Angie and Neal Fry are department managers in the housewares and shoe departments, respectively, for Calhouns, a
Question:
Angie and Neal Fry are department managers in the housewares and shoe departments, respectively, for Calhouns, a large department store. Neal has observed Angie taking inventory from her own department home, apparently without paying for it. He hesitates to confront Angie because he is due to be promoted, and needs Angie's recommendation. He also does not want to notify the company management directly, because he doesn't want an ethics investigation on his record, believing that it will give him a “goody-goody” image. This week, Angie tried on several pairs of expensive running shoes in his department before finding a pair that suited her. She did not, however, buy them. That very pair was missing this morning. Calhoun's recently replaced its old periodic inventory system with a perpetual inventory system using scanners and bar codes. In addition, the annual inventory is to be replaced by a monthly inventory conducted by an independent firm. On hearing the news of the changes, Neal relaxes. "The system will catch Angie now," he says to himself.
Required:
1. Is Neal's attitude justified? Why or why not?
2. What, if any, action should Neal take now?
Introduction to Probability and Statistics
ISBN: 978-1133103752
14th edition
Authors: William Mendenhall, Robert Beaver, Barbara Beaver