Today,
we present 5 basic steps that make up an effective investigation.
Mehfoud,
a director at Spotts Fain PC, emphasizes that while flexibility is important
during the course of an internal investigation, pitfalls are also common and
should be avoided. To help, here are five essential steps that should be
covered.
1. Designate a proper investigator. Whether you
choose to use outside counsel or an internal representative as an investigator,
the individual(s) you select must have three important traits:
Independence. They must be motivated to complete
the investigation with little outside assistance or prompting.
- Impartiality. Appointed investigators should not be in the reporting chain of the alleged wrongdoer OR the complainant, and if the issue under investigation involved any legal advice from outside counsel, the same counsel should not serve as the investigator.
- Integrity. An investigation’s credibility hinges on the investigator acting with integrity.
2. Assess and define the scope of the investigation.
It’s extremely important to assess and constantly reassess the scope of an
investigation, says Mehfoud. A common pitfall is tackling too much and lacking
focus. If you are having some sales ethics issues, for example, you don’t need
to review your entire pricing structure. If your compliance issue has
precipitated government action, clarify the scope of the investigation with the
government regulator. If it’s triggered by an employee complaint, a background
interview and initial document collection may define the scope.
3. Identify the key players. To stay focused,
identify the chief complainants and wrongdoers, and make them priorities for
further inquiry. It’s important to be flexible and reassess this, as the key
players may change the more you investigate, says Mehfoud.
4. Collect and preserve necessary documents.
Documents (including e-mails and text messages) are your best form of evidence.
Issue a document hold that suspends normal documentation destruction practices and
instructs relevant parties to preserve documents—be sure you have procedures in
place to link documents to their authors and recipients.
5. Conduct appropriate witness interviews.
Investigators should be guided by the documents and allegations to identify
their witnesses, says Mehfoud. When interviewing, stay mindful of both the
employees’ and the company’s rights and obligations. Focus on your key players,
and balance preparation with the need to act quickly.
Source: HR
Daily Adviser
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