Word: supervisor
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...dealer. Prompted by their disclosures, investigators from Treasury's Office of the Inspector General in November 1992 conducted an unprecedented raid on the Chicago office to seize financial documents. The interlocking scandals caused the transfer of the division's top three officials and the firing of a first-line supervisor (who was reinstated this year by a federal appeals court in Chicago). The experience, however, took a grave toll on the pair's careers and personal lives. For two months, Klipfel says, the couple had their children sleep in a second-floor closet as a precaution against retaliatory shootings...
...lawsuit further alleges that Rapalee approached her supervisor, Foster, on four different occasions to inquire about her employment status and the benefits to which she said she was entitled but Foster declined to answer her questions or rectify the situation...
...have to close the county's crime lab and bomb squad and release prisoners early, and that the D.A. will prosecute only the most serious crimes. Others claim he is an alarmist and that by selling assets like the John Wayne Airport the county can meet its obligations. Claims Supervisor William Steiner: "There is no interest by this board in stiffing the bondholders...
...informants rattled on about the doings of a terrorist cell. Sarah should have been the perfect spy. But her boss had other ideas. He assigned her to a desk job and escort duty for junketeering congressional wives. "I've dealt with some real lowlifes," she says. "But my supervisor was more of a sleazebag than any of the men I met. They treated me with respect; he stared at my legs and gave me bad assignments...
...they had been excluded. One day she was given an airplane ticket to Washington and ordered to report to the CIA medical staff to answer questions about an alleged drinking problem. Doctors at Langley quickly exonerated her. Their records reflected that the false charges had been levied by a supervisor. "I had been told by another woman case officer, 'Watch out for him, he'll get you,'" she says. And he eventually did. At her next two posts, in Western Europe, she was denied jobs where she could recruit informants. Without sufficient recruits, Diane's job ratings slid...