Anonymous wrote:There's more to this story. This is weird.
Anonymous wrote:There's more to this story. This is weird.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's more to this story. This is weird.
There really isn't. 40% of mass shootings in the US are domestic violence perpetrated by men.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It was the ex husband. Are you nay sayers going to apologize?
No one owes you an apology, weirdo.
Anonymous wrote:There's more to this story. This is weird.
Anonymous wrote:It was the ex husband. Are you nay sayers going to apologize?
Anonymous wrote:It was the ex husband. Are you nay sayers going to apologize?
Anonymous wrote:It was the ex husband. Are you nay sayers going to apologize?
Anonymous wrote:It was the ex husband. Are you nay sayers going to apologize?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It feels like someone knew something was already off given how quickly they were concerned. He didn’t show up for work and by 10:00 they had police there. I feel like the coworkers knew there were some issues going on. Maybe he had told them about weird messages or a stalker or someone who had threatened them or something.
In most places even if you had a very reliable employee, you wouldn’t be at their house with police almost immediately after they didn’t show up for work.
I tend to agree with this.
How many times does the way medical offices work need to be explained to you?
I've worked in many medical offices and no a boss wouldn't call the police while from vacation because an employee was late.
The police would be the first call. Probably not even the second or third.
How many times does that need to be explained to you?
Huh? Wouldn’t call the police but the police would be the first call?
Why would a boss who was on vacation call the police?
Maybe an office manager actually at the office. Maybe . Even then it seems like it would be more reasonable for a coworker to drive by and check before calling the police.
Bottom line some of you don't want to consider the coworker as a suspect because you are biased he's a dentist same social class as you and you don't believe people in your class in your circles commit murder.
The staff was dealing with a waiting room full of patients & no dentist. Of course they called their boss and asked how to proceed. The boss (owner of this business from what I can tell) likely took over decision making from there. It sounds like various efforts to reach the missing guy or his wife were made before resorting to calling the police and/or sending someone to the house.
Where did you read this? He was literally the only dentist scheduled to work the office that day? There are only two dentists total in the office, he and the dentist who was vacationing in Florida? How would a waiting room already be "full" for 1 dentist when they opened at 8:00 when the first coworker left to drive the 60+ minutes to his house? At most there'd be a couple of patients. Big whoop.
Sounds like you're trying to paint a fake frantic situation to blunt the weirdness of immediately driving 2+ hours round trip to someone's house because they were late for work.
At a normal dental office his patients would just be rescheduled or another dentist would try to pick up the slack. If people were just in for routine cleanings, the techs could begin their jobs without a dentist in the building...