Summary
If you were hurt by an employee who had a serious criminal history that should have raised red flags, you may be able to bring a negligent hiring claim against the employer in Georgia. These cases do not punish people for having a record. They focus on the company’s decisions and whether reasonable screening and placement would have prevented your injury. If the facts support it, you can seek compensation for medical bills, lost income, and other losses. Malchow Johnson Injury Lawyers offers free consultations to explain your options and protect your timeline.
What Negligent Hiring Means in Georgia
Negligent hiring is a type of negligence claim against an employer for hiring or placing an employee the company knew or should have known posed an unreasonable risk of harm. The question is not whether the worker has a conviction. The questions are what the employer knew, what a reasonable background check would have shown, and whether the job duties created a foreseeable risk given that history.
A conviction on its own is not automatic proof of negligence. Context matters. A theft conviction may not make a warehouse picker unsafe to the public, while a recent violent felony could be a serious concern for jobs that involve entering homes, driving passengers, or handling security-sensitive tasks. The employer’s policies, screening steps, supervision, and the specific role all factor into whether they acted reasonably.
Common Fact Patterns We See
• Delivery or rideshare-style driving where a driver with a violent or DUI history injures someone on the road or assaults a rider.
• In-home services such as cable, repairs, or home health where someone with a violent past is sent into a residence without reasonable vetting.
• Security, hospitality, or nightlife positions where prior violent conduct should have triggered heightened screening or placement limits.
• Contractors or temps placed into safety-sensitive worksites with little to no background review.
How a Negligent Hiring Case Is Built
To succeed, you need evidence that connects an employer decision to a harm that was reasonably foreseeable. A strong investigation usually includes:
• Background check evidence: what the employer ran, what was returned, and whether obvious gaps existed.
• Hiring and placement files: applications, references, interview notes, and policy manuals.
• Supervision records: prior incidents, complaints, or write-ups that signaled risk.
• Job duties and risk: the level of public contact, driving, access to homes, or security-sensitive functions.
• Causation: how the poor hiring or placement decision contributed to your injury.
Negligent Hiring vs. Negligent Retention and Negligent Supervision
These related claims often travel together. Negligent retention applies when a company keeps an employee after learning new facts that make continued employment unsafe. Negligent supervision targets failures to train, oversee, or restrict duties. If you were hurt by an employee with a past that suggested danger, or after warning signs popped up on the job, an experienced injury firm can help you evaluate which legal theories fit best.
Who Can Bring the Claim and What Damages Are Available
If you were injured by the employee, you may bring a personal injury claim against the employer. Families who lost a loved one may pursue a wrongful death claim and related estate claims for the decedent’s medical expenses and pain and suffering. Learn how wrongful death claims work and who can file by reviewing our firm’s guides, then ask us how these rules could apply to your case in Augusta and nearby communities:
• Understand who can file a wrongful death claim and what damages are available by reviewing this resource, then contact us with questions
• See additional wrongful death information relevant to families
• If you are considering hiring counsel for a death caused by negligent hiring, this page can help you think through your selection
These internal resources explain claim types and decisions you may face as your case develops.
What if You Were Injured at Work by a Coworker With a Serious Record
Employees harmed on the job usually have a workers’ compensation claim. In some situations there may also be a third-party claim against a staffing agency, contractor, or property owner, or a separate claim if the employer’s negligence falls outside workers’ compensation exclusivity. Start with a workers’ compensation basics review so you do not miss deadlines and benefits, then ask us to assess whether an additional negligent hiring or third-party claim exists in your facts:
• Workers’ compensation laws overview
• Can I sue my employer for a workplace injury
• Giving a recorded statement after a workplace injury
These pages explain Georgia rules and key decisions while we investigate responsibility outside the comp system.
Key Elements Your Attorney Will Assess
• Duty and foreseeability: Did the role create obvious risk to the public or to you given the employee’s known or knowable history.
• Reasonableness of screening: Did the employer run checks consistent with industry standards and the risk level of the job.
• Fit for the role: Even with a record, was the person placed in a position where the specific prior conduct would likely not endanger others.
• Warning signs after hire: Complaints, incidents, or safety violations that called for retraining, reassignment, or termination.
• Causation and damages: How the negligent decision contributed to the specific harm and what losses you suffered.
Evidence to Collect Right Away
• The business name, supervisor name, and any contractor or staffing company involved.
• Employee identifiers if available, vehicle information if a crash was involved, and any uniform or badge photos.
• Names of witnesses and any prior complaints you are aware of.
• All medical care and billing records.
• Photos, video, or incident reports.
Mistakes That Can Weaken a Case
• Posting details publicly before speaking to counsel, which can draw unwanted attention and complicate investigation.
• Sharing recorded statements with an employer’s insurer without legal guidance.
• Waiting too long to seek medical care, which creates gaps in the record.
• Assuming there is no case because the worker had “paid their debt.” The question is whether the employer acted reasonably given the risk.
Related Videos
Choosing a Personal Injury Attorney
How Much Is My Personal Injury Claim Worth?
When Wrongful Death Is Involved
Families deserve straight answers about liability, damages, and the path forward. If negligent hiring led to a fatal injury, Georgia’s wrongful death law allows family members to recover the full value of the life of the decedent, and the estate may recover medical and other related damages. Our wrongful death resources can help you prepare for that conversation, and we are available to talk through timelines and strategy. See our guides linked above for more context.
Practical Timeline and What to Do Next
• Get medical care and follow your treatment plan.
• Write down what happened while it is fresh, including every organization involved.
• Preserve messages, emails, and app records related to the service or job.
• Contact a lawyer early so subpoenas can secure hiring and placement records before they disappear.
If you believe negligent hiring or retention played a role in your injury or a loved one’s death, contact Malchow Johnson Injury Lawyers for a free consultation. We will review your facts, explain your options, and map the next steps.
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