Posts Tagged interview questions

Handling the Harasser’s Interview with Care

Interviewing those people accused of harassing someone else can be at the very least difficult or at the worst, dangerous.  Knowing how to handle this type of interview can resolve issues quickly and mitigate retaliation efforts.

Follow these guidelines:

  • Review 5 Interview Techniques for Harassment Claims.
  • Setup the interview using two investigators if possible.
  • Expect the interviewee to be highly reactive to the complaint.
  • Explain the purpose of the interview.
  • Reiterate that no decision has been made in with this claim, that the investigation is ongoing.
  • Identify the person making the claim.
  • Provide specific charges of the complaint.
  • Ask for the harasser’s response to each of the specific charges.
  • Do not let the interview digress into character and other non specific rhetoric.
  • Ask for witnesses.
  • Assess the harasser’s credibility.

During the interview, you should be taking copious notes, remaining professional and asking appropriate follow-up questions. Failure to collect sufficient information in this phase may create a liability issue for not handling the interview process correctly. It may also add to the claimant’s credibility if litigation occurs. Don’t let this happen to you. Handle the interview with care!

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Who, What Where, When and How Interview Questions

Asking the right questions during a victim interview is critical.  Here is a list of some of those questions:

Who, what, when, where, and how:

  • Who was the alleged harasser?
  • What exactly occurred or was said?
  • When did it occur?
  • Is the behavior ongoing?
  • Where did it occur?
  • How often did it occur?
  • How did it affect you?
  • How did you react?
  • What response did you make when the incident(s) occurred?
  • What response did you make afterward?
  • How did the harassment affect you? Did it effect your job in any way?

 
Incident specifics:

  • Did you tell anyone about it?
  • Who may have relevant information?
  • Was anyone present when the alleged harassment occurred?
  • Did anyone see you immediately after the alleged harassment?

 
Supporting information:

  • Did the person who harassed you, harass anyone else?
  • Has anyone else complained about harassment by that person?
  • Do you have any documentation of the incident?
  • How would you like to see the situation resolved?
  • Is there any other information you would like to provide?
     

As you are asking these questions, you should be taking copious notes, remaining professional and asking appropriate follow-up questions. Failure to collect sufficient information in this phase may create a liability issue for not handling the interview process correctly. It may also add to the claimant’s credibility if litigation occurs. Don’t let this happen to you. Ask Who, What Where, When and How!

Prepare management to ask the right questions by requiring harassment and discrimination training.  Get more information on online harassment training



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