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Biglaw Emergency Situation
Posted: Tue Jul 30, 2013 5:46 pm
by Mce252
So I'm currently finishing my summer in biglaw and I just had an emergency arise. I've been working with one of the most senior partners at the firm on a deal for the past week. I've been in and out of his office, along with dozens of others as well. This particular partner happens to keep a collection of valuable coins in his office. This morning, I was in there discussing something with him, when he looked behind me for a moment, looked at the table where the coins are displayed, and then looked at me and said "You f***ing took my coins didn't you?" I guess several of them are missing.
Of course, I didn't, but he stormed out of the office and left me sitting there for forty-five minutes. I went back to my office, have sent him an email, and haven't heard from him since.
Advice?
Re: Biglaw Emergency Situation
Posted: Tue Jul 30, 2013 6:01 pm
by Anonymous User
Anonymous User wrote:So I'm currently finishing my summer in biglaw and I just had an emergency arise. I've been working with one of the most senior partners at the firm on a deal for the past week. I've been in and out of his office, along with dozens of others as well. This particular partner happens to keep a collection of valuable coins in his office. This morning, I was in there discussing something with him, when he looked behind me for a moment, looked at the table where the coins are displayed, and then looked at me and said "You f***ing took my coins didn't you?" I guess several of them are missing.
Of course, I didn't, but he stormed out of the office and left me sitting there for forty-five minutes. I went back to my office, have sent him an email, and haven't heard from him since.
Advice?
He sounds like a god damn psychopath. Honestly I don't even know how one would deal with this situation. Offer to speak to younger associates to help him out? All you can do is make it abundantly clear it wasn't you and you are happy to assist.
Re: Biglaw Emergency Situation
Posted: Tue Jul 30, 2013 6:10 pm
by BeenDidThat
Anonymous User wrote:Anonymous User wrote:So I'm currently finishing my summer in biglaw and I just had an emergency arise. I've been working with one of the most senior partners at the firm on a deal for the past week. I've been in and out of his office, along with dozens of others as well. This particular partner happens to keep a collection of valuable coins in his office. This morning, I was in there discussing something with him, when he looked behind me for a moment, looked at the table where the coins are displayed, and then looked at me and said "You f***ing took my coins didn't you?" I guess several of them are missing.
Of course, I didn't, but he stormed out of the office and left me sitting there for forty-five minutes. I went back to my office, have sent him an email, and haven't heard from him since.
Advice?
He sounds like a god damn psychopath. Honestly I don't even know how one would deal with this situation. Offer to speak to younger associates to help him out? All you can do is make it abundantly clear it wasn't you and you are happy to assist.
I hope you said no. I would go to a sane partner on the recruiting committee with your concern IF the accuser-partner doesn't speak to you within a couple hours. And by "go to" I mean go in his office, close the door, and tell him exactly what happened and that you are very concerned. If you choose the right partner and the accuser-partner is known as a loose cannon, the one you speak to is best able to handle it and may be able to help. All depends on intrafirm politics, though.
Re: Biglaw Emergency Situation
Posted: Tue Jul 30, 2013 6:10 pm
by Anonymous User
Anonymous User wrote:Anonymous User wrote:So I'm currently finishing my summer in biglaw and I just had an emergency arise. I've been working with one of the most senior partners at the firm on a deal for the past week. I've been in and out of his office, along with dozens of others as well. This particular partner happens to keep a collection of valuable coins in his office. This morning, I was in there discussing something with him, when he looked behind me for a moment, looked at the table where the coins are displayed, and then looked at me and said "You f***ing took my coins didn't you?" I guess several of them are missing.
Of course, I didn't, but he stormed out of the office and left me sitting there for forty-five minutes. I went back to my office, have sent him an email, and haven't heard from him since.
Advice?
He sounds like a god damn psychopath. Honestly I don't even know how one would deal with this situation. Offer to speak to younger associates to help him out? All you can do is make it abundantly clear it wasn't you and you are happy to assist.
OP here. So if I think I know the associate that took them, should I rat on him/her to save myself? Several people have now stopped by my office to ask if I stole coins from partner X....
Re: Biglaw Emergency Situation
Posted: Tue Jul 30, 2013 6:12 pm
by BeenDidThat
Anonymous User wrote:Anonymous User wrote:Anonymous User wrote:So I'm currently finishing my summer in biglaw and I just had an emergency arise. I've been working with one of the most senior partners at the firm on a deal for the past week. I've been in and out of his office, along with dozens of others as well. This particular partner happens to keep a collection of valuable coins in his office. This morning, I was in there discussing something with him, when he looked behind me for a moment, looked at the table where the coins are displayed, and then looked at me and said "You f***ing took my coins didn't you?" I guess several of them are missing.
Of course, I didn't, but he stormed out of the office and left me sitting there for forty-five minutes. I went back to my office, have sent him an email, and haven't heard from him since.
Advice?
He sounds like a god damn psychopath. Honestly I don't even know how one would deal with this situation. Offer to speak to younger associates to help him out? All you can do is make it abundantly clear it wasn't you and you are happy to assist.
OP here. So if I think I know the associate that took them, should I rat on him/her to save myself? Several people have now stopped by my office to ask if I stole coins from partner X....
Why do you think you know? I probably wouldn't volunteer anything, but would reply with what I KNOW if asked. No speculation.
Re: Biglaw Emergency Situation
Posted: Tue Jul 30, 2013 6:12 pm
by Magnifique1908
Anonymous User wrote:Anonymous User wrote:Anonymous User wrote:So I'm currently finishing my summer in biglaw and I just had an emergency arise. I've been working with one of the most senior partners at the firm on a deal for the past week. I've been in and out of his office, along with dozens of others as well. This particular partner happens to keep a collection of valuable coins in his office. This morning, I was in there discussing something with him, when he looked behind me for a moment, looked at the table where the coins are displayed, and then looked at me and said "You f***ing took my coins didn't you?" I guess several of them are missing.
Of course, I didn't, but he stormed out of the office and left me sitting there for forty-five minutes. I went back to my office, have sent him an email, and haven't heard from him since.
Advice?
He sounds like a god damn psychopath. Honestly I don't even know how one would deal with this situation. Offer to speak to younger associates to help him out? All you can do is make it abundantly clear it wasn't you and you are happy to assist.
OP here. So if I think I know the associate that took them, should I rat on him/her to save myself? Several people have now stopped by my office to ask if I stole coins from partner X....
Nooooooo. BeenDidThat's advice is spot on.
Re: Biglaw Emergency Situation
Posted: Tue Jul 30, 2013 6:13 pm
by Anonymous User
BeenDidThat wrote:Anonymous User wrote:Anonymous User wrote:So I'm currently finishing my summer in biglaw and I just had an emergency arise. I've been working with one of the most senior partners at the firm on a deal for the past week. I've been in and out of his office, along with dozens of others as well. This particular partner happens to keep a collection of valuable coins in his office. This morning, I was in there discussing something with him, when he looked behind me for a moment, looked at the table where the coins are displayed, and then looked at me and said "You f***ing took my coins didn't you?" I guess several of them are missing.
Of course, I didn't, but he stormed out of the office and left me sitting there for forty-five minutes. I went back to my office, have sent him an email, and haven't heard from him since.
Advice?
He sounds like a god damn psychopath. Honestly I don't even know how one would deal with this situation. Offer to speak to younger associates to help him out? All you can do is make it abundantly clear it wasn't you and you are happy to assist.
I hope you said no. I would go to a sane partner on the recruiting committee with your concern IF the accuser-partner doesn't speak to you the rest of the day. And by "go to" I mean go in his office, close the door, and tell him exactly what happened and that you are very concerned. If you choose the right partner and the accuser-partner is known as a loose cannon, the one you speak to is best able to handle it and may be able to help. All depends on intrafirm politics, though.
I think this is the best advice. I would do this regardless of whether you know the thief or not.
Re: Biglaw Emergency Situation
Posted: Tue Jul 30, 2013 6:13 pm
by FeelTheHeat
BeenDidThat wrote:Anonymous User wrote:Anonymous User wrote:So I'm currently finishing my summer in biglaw and I just had an emergency arise. I've been working with one of the most senior partners at the firm on a deal for the past week. I've been in and out of his office, along with dozens of others as well. This particular partner happens to keep a collection of valuable coins in his office. This morning, I was in there discussing something with him, when he looked behind me for a moment, looked at the table where the coins are displayed, and then looked at me and said "You f***ing took my coins didn't you?" I guess several of them are missing.
Of course, I didn't, but he stormed out of the office and left me sitting there for forty-five minutes. I went back to my office, have sent him an email, and haven't heard from him since.
Advice?
He sounds like a god damn psychopath. Honestly I don't even know how one would deal with this situation. Offer to speak to younger associates to help him out? All you can do is make it abundantly clear it wasn't you and you are happy to assist.
I hope you said no. I would go to a sane partner on the recruiting committee with your concern IF the accuser-partner doesn't speak to you the rest of the day. And by "go to" I mean go in his office, close the door, and tell him exactly what happened and that you are very concerned. If you choose the right partner and the accuser-partner is known as a loose cannon, the one you speak to is best able to handle it and may be able to help. All depends on intrafirm politics, though.
For the love of god, do this. And only rat out the person you think did it if you don't want to bother taking the bar next year.
Re: Biglaw Emergency Situation
Posted: Tue Jul 30, 2013 6:17 pm
by Anonymous User
Anonymous User wrote:BeenDidThat wrote:Anonymous User wrote:Anonymous User wrote:So I'm currently finishing my summer in biglaw and I just had an emergency arise. I've been working with one of the most senior partners at the firm on a deal for the past week. I've been in and out of his office, along with dozens of others as well. This particular partner happens to keep a collection of valuable coins in his office. This morning, I was in there discussing something with him, when he looked behind me for a moment, looked at the table where the coins are displayed, and then looked at me and said "You f***ing took my coins didn't you?" I guess several of them are missing.
Of course, I didn't, but he stormed out of the office and left me sitting there for forty-five minutes. I went back to my office, have sent him an email, and haven't heard from him since.
Advice?
He sounds like a god damn psychopath. Honestly I don't even know how one would deal with this situation. Offer to speak to younger associates to help him out? All you can do is make it abundantly clear it wasn't you and you are happy to assist.
I hope you said no. I would go to a sane partner on the recruiting committee with your concern IF the accuser-partner doesn't speak to you the rest of the day. And by "go to" I mean go in his office, close the door, and tell him exactly what happened and that you are very concerned. If you choose the right partner and the accuser-partner is known as a loose cannon, the one you speak to is best able to handle it and may be able to help. All depends on intrafirm politics, though.
I think this is the best advice. I would do this regardless of whether you know the thief or not.
OP Here: The recruiting committee has several level-headed partners, but the partner accusing me of theft works extremely closely with all of them and he is generally regarded as a very honorable and trustworthy man (he used to be the managing partner here). Plus, the only other partner associated with recruiting is out of town.
Should I send out a firm-wide email about this instead?
Re: Biglaw Emergency Situation
Posted: Tue Jul 30, 2013 6:20 pm
by A. Nony Mouse
No no no no no. Firm wide emails are not usually a good move.
Re: Biglaw Emergency Situation
Posted: Tue Jul 30, 2013 6:21 pm
by guano
Do NOT send out a firm-wide email, under any circumstances
Re: Biglaw Emergency Situation
Posted: Tue Jul 30, 2013 6:22 pm
by FeelTheHeat
jesus christ do not do that
Re: Biglaw Emergency Situation
Posted: Tue Jul 30, 2013 6:22 pm
by kaiser
Do NOT send out a firm-wide email. Do you not read ATL often enough to realize that you could turn a small incident into an infamous career-harming event if you do that? You need to speak with someone from recruiting, a partner you trust, or maybe try and speak with the guy himself and see why the hell he thinks he stole anything from him.
Re: Biglaw Emergency Situation
Posted: Tue Jul 30, 2013 6:25 pm
by hephaestus
FeelTheHeat wrote:jesus christ do not do that
Seriously.
Re: Biglaw Emergency Situation
Posted: Tue Jul 30, 2013 6:25 pm
by Anonymous User
I would approach the accuser and convey (and emphasize) that it was not you. Furthermore, don't volunteer information that is not supported by evidence.
What a crappy situation.
Best of luck!
Re: Biglaw Emergency Situation
Posted: Tue Jul 30, 2013 6:38 pm
by maximator
Oh come on, this has to be trolling.
Re: Biglaw Emergency Situation
Posted: Tue Jul 30, 2013 6:40 pm
by NinerFan
maximator wrote:Oh come on, this has to be trolling.
Re: Biglaw Emergency Situation
Posted: Tue Jul 30, 2013 6:47 pm
by Anonymous User
NinerFan wrote:maximator wrote:Oh come on, this has to be trolling.
I wanted to think that, but then I remembered the amount of bat shit crazy people in this business.
Re: Biglaw Emergency Situation
Posted: Tue Jul 30, 2013 6:55 pm
by nyg22
Actually believed the troll until the firm-wide email suggestion. You had us all going...
Re: Biglaw Emergency Situation
Posted: Tue Jul 30, 2013 6:57 pm
by dixiecupdrinking
This sounds like a fucking MBE fact pattern.
Re: Biglaw Emergency Situation
Posted: Tue Jul 30, 2013 7:00 pm
by rinkrat19
I'm wondering why he'd wait multiple HOURS, while people are coming by and mentioning that they heard he stole the coins, without even attempting any damage control. Nobody who managed to get a SA is that stupid, right? Right?
Re: Biglaw Emergency Situation
Posted: Tue Jul 30, 2013 7:00 pm
by TheFactor
9/10 troll. the firm-wide email bit gave it away. save that until the very end next time
Re: Biglaw Emergency Situation
Posted: Tue Jul 30, 2013 7:01 pm
by Anonymous User
rinkrat19 wrote:I'm wondering why he'd wait multiple HOURS, while people are coming by and mentioning that they heard he stole the coins, without even attempting any damage control. Nobody who managed to get a SA is that stupid, right? Right?
Thus why part of me believes this might be real.
Re: Biglaw Emergency Situation
Posted: Tue Jul 30, 2013 7:06 pm
by Anonymous User
He might just be fucking with you
Re: Biglaw Emergency Situation
Posted: Tue Jul 30, 2013 7:06 pm
by TheFactor
Anonymous User wrote:rinkrat19 wrote:I'm wondering why he'd wait multiple HOURS, while people are coming by and mentioning that they heard he stole the coins, without even attempting any damage control. Nobody who managed to get a SA is that stupid, right? Right?
Thus why part of me believes this might be real.
sick anon.
also, how in the world could that possibly make you think he's not trolling?