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Fire Proof

A thorough investigation is the only way to build a case against problem employees.
Posted by Steven C. Bahls | July 1, 2002
URL: http://www.entrepreneur.com/article/52686

Rumors are flying. Everyone in the office is talking about a fellow employee stealing supplies, taking drugs or using office computers to run a porn Web site. Time to check it out and take action.

But not too fast. "Before disciplining anyone for misconduct, conduct a full and fair investigation," says Jeff Pasek, an attorney specializing in employment law with Cozen O'Connor in Philadelphia. That way, you'll have an excellent defense if you end up in court. The opposite is also true: A jury hearing that you fired someone after false accusations and a slapdash investigation may be more sympathetic to the ex-employee.

In one case, food products were disappearing from a retailer's warehouse, and a security guard reported seeing a supervisor eat a bag of chips from the inventory. The retailer promptly fired the supervisor, without talking with her or checking with other witnesses. Worse, when gossip started spreading, employees were told the woman had been fired for stealing.

The woman sued, claiming defamation, and the jury awarded her $90,000 in compensatory damages and $1.4 million in punitive damages. While the verdict was later overturned by an appellate court on a legal technicality, Pasek contends that the case remains a textbook example of how not to conduct an investigation.

Doing It Right

So how do you investigate properly? "I don't think there's ever been a perfect investigation," Pasek says. "The issue is how to do it well enough." He offers the following suggestions:

The list of cautions may be daunting, but doing it right can fend off liability that could be worse than the original problem.


Steven C. Bahls, dean of Capital University Law School in Columbus, Ohio, teaches entrepreneurship law. Freelance writer Jane Easter Bahls specializes in business and legal topics.