Sorry 14159 buy there has to be some sort of social justice in the world.
Is it right to fire someone for no reason after many years of dedicated service?
Would having a health issue that meant the person would use accumulated sick leave credits justify firing?
There is an inherent unbalance of power in the work place and the employer has to have some limits on that power for long term workers.
People take ownership of their jobs and there is some social benefit to having a measure of equality between an employer and an employee in the work place.
Where I live a person can be fired with no reason or notice in the first 6 months, from 6 to 12 months two weeks notice is required and after that the employee can only be fired for cause.
Generally firing for cause means that there has to be some sort of progressive discipline in place and that this progressive discipline has to be consistently applied across the work place. You cannot fire a long term worker the first time they are late but if you have warned them, perhaps suspended them without pay then you can fire them.
The only grounds for immediate dismissal are theft, intoxication in the work place, violence in the workplace or a serious and willful safety violation that put people at immediate danger for life or serious injury. Even these grounds can be lost to an employer if they have not been fairly enforced and applied in the past. That means that letting someone get away with theft may impair your ability to fire the next thief immediately on one occurrence.
To me these appear to be a reasonable balance in the workplace.
To go back to the original problem, why not have someone phone the former employer asking for a reference about the employee and just see what information the former employer is giving out? They may after a passage of time come to the conclusion that the OP was not the thief they thought, perhaps the same pattern of theft is still occurring, or simply developed some compassion and will not besmirch the former employee’s reputation.
I once stumbled across a HR firm’s web site that was offering this service; they would contact former employers and dig hard to get the information on a former employee. That way the former employee knew what was being said about him and could prepare for this information being released.
All that there is to lose is one phone call.
Rick Kitson MBA P.Eng
Construction Project Management
From conception to completion