Upon arrival at the scene, officials pronounced Prudhomme dead at 4.55pm, local outlets report, citing Tempe police. 12News reports that Prudhomme’s cubicle was located on the third floor and away from the main aisle.

The employee who spoke to 12News added that multiple people complained of a foul odor but assumed it was due to plumbing problems.

Another employee told the outlet: “It’s really heartbreaking and I’m thinking, ‘What if I were just sitting there? No one would check on me?’” The employee went on to add: “To hear she’s been sitting at the desk like that would make me feel sick … and nobody did anything. That’s how she spent her last moments.”

  • mvilain@fedia.io
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    2 months ago

    I predict the deceased’s executor will have to sue Wells Fargo for their last paycheck. They’ll claim they were working the full 4 days since they were found. And entitled to overtime since they’re hourly rather than salaried.

  • dohpaz42@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    There should be a service that people can sign up for that would have someone call, text, or email to check in on people with no family or friends. That way if something does happen to them, and they do not respond to repeated attempts at checking in, authorities can be notified sooner than 4 days later.

    And I bet someone smarter than myself could figure out a way to have the service subsidized so it is not expensive for people to use; especially older folks who may be on a fixed income.

    • gedaliyah@lemmy.worldOPM
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      2 months ago

      That’s one of the roles that churches, synagogues, mosques, etc. used to have (and still do). As societies have left behind religious institutions, we still haven’t figured out how to replace the many vital social functions that they used to provide.

    • ravhall@discuss.online
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      2 months ago

      It would really cost pennies to implement. A text or email goes out and you have 3 hours to respond before a person is notified. Then a friend could be messaged or an admin could call your phone or your emergency number, like your work etc. they would make sure someone knows that you need to be checked on

    • betweenthesixes
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      2 months ago

      Services such as these do exist, but I believe there is a social/mental stigma to them, in addition to any cost barrier. A lot of people think “this will never happen to me” or “maybe I will need this when I’m older, but not now.”

    • raiun@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      This is one reason why daily stand ups exist in the tech world. For bigger teams it could be split into groups.

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    2 months ago

    I really want to know the whole story, because I keep making up so many in my head.

    Maybe the managers kept her on because she had nothing else and she was past her prime and didn’t actually do any work, but like there’s a spare desk up on the third floor, have a heart, Jake.

    Or she had gone in and out each day but, like so many employees, forgot to use the clock. Especially older employees who can’t be bothered with such nonsense.

    Why was she sneaking in on a Friday when everyone else was leaving? Heist, baby. But she got double crossed by her team after she hacked the server.

  • awake01@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    How is that return to the office working out? People are really killing it! Dieing to get back to their cubes and overlords.

    • NocturnalMorning@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      While that may be true, her cubicle was in an area of the building with not a lot of foot traffic. She clocked in on a Friday and nobody discovered her until after the weekend. Read the article next time before commenting.

        • Mirshe@lemmy.world
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          2 months ago

          No joke, I could see this. My current workplace wants daily attendance emails from us to calculate how many of us are in the office, and thus estimate productivity that day. It’s asinine.