myurr wrote: ↑07 Mar 2024, 15:01
mendis wrote: ↑07 Mar 2024, 14:55
Ideally, she should be fired for falsifying a complaint if that is indeed the case. If there is no evidence (not the filmsy whatsapp screenshots available online), then it's an attempt to tarnish another employee. If the internal investigation lead by a KC barrister has looked at the available evidence and determined, it doesn't justify the harassment complaint, it amounts to tarnishing reputation of the accused employee. So it would be right to simply let her go. If the woman thinks she is right, then she should file a legal case and if she doesn't, she was making this up all this while.
For a start we've previously established the screenshots you're looking at aren't the ones from the original leak.
But now you're suggesting that if a woman reports sexual harassment in the workplace that if the company finds insufficient evidence to prove her right, or dismisses the case for any other reason such as a technicality, that she should be fired for raising the complaint in the first place?
Whatever the leaks are, no one knows for sure still if they are 100% real or not.
You are just wrongly assuming you know it all, which you don't. There is going to be more we don't know than do at this point. It's no coincidence that more information this week has been slowly coming out. It's also no coincidence this has happened the day after the last day she could appeal.
It's likely actually the KC came to a different opinion and what she could appeal could well of actually been something against her, not CH as everyone presumed.
No one is suggesting she would be sacked/suspended for making a sexual harassment complaint, but it is 100% fireable if that complaint was made with some level of falsified evidence.