It’s often tempting to throw out paper receipts. With the amount of shopping and dining we do, it’s pretty easy to feel inundated by the reminder of purchases past, especially around the holiday season. But this story is a solid reminder of why we should always keep a good record of what we pay. Unfortunately, scams and shady situations are all around us — even at Texas Roadhouse.
In this particular story, which started unraveling back in 2016, a gentleman insisted that he was ripped off at Texas Roadhouse during three different occasions. Doug Woodward from Colorado Springs was initially dining with his wife when he realized he was overcharged.
Sometimes, even the most dedicated employee can goof up a number during busy dining hours.
Woodward and his wife returned to the Texas Roadhouse in question a short while after the first overcharge occurred. For a second time, Wooward realized that his receipt did not match up with the charge on his credit card.
According to Fox21, the manager revealed that the server had botched his tip amount, which rightfully caused Woodward to avoid the popular chain for a year.
And then feel ripped off if they add digits to the tip line.
Sites like America Now originally titled their pieces “Waitress Commits Tip Fraud, Steals From Veteran.” Naturally, this riled people up even more.
Nobody wants to get scammed by their server, and this type of scamming feels extra intrusive. It makes you wonder what else servers can do with your credit card in the five minutes they have them to cover your order.
After dining elsewhere for a bit, Woodward chose to give Texas Roadhouse one last shot.
The same Texas Roadhouse, to be exact. This type of credit card scam can’t happen three times over the span of a year or two, right?
The total bill came to $105.01, and Woodward and his wife tipped $10, bringing the final bill to $115.01.
Obviously, Woodward was angry. Who wouldn’t be after a restaurant continuously ripped them off? This is when Woodward started getting the media involved, and the pressure was on Texas Roadhouse.
“I think the odds of being struck by lightning are probably better than this happening to the same person three times at Texas Roadhouse,” Woodward said.
How the heck could this happen three different times at the exact same Texas Roadhouse? At this point, we are on Woodward’s side and believe that a server at the restaurant is forging their own tips. Not okay.
These days, it’s customary to tip anywhere between 15-20% on a bill at a minimum. This means for a bill of around $105, a standard tip would hover around $15.75 to $21.
So, imagine his surprise after seeing that a total of $123.01 was rung up for that night.
“For her to show us the actual receipt that had been changed, that’s the smoking gun. You can’t deny that it was changed.”
Speaking to Fox21, Woodward said that, “For us to do this [go out] was huge, and for her [the waitress] to take advantage of us like that and we even told her that we were vets.”
when I was younger I was a waiter. Got plenty of garbage tips but never did I this
— Terry Terrones (@terryterrones) September 21, 2016
Nobody's excusing stealing, but we also shouldn't excuse garbage tips. Two wrongs. @FOX21News @Taylor_FOX21
— Andrew Dwyer (@MoreDwyer) September 21, 2016
shouldn't ever happen but question their initial tip amount that was less than 10 percent.
— Buckeye Mike in H-Town (@MichaelBCline) September 25, 2016
But he’s a good reminder that you should always keep an eye on your bank statements and make sure things add up. If an employee adds a dollar to every check, that’s a scam that could virtually go unnoticed by the customer.
First, Texas Roadhouse said that they fired the employee who had tampered with Woodward’s bill for the third time in a row. “After our investigation, we confirmed that Mr. Woodward’s receipt was tampered with by one of our employees,” started the official statement.
They chose to retract that and blame Woodward, saying this was all part of a scam.
“We have rehired the server, banned this gentleman for life from any Texas Roadhouse and are considering legal action.”
Does it make more sense to believe that Woodward was scammed three times, or that Woodward was behind the scamming in the first place? The only thing you can bet on is the fact that he hasn’t been back for any of their tasty entrees since.
After the third visit to the Texas Roadhouse, Woodward said that he and his wife were on “a budget like no one’s business,” and that going out “was huge.”
Fox21 reached back out to Woodward after the restaurant chain claimed he was the one doing the scamming. Woodward doubled-down on his accusations, saying he was “eager to confront” the general manager at Texas Roadhouse.
“There was four adults sitting at the table that night, all of which will testify the merchant copy was handed to the waitress as we were standing up to leave and in no way had been altered by any of us,” Woodward told the Fox media outlet.
“There’s no way on Earth I was the only victim,” he told Fox21. “I think a lot of people need to check their receipts and I think there’s going to be a lot of angry people.”
“The only way this $8 would benefit anyone is if they were doing it multiple times a night, multiple nights a week. If the waitress would have asked me for the $8, I would have given it to her.” This sounds pretty thought out on his end.
…or extra meals.
“The smoking gun is they presented the altered receipt, not us. What has Texas Roadhouse altered now?” Woodward challenged in a final statement to Fox21.
Why commit the crime you are accusing someone else of doing? The restaurant seemed to do the right thing when they initially heard Woodward’s complaints, but three times is definitely too many times to be coincidence.
Think about it: if an individual was making your business out to be a scam — and it turned out they were the one scamming the whole time — wouldn’t you want to set the record straight in the public eye?
In a statement to Fox21, the restaurant said “To suggest that Meghan [the waitress] or Texas Roadhouse would knowingly attempt to scam a veteran is unconscionable, especially given our company’s support of veterans and active military.”
In a Facebook thread linking to the story, many folks condemned Woodward for his scamming behavior, saying things like, “cheap and a scammer, i f you can’t afford the place don’t go, it’s that simple.”
“Poor waitress, I can’t image how she felt,” said one commenter. “I’m so glad they figured this jerk out.”
“Anyone who tips only $10 on a $100 bill should get ripped off,” said one commenter.
“And these are hard working guys and gals and deserve more than 10%. They always give great service and food.”
“I hope they throw his butt in jail,” said another commenter. “Not only for his scam, but also his pathetic tipping, especially on a large bill which that server probably had to work hard for.”
One angry commenter said, “How about you interview the waitress that lost her job and was shamed and slandered and give her two prime time news spots like you did with the lying scammer?”
“How about Fox 21 News being so quick to publicly report this (BS scammer) and then publicly smearing and slandering this restaurant and then publicly slandering and humiliating the server.”
“Check your facts and do your diligence FIRST!” the commenter finished.
“So the question is… was he lying about being a vet, too?” asked one commenter. We really hope not, but at this point, can he really be trusted?
We don’t know if Texas Roadhouse ultimately sued Woodward, if Woodward was telling the truth, or what the heck was going on. Honestly, if the server wasn’t innocent, we would have surely heard a followup story on this petty criminal. But we didn’t.
According to the comments section of the story, the news outlet did “offer to the Texas Roadhouse PR people that if the waitress wants to talk we are more than happy to do an update with her.”
The waitress was probably just glad to be back at her job and out of the spotlight.
But since untrustworthy servers are out there, you may want to take matters into your own hands by keeping each and every receipt as proof of your transactions, if they’re through credit.
It may be less convenient, but it’ll bring about a lot less worry.
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