Garrity Rights
In the case of Garrity v. New Jersey, the U.S. Supreme Court determined
that public employees could not be forced, under clear threat of
discipline, to violate the principles of compulsory self-incrimination.
This decision established what have come to be called "Garrity Rights" for public employees.
The
Garrity rule is similar to Miranda rights for public employees.
However, the burden is on the employee to assert their Garrity rights.
These rights can and should be asserted whenever an employee believes
they are being investigated for possible criminal conduct.
Once an employee has asserted their Garrity rights, management must:
- Give a direct order to answer the question;
- Make the question specific, directly and narrowly related to the employee's duty or fitness for duty;
- Advise
the employee that the answers will not and cannot be used against
him/her in a criminal proceeding, nor the fruits of those proceedings;
and
- Allow union representation if the employee also asserts their Weingarten Rights.