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Wedding Woes

Former co-irker has me professionally paralyzed

Dear Prudence,

I work in an IT role at a very large, well-known and selective university. My role is very “back of house,” and I have no interactions with students, and neither am I involved in student life, admissions, or academics at all. I’ve recently received several increasingly demanding messages (some via LinkedIn) and several directly to my work email from a student services counselor working at my previous institution—where I haven’t worked for six years! The messages demand that I set him and some of his advising students up with a tour, connect them with dining services (?), faculty, and provide him information on public transportation and “sights to see.” This is not a person that I know, outside of working for the same institution years ago. We weren’t even in the same department!

Not only is this not related at all to my job, I have no knowledge or connections with these types of functions. Regardless, based on how aggressive the emails are, I don’t want to assist in any way. The messages are poorly worded with a lot of typos and grammatical errors and demonstrate a shocking amount of ignorance as to how admissions work at private prestigious institutions. The first two I dismissed as spam, promptly blocking him from my socials, but the emails concern me, especially as he’s now cc’ing me into emails to other people. I don’t think he can get me into trouble, but I’m embarrassed by his pushiness, his ignorance, and the fact that he is trying to leverage a tenuous connection with me to push his agenda.

To clarify, he is not faculty, he works in some kind of student support role. Also, this is just gossip, but my friend (who still works at my past job and knows him) told me he has been in trouble in the past for sexual harassment and he has a history of pushing boundaries. I also found an interview with the university paper where he says “he doesn’t take no for an answer,” which is why I fear he’ll keep escalating. My husband thinks I should escalate to his boss; however, according to his institution directory, his immediate supervisor position is vacant. I want him to leave me alone. Obviously, I’m not going to gatekeep how he interacts with my current institution—that’s not my business. I just want him to stop messaging me. I’ve gone over every type of response in my head and continuing to send the messages to spam and blocking where I can seems the best course of action.

—De-Tour De Farce

Re: Former co-irker has me professionally paralyzed

  • Respond to him, "I appreciate you reaching out however the people who can assist you are in X office.  Then pull a direct link from the web so you're not copying in a person working for the same institution and instead include a link to the office itself.  Conclude by wishing that person well and that's it.

    If this person continues reiterate your stance, that you again appreciate his interest in a tour of the campus of your employer however per your prior email, the people who can assist him in this request are noted in the body of your email sent on April 25th - the most perfect day.


  • Hi former co-worker,
    Thanks for reaching out.  While I can't help set these things up, you can contact soandso in Admissions #soandso@well-known.selective.instution.edu.
    Best,
    Pleasedon'tcontactmeagain
    image
  • MNNEBride said:
    Hi former co-worker,
    Thanks for reaching out.  While I can't help set these things up, you can contact soandso in Admissions #soandso@well-known.selective.instution.edu.
    Best,
    Pleasedon'tcontactmeagain
    The only reason why I changed my comment to leave out a person's name and instead go w/ a link to the office is that this way, the other person can't blame you for their new misfortune.
  • I'd be so tempted to troll this guy. 

    "Sure, I'll be happy to host students and make some <wink> introductions. My normal fee for this is $5,000 per student, but in light of our past relationship, I'd be able to discount to $4,750 each." 
  • "Hi Weirdo, 

    While I appreciate your multiple messages, I'm actually not connected to student services and will be unable to help with your request directly. If your students are interested in tours, they may reach out to the Admissions Department at <link here> who will be more than happy to assist. 

    Well Wishes,

    Leave Me the Fuck Alone."

    Oh and absolutely if he keeps emailing after that I would escalate to whomever is supervising him. 

    I'm also veryyyy interested to know if LW is a woman. 


    image
  • Yes to professionally direct him to the admissions webpage, but I’d also be screenshotting and mentioning it to my manager in case this dude gets even weirder. 
  • VarunaTTVarunaTT member
    Knottie Warrior 10000 Comments 500 Love Its First Answer
    edited May 2024
    I wouldn't help out this person in any way.

    "Hi, it's lovely to re-connect again after 6 years.  However, as I'm sure you must know, I have the same job at Y as I did at X.  Therefore, my current position and expertise does not do any of these things, nor do I have any institutional knowledge of who to get these things from, because it is not contained within my field.

    Good luck!"

    Make sure everyone the OP has ever cc'd, is cc'd again and then block the address if LW is comfortable with that.
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