Intern Reports Coworker’s Repeated Inappropriate Behavior, He Gets Fired And Office Turns On Her

Sometimes, discomfort builds slowly until it becomes impossible to ignore. The original poster (OP) experienced a series of interactions at work that left her uneasy, especially because they only seemed to happen when she was alone with one particular coworker. What might have been dismissed as coincidence at first began to feel more deliberate over time.

When comments started to accompany the behavior, OP felt pushed to take action. Reporting it led to serious consequences for her coworker, but also unexpected reactions from the people around her.

Now, instead of relief, she’s dealing with isolation and second-guessing. Did she overreact, or simply protect herself in a situation that crossed a line? Read on to see how it all plays out.

Intern reports coworker’s repeated inappropriate behavior, leading to his firing and backlash

Intern Reports Coworker’s Repeated Inappropriate Behavior, He Gets Fired And Office Turns On Her
not the actual photo

'AITA for getting my coworker fired for his repeated visible d__k print?'

I (19F) am interning part-time and we all dress casually.

I was alone in a room at my office one morning and my coworker Josh (late 20s male) came and started chatting with me.

When I turned to face him, I could clearly see the outline of his erection.

He was wearing thin sweatpants and they left nothing to the imagination. I didn't say anything. After he left I just went back to work.

I ignored it that first time. But it kept happening. Josh would come alone to chat, and each time he was visibly hard

and I could see it through his flimsy shorts, or sweatpants, or thin dress pants.

Like he didn't even act embarrassed or try to hide it, he'd just stand there like it's nothing.

He acts normal around everyone else and this hasn't happened any other time I've seen him, not with others around, just when its only us.

I didn't bring it up to anyone yet, I just didn't want to appear dramatic and didn't want to make myself a target.

Then he started making comments. "it's hot out, I had to wear these shorts today".

One day Josh came over and he asked me to come to his apartment nearby over lunch.

I politely declined, and as he was leaving he said "alright, I've got to go to the bathroom to take care of something. See you around"

while glancing down. He clearly had an erection and the outline was clear.

That was it for me. I went to HR and reported everything. HR put Josh under review and he ended up being fired with cause.

Now some of my coworkers are icing me out.

One of my coworkers sarcastically muttered out "I made sure to wear proper pants today, didn't want anyone to get any ideas"

while I was having lunch near some of them and they laughed.

My boss has been talking to me less, and I feel alienated. I just wanted Josh to stop. AITA here?

There are moments at work when something feels off, but you hesitate to name it. You tell yourself it might be nothing. Then it happens again, and again, and the discomfort stops feeling accidental.

In this situation, the OP didn’t react to a single awkward incident. She responded to a pattern. The behavior occurred repeatedly, in private, and escalated into suggestive comments and invitations outside of work.

That context matters. What might be brushed off once becomes something very different when it keeps happening and seems directed at one person. Her decision to report wasn’t about punishment. It was about stopping behavior that made her feel targeted and unsafe in a professional space.

A more grounded perspective is how workplace power and uncertainty shape responses. As a young intern, she was in a position where speaking up carries risk. Many people delay reporting because they worry about being dismissed or blamed. That hesitation is common.

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When the behavior escalated, it likely crossed a threshold where staying silent felt worse than the potential fallout. The reaction from coworkers now reflects another reality. When consequences happen, people sometimes redirect discomfort toward the person who reported, rather than the behavior itself.

Workplace standards clearly address situations like this. U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission explains that sexual harassment includes unwelcome conduct of a sexual nature, including nonverbal behavior, that creates an intimidating, hostile, or offensive work environment.

In addition, RAINN notes that harassment can involve repeated nonverbal actions or behaviors that make someone feel uncomfortable or targeted, especially when there is a pattern over time.

These definitions make an important point. Harassment is not only about explicit statements or physical contact. Repeated exposure to sexualized behavior, particularly when it is directed and ongoing, can reasonably be considered a violation of workplace standards.

What stands out is that the OP did not act impulsively. She observed the behavior, tried to ignore it, and only reported after it continued and escalated. The company then conducted its own review and made a decision. She did not unilaterally cause the outcome. She raised a concern, and the employer acted on it.

Check out how the community responded:

These commenters agreed the behavior was intentional, calling it clear sexual harassment and supporting OP

Help_An_Irishman − Sounds 100% intentional. Gross behavior, absolutely NTA. Dude's a menace.

TimberGoingDown − NTA He knew what he was doing.

Enough-Process9773 − No. Josh knew what he was doing.

If he had never said anything to you that might have been difficult to prove, but his comments confirmed it.

This group defended OP strongly, saying coworkers are wrong and harassment shouldn’t be tolerated at work

emryldmyst − Nta Anyone being a jerk about it can kick rocks. Tell them you're there to work not be s__ually harassed with boners every day.

Designer-Carpenter88 − NTA. And f__k those other guys. He was a creep and got fired for good reason.

If they keep talking like that, take them to HR too. There is a way to behave in the workplace, and none of this is it

These commenters advised taking action, suggesting reporting coworkers and documenting retaliation

asafeplaceofrest − NTA and it looks like your co-workers are ganging up on you.

You'd have nothing to lose by reporting the whole lot of them and finding yourself another internship where they have a dress code.

Frozefoots − Fired with cause implies this isn’t the first time something has happened that HR has had to get involved with.

NTA. Document the snide remarks, date/time, what was said by who. If they continue or worsen, being HR in again for retaliation.

This group questioned workplace handling, noting HR should ensure anonymity and warning coworkers’ behavior could be retaliation

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Pasta_Fajool − How does anyone else know it was you or what you said. HR should have been an anonymous situation.

kosmosepiraat − New acc, 1 post, probably ragebait, but...

NTA, you are victim of s__ual harrassment, anyone who makes comments regarding to that can be considered as retaliation.

If it goes any further you should say to your coworkers that you were s__ually harrassed,

they should be disgusted by enabling it and their behaviour can be considered retaliation and you will report it if this continues.

So what do you think? Was reporting the right move given the pattern, or should it have been handled differently? And how should workplaces respond when someone speaks up but ends up feeling isolated afterward?

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