Urgent: Off-duty criminal conduct
das
1 Post
Please help! An employee confided in a friend (who was her former supervisor)
that she was sexually assaulted at an off-duty party by a co-employee. She did
not want anyone to know and did not want to report it to the police. Her "friend", who is in a supervisory position with the organization, arranged a meeting with herself and the accused employee. The friend was present during this meeting. At the meeting the accused admitted that he had sex with her without her willing participation.
The friend arranged for them to be on different shifts so they would have no contact. He did not report the incident to management nor did he report it to the police.
One year later, the employee decided to press charges, it became public and the offender was terminated. Management became aware that the employee confided in her friend about the issue over one year ago. He states that he was acting, not as the employee's supervisor, but as a friend when she confided in him. He said that she made him promise that he would not go to the police or tell anyone. He felt that, because of the embarassment she could potentially face, he was obligated to keep her wishes for privacy and it was off-duty. The issue is whether he had a legal obligation to report this to management? Our policies are not specific to how to handle off-duty conduct and/or knowledge of criminal conduct.
that she was sexually assaulted at an off-duty party by a co-employee. She did
not want anyone to know and did not want to report it to the police. Her "friend", who is in a supervisory position with the organization, arranged a meeting with herself and the accused employee. The friend was present during this meeting. At the meeting the accused admitted that he had sex with her without her willing participation.
The friend arranged for them to be on different shifts so they would have no contact. He did not report the incident to management nor did he report it to the police.
One year later, the employee decided to press charges, it became public and the offender was terminated. Management became aware that the employee confided in her friend about the issue over one year ago. He states that he was acting, not as the employee's supervisor, but as a friend when she confided in him. He said that she made him promise that he would not go to the police or tell anyone. He felt that, because of the embarassment she could potentially face, he was obligated to keep her wishes for privacy and it was off-duty. The issue is whether he had a legal obligation to report this to management? Our policies are not specific to how to handle off-duty conduct and/or knowledge of criminal conduct.
Comments
>issue is whether he had a legal obligation to report this to
>management?
I do not see how he could have 'a legal obligation to report this to management'. The law does not typically address what a person must report to his employer. Only your company sexual harassment or general conduct policy might do that. If your policy is specific or even if not, and the supervisor had a legitimate misunderstanding as to the paramaters and requirements of the policy, you might either firm up the policy or address this sort of thing in upcoming supervisory training sessions. If the supervisor seems to be indicating that he didn't agree with the policy, therefore failed to report it, you have another matter entirely. If this is an important matter in the company, I think I might run it by the corporate attorney. Otherwise, simply tighten up either the policy or peoples understanding of the policy. I'm not sure I would have reported it either, given the facts as you state them. Would have to know more and thoroughly analyze it all.
There are many other issues to deal with, including the knowledge of criminal activity - I mean this was an assault. The supervisor may end up as a witness in a criminal case and/or a civil case. The company lawyer should be in on this one right away.
What a tough situation to be in as he may be accessory to the fact for not reporting this - not sure how the courts would look upon this as the offender admitted assaulting someone against their will which is a crime.
You did not say if the meeting between the two parties was held on company time or premises? That would be the only problem I can see at this point.
I would expect since the friend is privy to all the details he will be called as a witness should the case go to trail.
I aslo agree that you should seek legal counsel to confirm.
Good Luck!
I think your company may be in trouble & you should contact your attorney. You should also tighten up your investigation policies and harrassment policies & conduct a company-wide training session on harrassment & do a separate one for supervisors & management - outlining reporting requirements. If I knew a supervisor was conducting an investigation into this type of situation without HR sanction or HR being present (HR does investigations in my company) I would fire the supervisor. Bottom line, can you imagine having to sit on the witness stand and try to explain, "No, no, no Mr/Ms Attorney, even though I'm a supervisor at the company & it's my job title, I was wearing my 'friend' hat at the time of the meeting."
Good luck to you - let us know how it turns out.