1 / 31

The Political Minefield of Internal Investigations:

The Political Minefield of Internal Investigations:. Practical Pointers for Tribal In-House Counsel to Avoid an Explosion. Tribal In-House Counsel Association/Michigan State University Indigenous Law Conference. October 26, 2017. Introductions.

lindaperry
Télécharger la présentation

The Political Minefield of Internal Investigations:

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Political Minefield of Internal Investigations: Practical Pointers for Tribal In-House Counsel to Avoid an Explosion Tribal In-House Counsel Association/Michigan State University Indigenous Law Conference October 26, 2017

  2. Introductions Venus McGhee Prince, Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton LLPLori Madison Stinson, Attorney General, Poarch Band of Creek IndiansBrian K. Pierson, Godfrey & Kahn LLP

  3. Overall Disclaimer • These issues are sensitive, internal matters, and Indian country is a small legal world • Nothing we say is intended to disparage or judge any particular situation or tribe • By nature, these situations are fact- and context-sensitive based on specific tribal laws and policies • Our presentation is focused on issue-spotting and best practices based on our experiences • We wish to foster productive conversations that can help during very uncomfortable situations

  4. What Types of Internal Investigations Do (or Should) the Tribe’s Laws Contemplate? • The different investigations and laws can overlap and trigger different investigative authorities and processes • Personnel • Officials • Ethics • Regulatory (Gaming, TERO, etc.) • Judiciary • Criminal

  5. Where Do You Start? • What tribal law or policy applies? • Where is it? • To whom does it apply? • Is there a timeframe? • What are its investigative procedures? • Do you have a budget? Who controls your budget? • Do you have a conflict between governing laws or policies? • What level of due process is needed? • At-will for employees v. elected official position

  6. Who Makes the Decision and How? • Tribal law or policy dictates—consistency is best • Options for Decision-Maker • Tribal Council • Board or Committee • Senior Management • Options for Communicating Decision • Verbal • Written • Personnel action form/letter • Decision or opinion • Remind clients that a criminal action might (or should) be outside of their decision-making authority

  7. What Federal Laws Might Be Triggered? • 18 U.S. Code § 666 - Theft or bribery concerning programs receiving Federal funds • 18 U.S. Code § 371 - Conspiracy to commit offense or to defraud United States • 18 U.S. Code § 1163 - Embezzlement and theft from Indian tribal organizations • Racketeering-Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) – Non-prosecution agreements with tribes in Tucker case • Marijuana enterprises?  

  8. What Role Should In-House Counsel Serve? • Considerations • Role (Investigator, Advisor, etc.) • Size • Single Attorney • Small Department • Large Department • Budget • Relationship to Council and Businesses • Facing an Investigation • How to decide whether to appoint special counsel • Level of employee? • Elected official? • Prior involvement by Legal? • How to choose special counsel

  9. How Does In-House Manage (and Survive) the Process? • Confidentiality • How to handle Council requests and communications? • Any need to maintain within Legal? • Ethics • What if in-house needs to initiate an investigation? • Recusals/Ethical Walls—do they work?

  10. A Dozen Do’s & Don’ts of Internal Investigations 8219338

  11. 1. Listen For The Whistle • Develop process for employees to report concerns: • Duty to report • Confidentiality to protect reporting employee • No retaliation • Educate employees regarding duties and processes • Hotline • Ombudsman • Be approachable • Open door • Follow up • Required component of “effective compliance and ethics program”

  12. 2. Don’t Shoot Before You Aim • Create an organized plan to gather information • Determine the proper scope of the investigation • Determine pervasiveness of wrongdoing • When and where did it start? • Who knew or should have known? • Determine documents to be gathered and the method for locating them • Consider internal and third party witnesses to be contacted

  13. Don’t Shoot Before You Aim • An internal investigation must be broad enough to: • Determine whether misconduct actually occurred • Discover evidence helpful in responding to actual or potential government investigation • Enable company to take remedial action • Scope may be restricted by: • The expense and disruption caused by the investigation • The need to maintain confidentiality • Scope should be re-evaluated at various stages of the investigation • Corporation must remain flexible and agile • Update the plan as needed as new information becomes available

  14. Don’t Shoot Before You Aim • Assess level of urgency, create a timeline • May need to complete investigation and make disclosures before federal or state government (independently) becomes aware of the matter • Council may need to make business decisions based on findings

  15. 3. Find the Information Where does relevant information reside? • Electronically stored information • Emails • Voice mails • Phone records • Text messages • Word documents • Financial records • Any document authorizing a disbursement

  16. Find the Information • Volume of documents stored electronically may be immense • Need for targeted and cost-effective search methods • Keep track of crucial documents • A log should be used to identify and organize important documents (who, where, when) • Consider retaining outside consultant to manage document collection and management process • Enhances credibility in the eyes of the federal government government • Outside consultant may be able to provide helpful testimony regarding thoroughness and integrity of process

  17. 4. Don’t Destroy Documents • Issue a document hold/retention memo to IT Dept. or selected custodians • An inclusive document retention policy should be promulgated on learning of misconduct • Failure to retain documents may result in obstruction charges. Arthur Andersen LLP v. United States, 544 U.S. 696 (2005) (accounting firm indicted for shredding documents) • Coordinate with IT department to target tapes, servers, hard drives, thumb drives, PDAs and other electronic storage • Litigation hold memo upon knowledge of potential claim

  18. 5. Identify Your Client • Multiple groups of actors in a tribe make the attorney-client relationship complex • Management, Council, employees: Who does counsel represent? • Answer: The Tribe • Always make it clear that counsel represents the Tribe • Failure to be clear could result in inadmissibility of statements/admissions and disqualification of counsel • “Upjohn” warnings (Attorney to tribal councilor: “I’m not your lawyer. I’m the Tribe’s lawyer.”) • May be permissible to represent officers and employees as well if their interests are not adverse.

  19. Identify Your Client • Model Rule 1.13: Organization as Client • A lawyer representing an organization may also represent directors, officers, employees, shareholders, or other constituents, subject to Rule 1.7 • Model Rule 1.7: Conflicts of Interest • A lawyer may not represent a client if the representation will be directly adverse to another client, or if there is a significant risk that the representation of one client will be materially limited by responsibilities to another client

  20. Identify Your Client • To avoid complication, separate counsel for employees may be advisable • Employees who may be culpable almost certainly need separate counsel • Employees not involved in wrongdoing and who reported it to management can probably be represented by corporation’s counsel • Between these two extremes, make sure to maintain flexibility • Joint representation can restrict options • When in doubt, secure separate counsel

  21. 6. Do Come Armed • Use documents to shape line of questioning • Mark as exhibits and attach to interview memoranda and report of investigation

  22. 7. Don’t Start at the Top • Tribal employees are a primary source of information • Interview after review of documents: personnel may shed light • Use documents to shape line of questioning • Mark as exhibits and attach to interview memoranda and report of investigation • Interview personnel outside presence of senior executives to encourage candor • Interview lower level and least culpable employees first • “Pyramid” investigation

  23. 7. Don’t Be A Lone Ranger • Staff interviews with a questioner and a note taker • Questioner can observe demeanor and body language • Listen to what person is saying AND not saying • Don’t give up. Follow up because you may only have one chance to conduct interview

  24. 8. Do Be A Historian • Take copious notes • Prepare accurate memoranda of interviews • Take steps to preserve attorney-client and work product privileges

  25. 10. Don’t Leak • Confidentiality is paramount • During investigation disclose information only “as needed” to accomplish goals • Understanding of facts likely to evolve as investigation progresses • Minimize risk of disseminating incorrect information • Avoid premature conclusions/corporate pressure to take action

  26. 11. Be Prepared for “60 Minutes” Call • Media will be interested in high-profile cases • Consider how to convey message • Avoid harm to legal status • Avoid appearance of disingenuousness to prosecutors • Comments by corporate spokespersons may be used as admissions • Minimize risk of negative publicity • Avoid ill will of consumers and business partners • Hazard of “No comment:” Allows media to spin the story • Media relations consultant may be helpful • Assist in crafting message • Manage relationships with media outlets

  27. 12. Don’t Report Before You’re Ready • Up the ladder • General Counsel • Administrator(s)/CFO • Council • Audit Committee • Law enforcement • Regulatory agencies • Other constituencies • Employees • Tribal Members • Business partners • Analysts/media

  28. Don’t Report Before You Are Ready • Identify the ultimate goals of the corporation • Avoid an indictment of the corporation • Minimize exposure to civil liability • Timing and method of communication with the government may vary • Early self-disclosure may be appropriate • Prevent harm to public • Preempt a whistleblower • More often, investigate wrongdoing first, and respond to inquiries from the government • Give candid responses that are limited to the specific inquiry • Establishing a positive dialog can aid relationship with prosecutors

  29. Don’t Report Before You Are Ready • Investigation should culminate in oral or written report • Present summary of background, the method of investigation, a discussion of evidence, an application of law to the evidence, and any remedial measures • Preserve work product privilege by limiting distribution

  30. Don’t Report Before You’re Ready • Consider whether and how to disclose to the government • Release of report may waive attorney-client and work product privileges • Release of report may render report discoverable to civil plaintiffs • Oral report or attorney proffer may allow corporation to disclose facts without waiving privilege • Oral report may protect investigative report from discovery in civil lawsuits

  31. Dozen Do’s & Don’ts of Internal Investigations • Do listen for the whistle • Don’t shoot before you aim • Do find the information • Don’t destroy documents • Do identify your client • Do come armed • Don’t start at the top • Don’t be a lone ranger • Do be a historian • Don’t leak • Do be prepared when “60 Minutes” calls • Don’t report before you are ready

More Related