Key points
- Contact from former employees can range from legitimate grievance to harassment and threats — the response differs significantly depending on which.
- Do not engage with threatening content; preserve everything and involve your HR and legal team immediately.
- If threats involve physical safety, contact police and consider applying for an intervention order.
- Protect current staff from contact — notify them of the situation and what to do if they are contacted directly.
- A communication relay that filters incoming contact protects your business while building a comprehensive archive.
The departure of an employee doesn't always signal the end of contact. In some cases — particularly where the departure was involuntary, or where there is an unresolved grievance — former employees continue to make contact, sometimes escalating into threatening or harassing behaviour.
The challenge for businesses in this situation is distinguishing between types of contact and responding appropriately to each. A former employee who has a legitimate unfair dismissal claim is different from one who is sending threatening messages. The response to each is different, and confusing the two can create problems.
Types of contact from former employees
Understanding what kind of contact you're receiving shapes your response:
Grievance or formal claim
Contact through formal channels — the Fair Work Commission, a lawyer's letter, an anti-discrimination complaint — is legitimate process. Even if the claim seems unfounded, it must be handled through the appropriate process with legal advice. Do not ignore it.
Angry or emotional contact
Direct messages expressing anger, betrayal, or frustration — but not threatening — are uncomfortable but not necessarily grounds for police involvement. Respond with a brief, professional message directing the person to the appropriate channel (their lawyer, Fair Work) and noting that direct contact with staff is not appropriate. Document everything.
Threatening or harassing contact
Messages that threaten physical harm, damage to the business, harm to staff, or that constitute a course of harassing conduct, require a different and more immediate response. This is where legal and potentially police involvement becomes necessary.
False claims to clients or online
Contact designed to damage the business's reputation — false reviews, false claims to clients, social media campaigns — may constitute defamation and requires specific legal advice.
Immediate steps when threats are received
If threatening messages are received — by any member of the business, through any channel:
- Do not respond to the threatening content. Do not engage, argue, or defend.
- Notify your HR manager, company owner, or whoever handles these situations in your business immediately.
- Engage legal counsel as soon as possible — even if you're not sure the situation will escalate, early legal advice is far more valuable than late.
- Preserve all messages in full — do not delete anything, even messages that seem minor.
- If the threats involve physical harm and appear credible, contact police immediately.
What to preserve and how
Your record of the contact is central to any legal action you may need to take. Preserve:
- All messages in their original form — with timestamps and sender details
- Any voicemails or call logs
- Social media posts or messages
- Any contact made to clients, suppliers, or other third parties (ask them to forward or screenshot)
- A log of any in-person contact or attempts to enter the premises
- CCTV footage if relevant (check your retention settings)
Store this material off the company systems if possible — on a personal device or in a separate secure account. Ensure your IT team knows to preserve relevant email records and is not inadvertently deleting anything.
Legal options
Police report
For threatening messages, contact police and make a formal report. A police report creates an official record. Police can investigate and may recommend charges under criminal harassment, stalking, or threat-related offences.
Intervention orders
Businesses and individuals can apply for personal safety intervention orders (Victoria), AVOs (NSW), violence restraining orders (WA), and their equivalents in other states. These can prohibit the former employee from contacting the business, its staff, or attending the premises. Police can also apply on your behalf.
Injunctions
In serious cases, a court injunction can restrain specific conduct — particularly useful for online defamation campaigns or contact with clients. This requires civil court proceedings and legal representation.
WorkCover
If staff are experiencing psychological harm as a result of threatening contact, a WorkCover claim may be appropriate. Your HR and legal team can advise.
Protecting the business
- Review who has access to business contact details and whether those details are publicly accessible
- Consider whether your business address needs to be less prominent if physical safety is a concern
- Update any shared logins or passwords that the former employee may have known
- Notify your IT team to revoke all digital access if not already done
- Consider whether a public-facing relay contact point (rather than direct staff numbers and emails) would reduce exposure
Protecting staff from contact
Current staff may also receive contact from a threatening former employee. Steps to protect them:
- Brief relevant staff on the situation — they should know what's happening without being alarmed unnecessarily
- Tell them not to engage and to report any contact immediately
- Make clear that they should not feel obligated to respond to former colleague contact if they find it distressing
- If individual staff members receive threatening messages, they may have the right to apply for personal protection orders in their own right
- Consider whether an employee assistance programme (EAP) is appropriate to support affected staff
Resources and support
| 🇦🇺 Australia | 🇺🇸 United States | 🇬🇧 United Kingdom |
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Fair Work CommissionGuidance on post-employment obligations and dealing with former employee disputes
National Legal AidFind free or subsidised legal help for family, civil and criminal matters anywhere in Australia
eSafety CommissionerReporting tools for online harassment from former employees
Safe Work AustraliaEmployer obligations to protect workers from threats under WHS law
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EEOCFederal guidance on post-employment harassment and retaliation protections
Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3)Report threatening communications from former employees that cross into criminal conduct
OSHA — Workplace ViolenceGuidance on managing threats from former employees and employer obligations
ABA Lawyer ReferralFind a lawyer for employment and post-employment threat matters
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AcasGuidance on post-employment conflicts and employer obligations regarding former employee conduct
Action FraudReport criminal threatening behaviour from former employees
Health and Safety ExecutiveEmployer duties to protect staff from threats including from former colleagues
Law Society — Find a SolicitorFind an employment lawyer for post-employment harassment matters
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Frequently asked questions
What should I do if a former employee is sending threatening messages?
Do not engage or respond to the threatening content. Preserve all messages with full metadata. Notify your HR and legal team. If the threats are credible or involve physical harm, contact police. Consider applying for an intervention order or AVO if the threats are serious or repeated. Inform relevant staff and review your physical and digital security.
Can I get a restraining order against a former employee?
Yes. In Australia, businesses and individuals can apply for intervention orders, AVOs (NSW), restraining orders (WA), and similar protective orders against former employees. The application is typically made through the local court, and police can apply on your behalf in serious cases. Evidence of threatening messages significantly strengthens the application.
Is it workplace harassment if a former employee contacts current staff?
Contacting current staff to harass, intimidate, or threaten them can constitute stalking or harassment under state criminal law. Depending on the circumstances, it may also give rise to intervention order applications on behalf of the affected staff members. Document all contact and speak with a lawyer.
Should I respond to messages from a former employee who has made threats?
Generally, no. Responding can encourage further contact and muddy your legal position. One brief, written acknowledgement that the contact has been received and is unwelcome — prepared with legal advice — may be appropriate. After that, silence and documentation is typically the correct approach. Let your lawyer manage any formal communication.
What if a former employee makes false claims online or to our clients?
Document the false claims carefully. If they constitute defamation — false statements of fact that damage your business reputation — you may have a legal claim. A cease and desist letter from your lawyer is often the first step, putting the person on notice and creating a formal record. Platform reporting can also be effective for content on social media or review sites.