Incident
Investigation -- Tips, Techniques & Trivia
June
Training
I
will be offering all of my training programs in the first two
weeks of June in Edmonton. Included for the first time will
be a two-day Advanced Level Incident Investigation session.
Jeff
Accident Readiness Checklist
10/10 is a good starting point!
- Your
investigation policy and procedures are reviewed annually.
-
Management is aware of what accidents are reportable to government.
-
All employees know how and what type of incident/accident to
report.
-
Employees know who is responsible to manage the accident scene.
-
Key employees are trained in accident investigation, analysis
and interviewing.
-
Procedures exist to preserve the accident scene and protect
evidence.
-
Complete investigation kits are available.
-
Report forms document direct, indirect and root causes.
-
Corrective actions from previous investigations have been implemented.
-
Management reviews all accident reports and provides feedback.
Using a Tape Recorder?
I’ve become a big fan of tape recording
interviews for two reasons. One, there is always, and I repeat
always something that I miss in the interview. When I listen to
the recordings or have them transcribed little nuggets of information
jump off the page. Secondly, a tape recorder provides you with
feedback on your interviewing performance. When you hear yourself
cutting people off with your next question or when the interviewee
asks you to repeat the question because he didn’t understand
it, you recognize the need to develop better interview skills.
To
view complete article. . .
Photo Log
It's more than just taking a few
pictures
Recently I was involved in a major investigation
and arrived on site three days after the incident. The initial
investigation team had taken dozens of photographs and turned
them over to me. When I asked them to walk me through the story
the photos told they were unable to easily do so.
They had taken many photos of some aspects of
the accident scene and few or none of other aspects. They felt
that if they took enough pictures they would capture what was
important.
To view
complete story. . .
To view photolog and other investigation forms. .
Deception
Detection Tip
Most
truthful stories have three more or less equal parts - an opening,
body and a conclusion. Deceptive stories often have a long rambling
introduction, and a very short main body and no conclusion.
The speaker may be delaying getting to the point under discussion,
and when he gets there it's over now! That's not the way we
tell stories in real life.
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