The other day I was paged up to the registers to do a price check. The SC had a stainless steel water bottle from the lunch bag/accessories endcap that rang up $12.99, and she claimed it was $7.99.
I headed over to the endcap and the SC followed me. I could see immediately the spot where the bottle had come from, and it did indeed come from a spot labeled $7.99. However, the tag quite clearly said it was for the transparent plastic bottles. A couple inches to the left was the sign that said "Stainless steel water bottle $12.99." Either someone had put the bottle in the wrong place or they had moved the sign.
Me: Oh, I see what happened. This was in the wrong place.
SC: Yes I know. The tag is for something else.
I just looked at her.
SC: But it still says $7.99.
So let me get this straight. You selected this water bottle from a $7.99 slot, you KNEW that it was in fact $12.99, but you argued for the wrong price anyway?
Last I checked, that fit the definition of FRAUD.
She and I made eye contact for just a moment, and I could tell from the look on her face that she knew she'd already won, and that she knew I knew. I briefly considered making a fight of it, but I knew what would happen: she'd complain, a manager would get involved, and they'd just override the price anyway.
So without another word, I walked back to the register and - with intentional and palpable annoyance - told PortuguesePrincess to just override the price to $7.99, then turned and walked away without looking at or saying anything to the scammer.
I hate people sometimes.
I headed over to the endcap and the SC followed me. I could see immediately the spot where the bottle had come from, and it did indeed come from a spot labeled $7.99. However, the tag quite clearly said it was for the transparent plastic bottles. A couple inches to the left was the sign that said "Stainless steel water bottle $12.99." Either someone had put the bottle in the wrong place or they had moved the sign.
Me: Oh, I see what happened. This was in the wrong place.
SC: Yes I know. The tag is for something else.
I just looked at her.
SC: But it still says $7.99.
So let me get this straight. You selected this water bottle from a $7.99 slot, you KNEW that it was in fact $12.99, but you argued for the wrong price anyway?
Last I checked, that fit the definition of FRAUD.
She and I made eye contact for just a moment, and I could tell from the look on her face that she knew she'd already won, and that she knew I knew. I briefly considered making a fight of it, but I knew what would happen: she'd complain, a manager would get involved, and they'd just override the price anyway.
So without another word, I walked back to the register and - with intentional and palpable annoyance - told PortuguesePrincess to just override the price to $7.99, then turned and walked away without looking at or saying anything to the scammer.
I hate people sometimes.
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