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Is it illegal to lie on your resume?

9 points| smilesnd | 8 years ago | reply

I am not talking about stretching the truth or padding your time spent at a company. I am talking about stating you work at places you never worked at. I know people have been fired and had legal actions taken against them for stating they had a PHD from some where. Could someone do jail time if they put they worked at google for 3 years when they were never employed there?

15 comments

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[+] techjuice|8 years ago|reply
If you apply for a job and lie about what you put there, the business can sue you for civil and criminal reasons. It is called resume or application fraud. So padding and stretching the truth of what you have actually done can get you twisted up legally if the company feels like pressing charges. The business can also sue you for all the time the different employees put into interviewing and training you, back pay (you pay them back what they paid you) their side of the taxes and benefits they paid on your behalf and many more things).

Also note, if you put a university on your resume that you never attended or graduated from that university could sue you for fraud if or when they found out about it.

It would be even more severe if this was for a government contractor or agency, as you sign legal documents saying everything listed is truthful. Depending on the job they will actually send an investigator out to everyone and every job you listed and you could get caught up legally before you even start your first day of work.

There is no reason to lie on your resume, would you like for your employer to lie to you in the job application? My advice is to always be truthful on your resume as once you start lying you may find yourself in a job where the lying can only get you so far and you end up in a position above your capabilities and your friends, family and coworkers will find out about it and you would eventually be publicly reprimanded or even blacklisted from your industry.

[+] trcollinson|8 years ago|reply
First, I am not a lawyer and what I am about to state is in no way legal advice. Second, I generally agree with your statements.

With that being said, a few comments. In the United States the legalities of this would fall under fraud. The legal basis for the criminality of fraud differs from state to state and depends on how you commit the fraud. It isn't safe to give a blanket statement that lying on a resume is illegal or fraudulent. Additionally, the penalties are based on a number of factors. My opinion, and only my opinion, is that at best an employer would only be able to civilly sue you for the damages of your fraudulent behavior. Additionally, legally, they have a burden to complete due diligence on applicants just as they do with many other things.

This is mostly theoretical as a quick search of Lexus Nexus does not bring up many employment related fraud cases at all. The exception seems to be when credentials are fraudulently represented (for example, a PHD that does not exist). However, I could not find one case that went criminal even in the instance of fraudulent credentials, nor could I find a case that wasn't settled before a trial.

[+] alltakendamned|8 years ago|reply
Depending on location, but it'll probably get you fired everywhere. Also, you'd be surprised how small the world can be once you're "tainted".
[+] skylark|8 years ago|reply
+1 on the industry being small.

I knew one of my ex coworkers padded his resume with 5 years of experience he didn't have. Two years later I'm working at Google and I'd blackball him without hesitation.

You might not get thrown in jail, but honest people never forget scummy behavior.

[+] colund|8 years ago|reply
I just don't understand why people would want to get a job they pretend to be qualified for in the resume just to get a hell trying to compensate for the lacks of skil/knowledge. Money is not worth it. Having a stable life is much better than trying to live based on a lie.
[+] bjourne|8 years ago|reply
You need to state what jurisdiction you are asking about for your question to be meaningful.
[+] rbsk|8 years ago|reply
Varies state to state for criminal charges: http://www.shakelaw.com/blog/lying-on-your-resume/
[+] smilesnd|8 years ago|reply
Thanks for the link, but all it told me was lying about education can lead to legal action. Lying about anything else would give them just cause to fire me on the spot or take away my ability to take them to court for mistreatment.
[+] gozur88|8 years ago|reply
The right way to do the PhD thing is to get a PhD from one of those mail order places and hope your boss doesn't realize that's what it is.
[+] smilesnd|8 years ago|reply
Yeah I have heard Harvard of Jamaica University has a impressive CS program