1) Shut up! If you were to hire a lawyer one of the first things that
he will tell you is to keep your mouth shut.
2) Make no public admissions to culpability.
3) Do not talk to the press
4) Be very careful what you do or do not say to your coworkers,
especially your fellow cohorts: Keep in mind that you are in a CYA
(cover your ass) situation. There will be scapegoats. Don't assume
that the seemingly innocent inquiries from your fellow cohorts are
truly innocent. They may be looking for information with which they
can shift the blame on your shoulders.
5) Continue with your no debate strategy. It's working.
6) Begin to get familiar with the phrase: "I don't recall."
7) Hire a financial advisor/accountant and get advice as to how you
can protect your assets.
8) Start planning an exit strategy, maybe even a career change.
9) Start putting your resources into propping up your public image: be
seen at charity events, etc.
I have better advice:
1) sit down in your desk chair
2) bend at the waist as far as you can
3) kiss your ass and your career goodbye
Day 4, still no fraud found.
Tick tock.
I pray for the day you acquire enlightenment.
Another thing to keep in mind is that it wasn't the break in at the
Watergate Hotel that led to Nixon's resignation, it was the coverup.
Don't stop now, you boys finding individual words and numbers you don't
happen to like in some private personal emails has the entire global warming
thing about to collapse like a house of cards, I can just feel it!
10) Throw Jones and Mann under the bus. They're toast anyway.
Day 5, still zero fraud found. None.
Probably not even involved in it, but knowing
about it and not reporting knowledge of a felony
to the justice department was the problem, he was
an officer of the court as a result of holding office,
and did not report it.
Sometimes doing nothing is wrong.
>
> Day 5, still zero fraud found. None.
Who needs overt fraud when your source data sucks?
http://www.surfacestations.org/
And your lab director is incompetent at data management?
http://www.google.com/search?q=harry_read_me.txt
Anyone who trust these guys is a fool.
Nixon ordered the breakin at the Watergate Hotel.
> but knowing
> about it and not reporting knowledge of a felony
> to the justice department was the problem, he was
> an officer of the court as a result of holding office,
> and did not report it.
>
> Sometimes doing nothing is wrong.- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -
Do you have a link for that?
Did you watch every news program at that time?
>> but knowing
>> about it and not reporting knowledge of a felony
>> to the justice department was the problem, he was
>> an officer of the court as a result of holding office,
>> and did not report it.
>>
>> Sometimes doing nothing is wrong.- Hide quoted text -
An officer of the court is duty bound to assure
that laws are followed and that violations are given
to the district attorney.