What If

Smoke

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What If?

Here's the scenario:

You work in a secure office. The ONLY people who have access to the room during your shift are you and your coworker.

While you're getting your lunch out of the Fridge you look down and realize your coworker left his backpack open on the table and there's a handgun in it.

(I want this to be CLEAR NO ONE is authorized access to your office but you and your coworker. No one else even has a key. This isn't the same as randomly leaving the gun in the bathroom)

The guy also doesn't drive. He has no car to leave the gun in. So his only option is to leave in his backpack. It's (IMO) not an escalation like it would be if he COULD leave it in his car but chose not to.

Company policy is ZERO TOLERANCE automatic, immediate termination on the first offense. The coworker doesn't SEEM to be a fruitcake.

What do you do?
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An office is only as secure as the last person to leave left it . . .

(And I got ten bucks and a beer says there's another key somewhere)

The office is on a card reader. Only security has access to the office on their badges. Only two of us are on shift at any given time (except for shift change of course). One of us is always in the office. The most likely candidate to steal the (hypothetical) gun would be me and I have (hypothetically) no interest.

I'd call that reasonably secure.
 
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I'd make sure that the co-worker and you are best buddies forever... Get to know his family and hobbies.... create a pleasant working environment for you both. Eventually, see if he has any extra ammo or primers he'd part with.

IMHO,
J.
 
Have you considered that your corporate policy on such did not include your co-worker? There is always someone that the rules do not apply to.
 
I would keep my mouth shut. I see no harm. I can see deniability. I saw nothing. Many people don't like a tattle tail. Even though the management may well say good job, some of them will be thinking he would sell me out too. The guy who replace co-worker and anyone else you interact with will never 100% trust you. None of us are perfect. Might be different if the guy had proved to be deficient in other areas to the point of being near worthless.

Guy I worked with was a busy body. He became plant personnel and then staff. He found out that the staff people were working an under the table comp time deal to compensate for overtime and they were not following corporate policy on this practice. He brought this to corporate attention. Not only was he hated by the rest of staff he was laterally "promoted" to be in charge of off site grounds with no hope of advancement. It has been 8 years now.
 
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I probably wouldn't report it. I'd file that away in case I needed to get rid of him someday. By getting him fired not shooting him. Nobody at work is my friend. Ever.

But I'm not you, don't know him, and likely worked in a completely different environment.
 
How close are you and your co-worker?

Friendly enough to discuss guns, shooting, and the the RKBA?

I would not want to do anything that gets him in trouble. Based on what little you have said.
 
Sounds like a unique work environment. In some ways reminds me of the two guys inside a missile silo, both with keys, and both guys and their keys being needed to launch.

Farfetched, but are the two of you in control of something potentially dangerous? Does the co-worker's gun make him the only guy with a key in the sense that he could compel you to take an action that could harm many others?

In the missile silo scenario above, I think both guys are armed. Don't have anything beyond movie experience with that though.

Re not having a car, your employer ought to provide secure lockers outside the restricted area.
 
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