[citation][nom]COLGeek[/nom]Moral does not equal legal. I agree that the fired employee did the "right" thing stopping the thief, but he also did the "wrong" thing for knowingly violating his employers policy. So, that being the case, the moral vs. legal question is irrelevant.Still, I would hire a guy like this because he cares about the company/organization he represents. But, only after we came to an understanding of his boundaries and limitations. I would never want to lose a guy/girl over a thing as meaningless as a laptop, a pack of smokes, a big gulp, etc......[/citation]
Okay, disregard. I guess most just do not know what "Forget about legalities, hypothetical and dollar amount situations for a moment." means or just are unable to in order to answer a question. There was no hidden agenda or conspiracy behind it, just in case anyone was thinking that, just wanted to know how many, disregarding all else, could agree on whether or not the action of the employee was morally correct.