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Recording a counseling/disciplinary meeting

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magtwo

Junior Member
What is the name of your state? CA


I have an employee to whom I need to administer a written counseling. I have a meeting scheduled, but need to know if I can get into legal trouble if I record the meeting discreetly; that is, without the employee knowing.

The main reason for this is twofold; I want to protect myself from any accusations, and I want to be able to dissect the conversation at a later.

I fully expect this meeting to be very dramatic, based on the employee, and the reason for the disciplinary action. That is the main reason I do not want to set a tape recorder out in the middle of the table.

Thank you for any help.
 


justalayman

Senior Member
California's wiretapping law is a "two-party consent" law. California makes it a crime to record or eavesdrop on any confidential communication, including a private conversation or telephone call, without the consent of all parties to the conversation. See Cal. Penal Code § 632.
it would appear it would be illegal.
 

justalayman

Senior Member
maybe if you explained you would like to record the meeting to protect the employee. It makes them feel like you really care about them.

the recorder itself could also cause the meeting to be not so dramatic as well. A lot of people tend to have better control of themselves when they are aware their words/actions being recorded.
 

Beth3

Senior Member
What is the name of your state? CA


I have an employee to whom I need to administer a written counseling. I have a meeting scheduled, but need to know if I can get into legal trouble if I record the meeting discreetly; that is, without the employee knowing.

The main reason for this is twofold; I want to protect myself from any accusations, and I want to be able to dissect the conversation at a later.

I fully expect this meeting to be very dramatic, based on the employee, and the reason for the disciplinary action. That is the main reason I do not want to set a tape recorder out in the middle of the table.

Thank you for any help.
Have someone else from management (your HR person?) sit in on the disciplinary meeting. Then you'll have a witness to everything that was said, should your employee later make any false accusations.
 

Beth3

Senior Member
If only it were that easy sometimes...

There are many reasons why it's necessary for an employer to follow progressive disciplinary practices and create documentation of same before terminating an employee. For example, if the employee alleges he/she was terminated due to their race, religion, age, handicap, etc. Unless the employee had engaged in egregious misconduct where immediate termination was appropriate, an employee can be in a world of hurt in attempting to refute a discrimination complaint without documentation of progressive discipline.
 

xylene

Senior Member
If only it were that easy sometimes...

There are many reasons why it's necessary for an employer to follow progressive disciplinary practices and create documentation of same before terminating an employee. For example, if the employee alleges he/she was terminated due to their race, religion, age, handicap, etc. Unless the employee had engaged in egregious misconduct where immediate termination was appropriate, an employee can be in a world of hurt in attempting to refute a discrimination complaint without documentation of progressive discipline.
That is a good line of reasoning.

I suppose the point of my comment was that something about this managers desire to secretly tape a meeting appeared to be coming from a less noble place concerning the best interest of the company.
 

Beth3

Senior Member
Could be. Or perhaps the manager is being unnecessarily cautious. Or perhaps this employee has a history of making unfounded allegations.

Anyway you look at it, taping the conversation is a bad idea. Having a member of management sit in as a witness is definitely the way to go and quite commonplace.
 

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