Friday, September 3rd, 2010

News | Fbi Fingerprint Background Check To Lookup Peoples Criminal

March 1, 2010 by Jacob Pratama  
Filed under News

In today’s fast-paced, high-risk world, many employers regularly conduct background checks on their prospective employees. Many companies would like to make sure that the staff they hire have a “clean background” before they can join the organization. Having a clean FBI background check could mean having no criminal history whatsoever, or having proof of legal immigration or simply having proof of good financial status. Employees, whether they are teachers, firemen, security guards, airline personnel, child care workers, may have to present proof of their credibility and integrity before they get hired. This proof is called a criminal history background report or a police arrest record. When no such record exists, or when a person does have a clean background, they might still need to acquire proof that states no such record exists. In other words its not hard to lookup peoples criminal history.

In most states, a person is usually arrested and taken to the local police station before being presented to a judicial officer like a magistrate for his case to be reviewed. This is called processing, and involves having an individual’s prints and photographs taken. It’s perfectly true that there are no two people, in the whole entire world, who have the same prints. While a person may fabricate his name, date of birth or address just to hide their past, they cannot invent their prints. This is why fingerprints have to be taken.

The process for acquiring your police report, or rap sheet, is relatively simple. You have to fill out an application called the Criminal Justice Information System or the CJIS Application for Criminal History report which is often called the “orange card.” If the employer also wants the Federal Bureau of Investigation, or the FBI to do a national background check on a particular individual, the person can also request for an application form. He must then take the cards to an agency to have his fingerprints taken. These days though, while the police are authorized to take fingerprints, some no longer offer the service to the general public. Some still do, at the price of about $10 per card.

Additionally, contrary to popular misconception, the government does not actually keep a file of everyone’s fingerprints. The prints that are actually stored are those who have been arrested or those working in sensitive government offices. What happens is that when your prints are taken for a background check, the card is destroyed after the check is finished. This is because the law actually forbids your prints to be stored, so if you apply for a new job, you must go through the same process again. The rationale behind is, is that just because a person had a clean history before he was checked, it does not follow that he will not commit a crime after.


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