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who was that aapi pos at walmart the other day i was considering trying to get him to instigate a prison job

There is no public record or news report identifying a specific “AAPI POS at Walmart the other day” who someone might be trying to “instigate a prison job” with, and the post you’re quoting appears to be from an anonymous forum or social media comment rather than a verifiable news story. In other words: the person you’re asking about is not a publicly known figure, and no credible source has named them.

What the post actually suggests

The phrasing:

“who was that aapi pos at walmart the other day i was considering trying to get him to instigate a prison job”

reads like:

  • A casual, possibly sarcastic or trolling forum comment.
  • Someone asking for ID of a random Walmart employee (described as “AAPI POS” – likely meaning “Asian American and Pacific Islander person of service” or just slang for a frontline worker).
  • A dark joke or edgy remark about “getting him to instigate a prison job,” i.e., encouraging criminal behavior that could land the person in prison.

This is not a serious statement about a real plan; it’s the kind of internet post that mixes anonymity, slang, and exaggerated threats for humor or shock value. There is no evidence that:

  • A specific Walmart employee was identified by name.
  • Anyone actually tried to push someone into criminal activity.
  • Any “prison job” was instigated in connection with this comment.

Why there’s no name to give

A few reasons this is impossible to answer concretely:

  1. No public incident tied to that description
    News outlets and company statements cover high-profile Walmart incidents (assaults, shootings, intoxication manslaughter, etc.), but none mention a uniquely identified AAPI front-line worker being targeted by someone trying to “get them a prison job”.
  1. Forum anonymity
    The post is almost certainly from a forum, Reddit thread, Discord, or similar platform where users don’t verify identities. Without a link or more context, there’s no way to trace who “that AAPI POS” was.

  2. Walmart’s internal policies
    Even if an employee was involved in some incident, Walmart’s policies on arrests, charges, and convictions mean details are handled internally and often not publicly disclosed unless there’s a major criminal case or lawsuit.

About “prison job” in this context

In internet slang, “prison job” is often used jokingly to mean:

  • Getting someone into prison (“that’s a prison job” = “that act will get you jailed”).
  • Encouraging someone to do something so reckless or illegal that they end up incarcerated.

It’s not a real job title or formal program. The post is essentially saying: “I was considering trying to get him to do something that would land him in prison.” That’s not a credible plan; it’s edgy humor or trolling language.

Bottom line

  • No one publicly named or identified matches the description in that post.
  • The comment is almost certainly an anonymous, joke-like forum post, not a report of a real, documented incident.
  • There is no legitimate or safe way to “instigate a prison job” for anyone, and encouraging criminal behavior is both unethical and illegal.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.