A representative of an auto repair company in the United States is being criticized for cowardly revenge on a former employee who resigned.



On the 18th local time, foreign media such as CBS in the US introduced what happened to Andreas Platen, who worked at a car repair shop in Peachtree City, Georgia.



In November of last year, Mr. Platen decided to leave the company and asked Mr. Miles Walker to speak with him.

According to the company's bylaws, he announced his intention to leave the company two weeks before quitting, but Mr. Walker's reaction was a bit strange.



As soon as I talked about leaving, he stared at Mr. Plateton silently for a few minutes with a stubborn face, then kicked out of the office as it was.




Mr. Platen was embarrassed by the way CEO Walker was dealing with it, but as he was about to leave the company, he tried to move on without taking a problem.

Rather, Mr. Walker later insulted Mr. Platen to his co-workers and insulted Mr. Platen's young daughter.



Mr. Platen, who initially decided to resign because of the representative's extreme character and harassment, eventually handed a letter to Mr. Walker stating "I can't work anymore," and left the work ahead of the resignation date.



But the bad relationship with my former job didn't end like this.

Walker, who was often in arrears of wages, didn't pay $915 (about 1,300,000 won) of Mr. Plateon's last salary for months.



Unbearable, Mr. Plateon contacted Mr. Walker three months after leaving the company to ask for wages. Mr. Walker said, "You left the company 10 days earlier, so the damage was great." 




Platen tried to forget everything after reporting Mr. Walker to the Georgia Department of Labor, but had a nightmare of returning $915 arrears to a coin weighing 230 kg.



The coins were sprinkled with unknown oil, and a sheet of abusive paper was laid on top.

It was the brutality of Mr. Walker, who was warned by the Labor Office and was reviled.




When this fact was known and criticized through the local media, Mr. Walker responded blatantly, saying, "I don't remember leaving the coins in front of Mr. Plateton's house. Anyway, Mr. Plateton was paid all his salary."



Netizens are sending messages to the car repair shop represented by Mr. Walker, such as, "Is this a company that pays for the employee's salary in coins?" and "I want to entrust the car repair, but do you get coins?"



This is'News Pick'.



(Photo ='ox_isms' Instagram, Google map capture)