Imagine reconstructing history without important documents such as constitutional amendments, peace treaties, and records of significant events. How many different accounts of the same events would there be? How different would our understanding of the world be? On a smaller scale, that’s why it’s important to have accurate records of how your business’s keys are used.
Relying on an employee’s word or making assumptions based on the circumstances simply won’t cut it. You must have a reliable key control audit trail.
A key control audit trail captures specific details about the history of an employee’s interactions with a specific key:
With a verifiable record of these details, a company can build a historical record of key-related activity within the business. If the audit trail doesn’t exist or isn’t reliable, the organization is forced to rely on conjecture and employees’ versions of events.
To help you learn from others’ mistakes, we’ll examine two real-life examples demonstrating the consequences of a poor audit trail and explain what you should do instead.
For one dealership, a poor audit trail resulted in costly legal action. A dealership employee used one of his employer’s vehicles to run a personal errand on his lunch break and rear-ended a couple who then brought a lawsuit against the dealership.
The jury found that the dealership had given the employee implied permission to use the vehicle based on its policies for vehicle use (or lack thereof) and method for controlling access to keys. Described in the case summary as “an elaborate process,” the dealership’s key control procedure involved keeping keys in a shack staffed by an attendant. The key-issue process included the following steps:
The Problem
Because one person was in charge of issuing keys and the dealership didn’t have a clear policy against using vehicles for personal reasons or without supervisor approval, employees assumed that if the shack attendant gave them keys to a vehicle, they were authorized to use it.
In addition, relying on one person to manage keys without any cross checks increased the risk of human error, and the data’s accuracy couldn’t be verified. Since keys weren’t always marked as returned and the vehicles’ gas, oil or mileage levels weren’t monitored, it was easy for unauthorized use of vehicles to go undetected.
The Consequences
Although the dealership insisted that employees weren’t allowed to drive vehicles for personal use, the jury ruled that the dealership’s lack of strict vehicle monitoring and lax key control processes implied tacit permission for employees to use the vehicles. Despite appealing the jury’s verdict, the dealership was held liable for $277,662 in damages.
A 5,200-bed state corrections facility is required to undergo annual audits conducted by the state’s Office of Inspector General. One of the audit categories reviews how keys are stored and accounted for in each unit within the facility. In one year’s inspection, the audit uncovered several problems with the facility’s key control records:
The Problem
The facility’s key storage methods and manual, paper-based processes made it difficult to keep an accurate audit trail. For example, when storing multiple key rings on a single hook, it was difficult to see how many sets of keys there actually were, which led to the wrong number of key rings being recorded.
Employee training and accountability issues resulted in key control logs not being updated in a timely manner — if at all. It was also problematic that key-issue authorizations weren’t always completed and there wasn’t an effective process for storing and accessing historical records.
The Consequences
The deficiencies in the key control audit added to the correctional facility’s compliance burden, since it had to correct all the key control problems it was cited for, in addition to issues cited in other categories. Worse, the inaccurate records would make it easier for missing keys to go unnoticed, increasing security risks.
Regardless of your industry or the types of keys you manage, there are typically two culprits for inadequate audit trails: manual processes and lack of employee accountability.
To create and maintain a verifiable audit trail that’ll help you avoid unauthorized key use and liability, follow these best practices: