resume made him an instant success story...at least until someone stole all of his documents. It turns out that Stahl’s secrets were not as ironclad as he claimed them to be. Multiple sources claim that Stahlschlussel has never, nor will ever, work in the steel industry. Relying on his resume, Stahlschlussel got a job at stock brokerage firm Bear Stearns in March 2007. He was able to obtain this position with very little effort. Stahlschlussel’s credentials were so impressive that within three weeks of sending out his resume, he had an interview with Bear Stearns and by the end of the week was offered a job as a vice president of equity trading. Soon after starting employment at Bear Stearns he went on vacation to Italy. Little did anyone know that this would be the last time they would see him again. In June 2007, while Stahlschlussel was in Italy, his brother-in-law, a warehouse worker at Bear Stearns, was arrested for stealing a large quantity of copper from the firm. Over the course of four months he allegedly stole at least 13 casks of steel weighing hundreds of pounds. Certainly this would have been a problem for an executive at Bear Stearns but it turns out that he had nothing to do with any of this. The warehouse employee’s name is not listed on the indictment against him because his brother-in-law had convinced him that he needed to take care of all the work in the warehouse before starting his job at Bear Stearns. All of the stolen material was recovered and returned to Bear Stearns, but by then it was too late for Richard Stahlschlussel, his documents were already lost. The vice president of equity trading position that he had held for such a brief period of time was no longer open and he would never be welcome back at the firm again. Even though his brother-in-law had been stealing from Bear Stearns for months, no one ever bothered to take a look at his resume and verify the information provided on it. By early September 2007, Bear Stearns had filed a lawsuit against Richard Stahlschlussel and his brother-in-law seeking $300,000 in damages. Even though the firm only wanted the money to satisfy his employee’s termination benefits, Stahlschlussel was not able to find another job. It turned out that Stahlschlussel had left behind some very incriminating information on his resume. The first lie that he told on his resume, concerning his work history, was that he had been employed at China Steel for three years. In fact China Steel had never even heard of him, so they were unable to help him in any way. Still not deterred by this setback Stahlschlussels next attempt was to claim that he worked for RSC-Alpine, one of the most important steel companies in Germany. cfa1e77820
Comments