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Internal Investigations: A primer . Bob Cooper May 30, 2007. When do they occur?. OHS Regulatory action Employee misconduct Whistleblower complaints Media reports. What’s at stake?. Health and safety of employees Risk of regulatory or criminal prosecution Civil liability Reputation.
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Internal Investigations: A primer Bob Cooper May 30, 2007
When do they occur? • OHS • Regulatory action • Employee misconduct • Whistleblower complaints • Media reports
What’s at stake? • Health and safety of employees • Risk of regulatory or criminal prosecution • Civil liability • Reputation
Example #1 • Forestry company operating on private land • Forestry operations being carried out by contractors and sub-contractors • A faller is critically injured in an accident and dies on-site before he can receive medical attention • Investigations are started by WCB, police and coroner’s office • The incident has a high media profile • Labour and industry groups use the incident to lobby for changes to the industry • Coroner announces public inquest • At issue for the company is the likelihood of regulatory sanctions, the risk of prosecution and significant reputational risk
Example #2 • Through a whistleblower hotline established by a major company, an anonymous complaint is made that certain key employees have engaged in insider trading • The employees named are members of senior management • The whistleblower provides few specifics • If true, the allegation has serious consequences for the company and individuals involved • At issue is the integrity and reputation of the company and individuals involved and the possibility of regulatory or civil action
Example #3 • A routine review raises a serious issue of misconduct by a long-time employee • The issue raises questions about the employee’s trustworthiness and calls into question the employee’s future with the company
What do you do? • Anticipate the event • Prepare the initial response • Assess the risks • Choose a process
Anticipate the event • Something bad will happen; it is only a matter of time • Decide who will be the point person • Decide who will respond to media • Know who your outside sources are
Initial response – Workplace accident • Secure accident site • Notify WCB • Inform employees of rights/obligations • Advise counsel • Understand the scope of the duty to cooperate • Document and record
Initial response - Regulatory Investigation • Protect privilege • Determine the purpose • Contact counsel • Search warrants • Requests for production
Initial Response – Employee Misconduct • Establish clear policies for conduct • Complaints procedure in place – whistleblower program? • Understand privacy and confidentiality obligations
Assess the risks • What are the legal consequences? • Closure • Fines • Prosecution • Civil actions • Distinguish between risks to the company and to the individuals involved • Is there an obligation to report or disclose? • Is the reputation of the company at stake?
Choose a process • The process must be gauged to the seriousness of the incident • Decide early if outside counsel is needed • Will the investigation remain internal or will the results be made known to outside bodies?
What to watch out for • Know your client • Manage internal and external communications • Maintain privilege • Understand the regulatory environment
Know your client • Decide who will provide instructions • Management • Directors • Committee • Make an early decision to go outside or stay home • To be credible, the investigation must be independent
Manage internal & external communications • It is easy to lose control over the investigation • Limit knowledge inside the company to those who need to know • Limit speculation and rumours by communicating what you can • Have one external spokesperson
Understand the regulatory environment • Know the regulator • Understand what matters to them • What are the current hot buttons? • Beware of overlapping jurisdictions • Kiss and make up or pistols at dawn
General considerations • Investigations are hard on people • The manner in which the investigation is carried out has the potential to cause more harm than the conduct under investigation • Serious incidents get the attention of senior management • There is increasing pressure from regulators to “cooperate” by disclosing the contents of the investigation • Done properly, they can allow a company to get ahead of the curve