you have no ethics and no morals and don't mind in the least misleading people into lying, cheating, and committing fraud
If the employer can't prove by a preponderance of the evidence that a claimant committed a bad act that rises to the level of misconduct, then so be it. I don't tell anyone to lie, but they don't have to spill their guts either.
I don't mislead anyone. There are procedural aspects to the process, and there is no reason for a claimant that is informed of them not to take advantage of them.
In a discharge, the employer has the burden. If the claimant is just going to admit to everything, then what's the point?
The UI applications ask "why" or the "reason" you were fired, and a claimant can put in "fired." It's not a lie. While the deputies can and do ask incriminating questions, the claimant doesn't have to take the call and a decision will be made "with the best available information." Again, not lying. At the hearing, I have yet to have a claimant say that the ALJ asked them right out, "did you do this?" They just don't probably because they take self incrimination seriously.
I see too many claimants that should get benefits being denied for wrong reasons, that when a claimant gets benefits that probably shouldn't, I can live it. Even when the claimants succeed on appeal, that's still a minimum of 4 to 6 week wait on top of the 3 to 4 week wait for the initial decision. It's hurting people that can least afford it.