Title: Practical Tips for Investigating Discrimination Complaints
1Practical Tips for Investigating Discrimination
Complaints
- Susan Hutton, U.S. Department of Labor, Office of
the Solicitor - Laura Stomski, U.S. Department of Labor, Civil
Rights Center
2Developing and organizing a plan for investigation
The key to conducting an effective
investigation is to organize your thoughts and
develop a plan before you start interviewing
witnesses, reviewing the evidence, and drafting
the investigative report.
3Developing your plan
- Legal standards
- Methods for Gathering Evidence
- Putting it all Together
4Hypothetical
- Ms. Garcia was laid-off from her position as a
housekeeper for the Ocean Motel. She speaks
Spanish fluently and some English. She applied
for unemployment benefits, but her request was
denied.
5Legal Standards
6Developing your plan An overview of possible
legal theories
- Categories of Discrimination
- Disparate Treatment
- Disparate Impact
- Hostile Work Environment
- Reasonable accommodation
- (applies to Religion and Disability)
7Disparate Treatment
- Different Treatment
- Must be Intentional
- Direct or Circumstantial Evidence
- Direct evidence the "smoking gun
- Circumstantial evidence does not prove a fact
but permits the inference that a fact is true
8Step 1 The Prima Facie Case
- Complainants Burden to Prove
- Member of a protected category
- Adverse action
- Nexus to their protected category
- Treated differently from someone similarly
situated
9What is the adverse action that is the basis of
Ms. Garcias complaint?
10Step 2 Rebutting a Prima Facie Case
Legitimate Non-Discriminatory Reason The
provider or employer must respond with a
legitimate non-discriminatory reason for its
actions.
11What is the Career Centers justification for its
actions?
12Step 3 Pretext
If provider or employer provides a legitimate
non-discriminatory reason, the claimant must
establish that the provider's or employer's
reason was pretext to mask the unlawful
discrimination. In other words, the complainant
must show the stated justification was not the
real justification, but was used to cover up the
discriminatory conduct or decision.
13Whats next?
- What is the challenged adverse action?
- Based on Ms. Garcias allegations, what type of
discrimination may have occurred? - What information do you have?What do you need?
- Where can you get that information?
- What documents do you need?
- Who do you need to talk to?
-
14Methods for Gathering Evidence
15Information comes from
- In person interviews
- Phone interviews
- Written interrogatories
- Document requests
16Putting it all Together
17Start with the Complainant
- What do we need to ask Ms. Garcia?
18Interviews and Interrogatories
- ASK Who, What, When, Where, and How?
- Example Describe what happened when you went to
the to the Career Center?
19Prompt your witness
- Why did you go to the career center?
- Do you recall who you spoke to?
- Were you by yourself?
- Were you given any materials? Did you complete
any forms? - What were you told about your benefits? Who told
you that?
20Practical Interviewing Tips
- Be careful not to make assumptions.
- Ask clarifying open-ended questions, but avoid
leading questions. - Ask whether there are other people who may have
knowledge of the circumstances surrounding the
complaint that you should talk to. - Are there gaps in the information? Ask
follow-up questions to fill those gaps.
21What we learned from our interview of Ms. Garcia
- Ms. Garcia went to the Career Center with her 12
year old son, Luis. Initially, she spoke with
Ms. Martinez, a bilingual receptionist. Ms.
Martinez referred Ms. Garcia to Mr. Jones, an
employment specialist, who only spoke English.
He gave Ms. Garcia some forms to complete and
also asked her to enter some information online
using one of the Career Centers computers.
22(continued)
- Ms. Garcia said she had great difficulty
understanding Mr. Jones and requested if someone
who spoke Spanish could help her. Mr. Jones told
her that no one was available to assist her.
Luis tried to assist with the written forms and
entering information online. Several weeks
later, Ms. Garcia received a letter, in English,
denying her request for benefits.
23Based on what we learned from interviewing Ms.
Garcia, who do we need to talk to next?
- Ms. Martinez, the Career Center Receptionist
- Mr. Jones, the Employment Specialist at the
Career Center - Luis Garcia?
- Unidentified Manager at the Career Center
24What do we ask those witnesses?
- Open-ended questions based on information learned
from Ms. Garcias interview - Consider whether the statements are consistent or
not - From the Career Center witnesses, ask them to
explain their actions and general procedures for
processing UI claims
25Anything else?
- Are there any other individuals involved that we
should speak to? - Documents?
- Any relevant policies
- Corrective action taken, if any, in response to
the complainant's complaint - All Written communications including email
messages, letters, memos
26Is the investigation complete?
- Did you gather sufficient evidence to
- Answer the prima facie questions?
- Establish the Career Centers non-discriminatory
reason for denying benefits? - Did the Complainant offer any testimony to refute
the Career Centers reasons (pretext)? - Is there sufficient information from which a
decision-maker could render a decision?
27What have we learned?
- Determine your legal theory of discrimination and
use it as a guide for planning your investigation - Use your interview time well ask leading
open-ended questions, summarize and revisit open
issues - Request relevant documents
- Look for gaps and inconsistencies in your
information, re-interview witnesses if necessary