The quiet after a termination can be the most important part of the day. When a former employee sends angry messages, threatens a supervisor, refuses to leave, talks about coming back, or creates fear among staff, leaders have to respond with care and control. This page explains how to recognize warning signs, document threats, protect employees, involve the right professionals, understand possible legal options, and avoid actions that may make the situation worse.
At Flores Legal Allies, we understand that legal and safety concerns are not just procedural issues. They affect people. They affect families, teams, reputations, and peace of mind. Attorney Andrew Flores founded the firm to be a strong ally for people facing stressful legal and criminal situations. The firm listens closely, takes concerns seriously, and brings calm to moments that can feel tense, emotional, and uncertain.
Why Can Terminations Create Serious Safety Concerns?
Losing a job can be one of the most stressful events in a person’s life. For some former employees, the reaction is sadness, embarrassment, or confusion. For others, it may turn into anger, blame, threats, stalking, harassment, or a desire to return to the workplace.
Most terminated employees do not become dangerous. It is important not to treat every upset person as a threat. At the same time, employers have a duty to take credible warning signs seriously. A balanced response protects the workplace without overreacting, escalating, or ignoring real risk.
The goal is not panic. The goal is preparation. When leaders have a clear process, they can respond calmly instead of making rushed decisions under pressure.
What Types of Threats Should Employers Take Seriously?
A threat does not always sound like a direct statement of violence. Sometimes it appears in a text. Sometimes it is posted online. Sometimes it comes through a coworker, family member, voicemail, email, or repeated visits to the workplace.
The more specific the threat is, the more serious it may be. A vague angry comment may still deserve documentation, but a statement that names a person, time, location, weapon, or plan should be treated with urgency.
Warning Signs That May Require Immediate Attention
- Threats to harm a supervisor, manager, coworker, customer, or executive
- Statements about returning to the workplace to “settle things”
- References to weapons, violence, revenge, or self-harm
- Repeated calls, texts, emails, or social media messages after being told to stop
- Showing up at the workplace without permission after termination
- Following, watching, or contacting employees outside work
- Damage to company property, vehicles, equipment, or personal belongings
- Attempts to access company systems, buildings, or restricted areas
- Threats made through third parties, including former coworkers
A threat should never be dismissed simply because the person was emotional. Emotion may explain behavior, but it does not erase risk. If there is concern that violence may be imminent, employers should contact law enforcement or emergency services right away.
How Should a Company Respond in the First Few Minutes?
The first response matters. A company should focus on safety, documentation, and control. This is not the time for emotional exchanges, argument, or informal promises.
If the terminated employee is still on-site and acting aggressively, leaders should avoid physical confrontation. A designated person should calmly ask the individual to leave, while another person alerts security or law enforcement if needed. Staff should not be expected to handle a volatile situation alone.
Immediate Response Priorities
- Move employees away from the immediate area if there is a safety concern.
- Call 911 if there is an immediate threat, weapon, assault, or risk of violence.
- Preserve messages, voicemails, emails, videos, and access logs.
- Identify who heard or saw the threat.
- Notify leadership, HR, security, and legal counsel.
- Limit communication with the former employee to one trained point of contact.
- Do not debate, insult, or challenge the person.
A calm response can protect people and protect the company. It can also reduce the chance that the former employee becomes more agitated.
What Should Be Documented After a Threat?
Documentation is one of the most important parts of managing threats from terminated employees. Memories fade quickly. People may remember the same event differently. A written record helps create a clear timeline.
Documentation should be factual. Avoid labels like “crazy,” “unstable,” or “dangerous” unless they are tied to specific behavior. Write what happened, who was present, what was said, and what steps were taken.
Helpful Documentation May Include:
- The exact words used by the former employee, if known
- Date, time, and location of the threat
- Names of witnesses
- Copies of texts, emails, social media messages, and voicemails
- Security footage or access badge records
- Photos of property damage, if any
- Prior incidents involving the same person
- Steps taken by the company in response
- Police report numbers, if law enforcement was contacted
Documentation is not just about building a legal file. It helps decision-makers understand whether the situation is escalating, whether protective measures are working, and whether outside help is needed.
When Should Law Enforcement Be Involved?
Law enforcement should be contacted immediately if there is an emergency, a weapon, a physical assault, a direct threat of violence, stalking, forced entry, property damage, or credible concern that someone may be harmed.
Companies sometimes hesitate because they do not want to embarrass a former employee or make the situation worse. That concern is understandable. But when safety is at risk, hesitation can create greater danger for employees and customers.
Not every unpleasant message requires a police report. But direct threats, repeated harassment, or attempts to return to the workplace after being told not to come back may justify contacting law enforcement, legal counsel, or a workplace safety professional.
Can a Threat Become a Criminal Matter?
Yes. Depending on the facts, threats from a terminated employee may lead to a criminal investigation or charges. The law may treat certain threats seriously even if no physical contact happened.
A criminal threat case may involve words spoken in person, sent by text, emailed, posted online, or communicated through another electronic method. The legal analysis often depends on what was said, whether the threat was specific and immediate, whether the person intended it to be taken as a threat, and whether the recipient reasonably experienced sustained fear.
This is where details matter. A frustrated statement like “I am angry about this” is not the same as a specific threat to harm someone. A defense attorney may look closely at the words used, the context, the relationship between the parties, prior communications, and whether the alleged threat has been exaggerated or misunderstood.
Can an Employer Seek a Workplace Violence Restraining Order?
In some situations, an employer may be able to seek a workplace violence restraining order to protect employees from unlawful violence, harassment, or a credible threat of violence. This type of order may restrict contact, workplace access, harassment, intimidation, and other conduct.
A restraining order is a serious legal step. It should be supported by clear evidence and handled carefully. Courts may consider whether the threat was credible, whether it could reasonably be carried out at the workplace, and whether employees need protection.
Employers should also understand that restraining order proceedings can affect the accused person’s rights. The former employee may have the right to respond, explain, deny, or challenge the allegations. That is why both sides benefit from legal guidance.
What Corporate Security Steps Can Reduce Risk?
Corporate security is not about creating fear. It is about creating a safe, predictable plan. A strong security response should be lawful, professional, and proportionate to the risk.
The best strategies often begin before a termination takes place. If an employee has shown troubling behavior, made threats, or displayed escalating anger before termination, HR, management, legal counsel, and security should coordinate before the meeting.
Practical Security Measures May Include:
- Planning the termination meeting in a private but safe location
- Having two trained company representatives present
- Keeping the meeting brief, respectful, and clear
- Arranging for a calm exit from the building
- Collecting keys, badges, company devices, and access cards
- Disabling system access at the appropriate time
- Notifying reception, security, and relevant managers
- Preserving final communications and termination records
- Creating a single communication channel for follow-up questions
- Reviewing parking access, building access, and visitor procedures
These steps should be handled with respect. A terminated employee should not be humiliated or provoked. A firm, professional process can reduce risk and preserve dignity.
How Can Employers Communicate Without Escalating the Situation?
Communication can either calm a situation or inflame it. After a termination, companies should avoid emotional, sarcastic, or defensive messages. The tone should be clear, brief, and professional.
It is often helpful to designate one person to communicate with the former employee. This may be someone from HR, leadership, legal counsel, or another appropriate representative. Multiple people responding can create confusion and increase the chance of mixed messages.
Communication Principles That May Help
- Keep messages short and factual.
- Avoid blame, personal criticism, or argument.
- Do not make threats that the company does not intend to follow through on.
- Confirm boundaries, such as no unauthorized workplace visits.
- Provide lawful instructions for returning property or receiving final documents.
- Preserve all communication.
- Stop direct communication if advised by counsel or law enforcement.
A company can be firm without being cruel. That balance matters. It may also help reduce the chance that the situation escalates further.
What Should Employers Avoid Doing?
Even when a former employee behaves badly, the company’s response must still be careful. Overreaction, public shaming, or careless communication can create legal and reputational problems.
Employers should avoid spreading rumors, sharing unnecessary personal details, threatening unlawful consequences, or allowing untrained employees to confront the person. They should also avoid ignoring credible threats because the person “probably did not mean it.”
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Calling every angry comment a criminal threat without reviewing the facts
- Failing to document repeated behavior
- Letting managers respond emotionally by text or email
- Allowing employees to engage with the former employee online
- Ignoring social media posts that mention employees or the workplace
- Delaying law enforcement contact when there is an immediate safety concern
- Failing to preserve security footage before it is deleted
- Discussing the former employee’s situation with people who do not need to know
A measured response protects the company, employees, and the integrity of any future legal process.
How Do Workplace Violence Prevention Plans Fit Into This?
California employers may have workplace violence prevention responsibilities, including maintaining a written plan, training employees, identifying hazards, and keeping certain records. These requirements are designed to help employers prepare before a crisis happens.
A workplace violence prevention plan should not sit unread in a folder. It should guide real decisions. Employees should know how to report concerns, who reviews threats, what happens after a report, and how the company responds to urgent safety issues.
Termination-related threats should be included in workplace safety thinking. If a company has had prior incidents, repeated threats, or warning signs, leadership should review what worked, what failed, and what needs to change.
What If the Former Employee Claims They Were Misunderstood?
Not every allegation is accurate. A former employee may be accused of making threats when they were venting, asking questions, or expressing frustration in a poor way. On the other hand, a company may feel genuine fear based on the person’s words and actions.
These cases often involve two different stories. One side may say, “We were afraid he was coming back to hurt someone.” The other side may say, “I was upset, but I never meant that.” The legal system must look at the evidence, not assumptions.
That is one reason Flores Legal Allies takes listening so seriously. Attorney Andrew Flores and the team understand that criminal accusations often arise during emotional moments. They work to understand the full context, not just the most alarming sentence in a report.
Why Does Having a Calm Legal Ally Matter?
Threat-related situations are stressful for everyone involved. Employers want to protect their teams. Employees may feel afraid. Former employees may feel angry, ashamed, or misunderstood. One wrong step can turn a difficult employment dispute into a criminal case, a restraining order hearing, or a long-term workplace safety concern.
Flores Legal Allies stands apart because the firm becomes a strong ally to the client. The team listens closely to the client’s concerns and helps bring calm to stressful legal and criminal situations. That matters when the facts are sensitive, emotions are high, and the consequences may be serious.
The firm’s case results have been featured in respected publications, including the Associated Press, Business Insider, Fox8, and Apple News. That public recognition reflects meaningful work, but the firm’s deeper value is how it treats people when they are under pressure.
Clients need more than a legal opinion. They need someone who can slow the situation down, explain the options, protect their rights, and help them make clear decisions.
When Should You Speak With an Attorney?
You should consider speaking with an attorney as soon as a threat, accusation, restraining order request, police report, or criminal investigation becomes part of the situation.
For employers, early legal guidance can help protect employees, preserve evidence, avoid missteps, and choose the right legal response. For a former employee accused of threats, early defense guidance can help protect rights, prevent damaging statements, and present the full context.
Waiting can make matters harder. Messages may be deleted. Video may be overwritten. Witnesses may forget details. People may keep communicating in ways that make the conflict worse.
A calm legal strategy helps everyone focus on facts instead of fear.
How Can Flores Legal Allies Help?
At Flores Legal Allies, we understand how quickly a workplace threat situation can become overwhelming. Whether you are dealing with threats from a terminated employee, a restraining order issue, police involvement, or a criminal accusation, you deserve steady guidance and a clear plan.
Attorney Andrew Flores founded the firm to be a true ally for people facing stressful legal and criminal situations. We listen closely to your concerns, help you understand what is happening, and work to bring calm to a difficult moment.
If a termination-related threat has created legal risk, safety concerns, or criminal exposure, you do not have to navigate it alone. Flores Legal Allies is here to help protect your rights, your people, your reputation, and your peace of mind.