Sent Items (Very Important) Please Help

S

sgamboa

Hi-
Today at work, my team lead stated that I had not sent her an email that I
was suppose to have sent. I told her that we could go to my desk and show her
my sent box, where I had indeed sent it to her and I could forward the
original. We go to my desk, I log in and show her the sent items. I sort the
mail. Scroll down to all of the messages I have sent to her and show her the
message that I sent to her on Wednesday. She then says that I doctored it.
I need to know if this is even possible while working in a very secure
environment.
(I work for a bank)
Please any information anybody could give me would really be appreciated.
 
G

Grant Robertson

Today at work, my team lead stated that I had not sent her an email that I
was suppose to have sent. ... and show her the
message that I sent to her on Wednesday. She then says that I doctored it.
I need to know if this is even possible while working in a very secure
environment.
(I work for a bank)

If your team lead at a bank is going to blithely accuse you of faking an
e-mail because she does not want to admit that she may have accidentally
deleted it, or that it may have been filtered out, then you need to get
another job fast. Next thing you know she will be accusing you of
stealing money because she left a money bag on top of her car.

I'm serious. Get out and get out fast. The only safe way to deal with
this kind of person is to put as much distance between you and them as
possible.


P.S. You posted this in the wrong newsgroup. OneNote is spelled very
differently from Outlook.
 
T

Thurman

Grant Robertson said:
If your team lead at a bank is going to blithely accuse you of faking an
e-mail because she does not want to admit that she may have accidentally
deleted it, or that it may have been filtered out, then you need to get
another job fast. Next thing you know she will be accusing you of
stealing money because she left a money bag on top of her car.

I'm serious. Get out and get out fast. The only safe way to deal with
this kind of person is to put as much distance between you and them as
possible.

I agree w Grant, you are in the wrong place which will morph into the wrong
time.

Depending on the state you are in, there are 'archival laws' that
specifically state what kind of documents, electronic or other, that must be
preserved 'short, intermediate or long term'. Short is 7 years, intermediate
is 100 years and long= forever.

If you are working in a federal bank, start shopping for an attorney. You're
probably going to need one. Good news is the records laws are on your side.
 
T

Thurman

Grant Robertson said:
If your team lead at a bank is going to blithely accuse you of faking an
e-mail because she does not want to admit that she may have accidentally
deleted it, or that it may have been filtered out, then you need to get
another job fast. Next thing you know she will be accusing you of
stealing money because she left a money bag on top of her car.

I'm serious. Get out and get out fast. The only safe way to deal with
this kind of person is to put as much distance between you and them as
possible.

I agree w Grant, you are in the wrong place which will morph into the wrong
time.

Depending on the state you are in, there are 'archival laws' that
specifically state what kind of documents, electronic or other, that must be
preserved 'short, intermediate or long term'. Short is 7 years, intermediate
is 100 years and long= forever.

If you are working in a federal bank, start shopping for an attorney. You're
probably going to need one. Good news is the records laws are on your side.
 

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