"Actually, I see some of this behavior in other programmers. If you were the last one who worked on an application when a strange production error occurs, some devs will point fingers at you. Even if it's obvious it wasn't you."
Actually, I have even seen this behaviour in managers who needed someone to point a finger to, even if they actually only needed the problem fixed.
OOPS need to edit.
On my holiday in Cuba, there was a guy in the group who refused to tell us what his profession was, because "otherwise, he would not be on a holiday any longer and just be back to work". I thought to myself, "The ONLY unresolved questions that EVERYONE has are either legal or else medical, so either he's a lawyer or else he's a medical doctor", but kept that thought to myself. Turned out he was a medical doctor.
Conclusion : NEVER let anyone know what your profession is.
OOPS need to edit again, 'cuz someone said :
"It's strange that people who work in IT, whether they be programmers, db admins, hardware engineers, etc. are the only people that others expect free work from."
DEFINITELY untrue. Imagine yourself on a holiday and you know that this other guy in your group is a medical doctor or a lawyer. Are you REALLY SURE you DON'T HAVE ANY question you expect that person to answer "for free" ?