Originally posted by ladymuck
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Fair Cop...
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Originally posted by _V_ View PostIt's funny how we've accepted the unpaid job of checkout person, and the risk of fine and criminal record if we do a bad job without any training or supervision.
Next step, we will have to load the shelves and move stuff around in the warehouse before being allowed to make the purchase.Leave a comment:
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It is quite a common scam that people weigh an expensive item on the self-service tills instead of scanning the barcode and select a cheap root vegetable.Leave a comment:
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Originally posted by _V_ View PostNext step, we will have to load the shelves and move stuff around in the warehouse before being allowed to make the purchase.
HTHLeave a comment:
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It's funny how we've accepted the unpaid job of checkout person, and the risk of fine and criminal record if we do a bad job without any training or supervision.
Next step, we will have to load the shelves and move stuff around in the warehouse before being allowed to make the purchase.Leave a comment:
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Originally posted by SueEllen View PostI once scanned the wrong type of potato for a cheaper type because they didn't have the type I was buying on their tills, and the assistant had fecked off.Leave a comment:
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Originally posted by xoggoth View PostI use those barcode scanners at Sainsburies. Must admit, it worries me slightly that one could make an honest error by forgetting to scan summit and and get nabbed by one of their random checks.Leave a comment:
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I use those barcode scanners at Sainsburies. Must admit, it worries me slightly that one could make an honest error by forgetting to scan summit and and get nabbed by one of their random checks.Leave a comment:
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An arrest and a solid conviction is slum-dunk really, how very dare they charge cops for donuts?
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Fair Cop...
Or more like a thief who is a cop.
Cop who scanned Krispy Kremes as 7p carrots said it was ‘honest mistake’ | Metro News
A police officer who scanned a 7p barcode for carrots on tray of £9.95 Krispy Kreme doughnuts has said it was an honest mistake.
PC Simon Read said he did not realise he had scanned the carrot barcode twice at the self-service tills at Tesco in Wisbech, Cambridgeshire.
At the opening of his misconduct hearing this morning, PC Read accepted that he failed to scan the barcode for the doughnuts while purchasing four items at around 11.30am – the doughnuts, carrots, a sandwich and a drink – but said it was not done on purpose.
Asked if he intended to steal the doughnuts, he told the hearing: ‘Absolutely not, and I’m horrified we’re in this situation here today.’
The Cambridgeshire Police officer, who joined the force in January, said he was buying the sweet treats for colleagues as a ‘cake fine’.
‘Cake fines are fairly common in the police,’ he said. ‘It’s a way of being punished in a light-hearted way.’
He said people could be given a ‘cake fine’ if they were having a bad day, or if they were joining or leaving a department. PC Read said he was buying the carrots for someone on a diet and he thought it ‘would be funny’ for them to be in a Krispy Kreme paper bag.
He said he stuck the carrots barcode onto the doughnut tray. ‘I simply scanned where I believed the barcodes were and placed them down (in the bagging area),’ he said.
‘I didn’t check the screen. I wish I had have done. I wish I had paid more attention to what was an ordinary experience – going to the shop, scanning some items and paying.’
He said he felt ‘embarrassed’ by what happened, adding: ‘This has been a very long and lengthy nine months, not being at work when I should be.’
He said he took a receipt but did not look at it, adding: ‘I had no cause to.’
Lawyer Mark Ley-Morgan, putting the misconduct case, said: ‘He’s maintained from the outset this is all a horrible mistake, of him failing to pay attention while scanning his items.
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