Tried using the men's room at work. One stall, the toilet was clogged with a lot of toilet paper and several seat covers. The other stall, someone had apparently removed the locking mechanism, turned it around, and put it back on, rendering it impossible to actually lock the stall door. My manager's reaction to that second one was the same as mine: unintelligible sputtering.
On the opposite end of the WTF spectrum, someone found $5,200. Normally the policy with found money is that if it's over $10, the person who finds it gets to keep 30% of it while the rest of it goes into the fund that pays for things like lunch for everyone during a sale. With an amount like that though, I don't know if there's a different policy.
Not a Police Officer
A
lot of fictional police officers do not act like actual police officers. ...Actually that might be a cause for many of the problems with police officers nowadays.
At one point when investigating the kidnapping of the secondary main character by a serial killer, the real main character, an FBI forensics specialist, finds that the local sheriff has been trying to do some of the forensic work. Sloppily, and potentially evidence-damaging. The main character does get to call them out for it though.
Then the killer manages to kill at least a dozen police officers in a 5-second ambush... slightly justified by mega-spoiler: {there's three killers, and one is a former Marine sniper, while another is an FBI agent involved in the case}.
On the other hand, the police don't get around to checking up on the loss of communication with the crime scene(and sending reinforcements) until late the next day, after the entire situation is resolved. You'd think that an active investigation, one with the possible killer looming around, would be required to make regular reports, and the lack of such reports would be cause for concern. Especially since the main character is definitely in regular phone contact with the forensic lab.