What is fundamentally missing in a human being that could stoop so pathetically low as to tell people his child has cancer and then later tell them his child died from cancer -- when none of it is true? I know, innocent until proven guilty but the way things are stacking up in this story, it does appear Michael Ruffalo told a new employer his 3-year-old son had cancer, spent months reporting on his child's failing health and then topped it off by announcing the death of his son. Ruffalo got caught in the lie when the Atlanta-based software firm Lancope Inc., tried to send flowers to the funeral. The fake funeral. "When you hear of somebody's child being ill and ultimately the child dying, you feel for that person," said Lancope's chief financial officer, David Cocchiara, whose company put Ruffalo on paid leave within weeks of hiring him because of his son's cancer diagnosis.
To absolutely make matters worse, if that is possible, Ruffalo has done this before with a previous employer. EncryptX Corp., an e-mail security company, said that shortly after hiring Ruffalo they got an e-mail about his son. "We tried to send flowers to the funeral home and they said we never heard of him." EncryptX wrote off the $21,464 dollars they paid him as a bad experience.
Lancope Inc. is suing Ruffalo.











1. Just wanted to add that the Michael Ruffalo story is a fact. I am the President of encryptX. He did this to not only our company and Lancope but 4 othe companies that we are aware of. We had exactly the same reaction as the Lancope management team - take time off, take care of your family, we will cover for you - and ultimately the shared devastation on the news that his 3 year old son had died. Suffice to say, we'd like to see this person behind bars. Having recently lost a family member to lymphatic cancer, I cannot fathom why or how someone could stoop as low as Mr. Ruffalo did.
Sincerely,
David Duncan
President
encryptX Corporation
Posted at 5:35PM on Aug 2nd 2006 by David Duncan