Title: Criminal%20Background%20Checks%20
1Criminal Background Checks Prior Offenders A
Discussion of Policy Choices
- Prof. Kent Markus, At-Large Member
- SEARCH Membership Group Meeting
- January 28, 2005
- St. Pete Beach, FL
2Two Session Goals
- Discussion of a public policy issue impacting
criminal history repository managers - Discussion of the role of those with
substantial knowledge about state criminal
history record systems in the development of
related public policy
3The Public Policy Question
- What steps, if any, should public policymakers
take to ease the societal re-entry of prior
offenders in an era of increasingly pervasive
employment, housing and other non-criminal
justice background checks?
4Whats going on?
- Not long ago, the fact of a criminal conviction
was relatively inaccessible to the general public - Dramatically expanded technological and record
storage capacity changed everything
5Whats going on?
- Technological advancements expanded access to
records that, individually, were always public - Made public desire for criminal history record
information reasonable - Made commercial vendors viable
- Accordingly
- Governmentally managed web other access
increased whenever authorized by open record laws - Purposes for which governments authorized access
expanded (and continues to expand) - High volume commercial vendors developed
6Whats going on?
- Now, background checks are widely utilized by
private employers, landlords, and myriad others
in our society with the authority to grant prior
offenders access to jobs, housing and other
aspects of everyday life in society necessary for
them to become productive citizens and to avoid
recidivism
7Whats going on?
- These background checks are utilized with few
limitations, and with even less guidance about
their relevance to the employment, housing and
other critical decisions being made.
8An aside
- Not talking here about circumstances in which
policy makers have already made their own
judgments about the relevance of criminal
activity to various jobs or other opportunities
(e.g. - statutory prohibitions on those with
certain backgrounds being employed in certain
professions, having access to public housing,
being allowed to adopt children, etc.) - My focus today is on public and private
decision-makers with discretion to utilize
criminal history information as they see fit
9So whats the problem?
- Criminal history records, now quite pervasively
available, are being routinely and extensively
used to exclude prior offenders from basic life
opportunities and needs.
10Isnt that appropriate?
- Shouldnt prior offenders be treated with greater
suspicion and concern than those seeking jobs or
housing who have no criminal history? - Dont employers, landlords, and day care
operators have an obligation to protect their
employees, tenants and client families from harm
that might come from a prior offender?
11The problem!
- Prior offenders are left with an untenable
version of the societal social compact - A sentence is imposed as punishment for the
offenders transgressions. - Offenders completing their sentences are told
they have repaid their debt to society they must
sin no more, reject crime and become productive
members of that society - And yet
12The problem!
- Prior offenders who have completed their
sentences - Are denied jobs and housing, and may not coach
their childs soccer team or lead their childs
scout troop - Are branded with an indelible mark that provides
various societal decision-makers a powerful
reason to avoid the actual and perceived risk
associated with involving a prior offender in
their affairs - Are part of an ever-growing underclass looking at
recidivism as a practical choice
13The problem made worse
- Those incarcerated as part of their criminal
sentence have a harder time re-entering society
a harder time obtaining employment and housing,
post-incarceration, than those sentenced but not
incarcerated
14The problem made worse
- Between 1972 and 1999, while the American
population increased by 28, the American prison
population increased by more than 500. - While in 1990, 405,000 inmates were released from
American prisons, by 2002, over 650,000 inmates
were released. - It is estimated that in about 5 years, in 2010,
1.2 million prisoners will be released to society
in search of new lives.
15How much background checking?
- A 2001 survey of state criminal repositories
revealed 29 states with a policy that its own
records could be accessed by anybody - There are now over 1500 state statutes permitting
access to the FBIs national background check
system ranging from traditionally authorized
entities like schools and day care providers, all
the way to those seeking a mortuary license or
employment in the dry cleaning industry.
16How much background checking?
- In 1991, the FBI processed 3.85 million
non-criminal justice background checks requests
unrelated to ongoing criminal cases or
investigations. By 1997, that number had reached
6.85 million and in 2003, 8.6 million. - In 2002, for the first time in its history, the
FBI processed more non-criminal justice
background checks than criminal justice
background checks.
17How much background checking?
- The expanded access and use of criminal
background checks through governmental sources is
dwarfed by activity in the new private criminal
background check industry - ChoicePoint, one of the largest commercial
information vendors in the country, conducted
roughly 1 million background checks in 1997.
Five years later, that number had ballooned to
6.1 million. A senior ChoicePoint executive
estimated that in 2003, commercial vendors
provided between 50 and 100 million criminal
background checks to employers, landlords and
other societal decision-makers.
18Even more checks post-911!
- The instinct to conduct background checks was
notably reinforced by the 9/11 attacks - One private limousine company spent over 40,000
to conduct criminal background checks on all of
its drivers just two days after the attacks. The
companys owner justified the expenditure by
stating it was the only way we could think of to
reassure our clients that theyre safe with our
drivers
19Even more checks post-911!
- One corporate senior vice president told the NYT
that though it was unlikely that his company had
hired any terrorists, his company was stepping up
its security screening because it wanted to make
sure someone with a felony history hadnt snuck
into his organization. - One private background check vendor told the
Charlotte Observer that after 9/11, his 200 to
250 checks per month skyrocketed to 3,500 to 4000
checks per month.
20The public policy quandary
- It is undoubtedly the case that there are certain
types of offenders who should be denied
employment or volunteer positions they seek
prohibitions on convicted child sexual predators
working in day care centers are reasonable and
appropriate
21The public policy quandary
- The difficult question is, are there ways to
facilitate the appropriate use of criminal
history record information while discouraging its
across the board use to bar all prior offenders
from the jobs, housing and other societal
benefits they need to reintegrate and remain
ex-offenders
22Solutions what do we know?
- Those who commit crimes are statistically more
likely to commit another crime than those who
have never committed a crime. - Prior offenders unable to obtain jobs or housing
are substantially more likely to return to crime
than those who obtain jobs and housing
23Solutions what dont we know?
- The Backgrounding of America Task Force has
thus far been unable to identify any empirical
evidence demonstrating a relationship between
offense types and employee or tenant suitability
(or suitability to provide other functions for
which background checks are routine).
24Possible public policy responses
- 1) Record use education Develop and provide
guidance about effective and appropriate use of
criminal history information in discretionary
decision-making. While it is not uncommon for
the government to recommend that various
employers, for example, conduct background
checks, it is almost unheard of for the
government to suggest how those employers use
that information once they have it. While
comparatively non-controversial, the mere
provision of guidance is unlikely to bring about
substantial improvement in the current national
situation.
25Possible public policy responses
- 2) Restrict access to records More severely
restrict access to federal and state criminal
history repositories and the distribution of
criminal history information to commercial
vendors. This approach is probably politically
untenable and may well be shutting the barn door
after the horse has already escaped given the
information already possessed by commercial
vendors.
26Possible public policy responses
- 3) Restrict use of information While Title VII
currently limits use which would have a disparate
racial impact, proving such claim is well beyond
the capacity of the vast majority of
ex-offenders. Some states have enacted statutes
that limit or prohibit use in various ways.
Wisconsin law prohibits all employers and
licensing agencies from practicing employment
discrimination based on arrest or conviction
information but
27Possible public policy responses
- 3) Restrict use of information (cont.) the
statute has been read by the Wisconsin courts to
permit employers to deny employment when an
applicants criminal history is substantially
related to the required job duties. Several
state statutes use time elapsed since
conviction in determining whether an employer
may use criminal history information. The ABA
has supported restrictions on end-user
utilization of criminal history information.
28Possible public policy responses
- 4) Purge more records Expand and ease the
process by which certain arrests and convictions
are officially expunged. In many ways this is
simply a more aggressive version of restrictions
on access to the records since they would not
only be unavailable but legally a nullity.
This solution would likely face substantial law
enforcement community resistance.
29Possible public policy responses
- 5) Keep certain adjudications out of the records
Florida has a law permitting judges to withhold
the adjudication of felony offenders. This
practice, explicitly designed to give a one-time
break to help first-time offenders allows those
offenders to say that they had never been
convicted of a crime. This 1941 statute has been
under heavy attack recently.
30Possible public policy responses
- 5) Keep certain adjudications out of the records
(cont.) An extensive study by the Miami Herald
found that the withholds were being administered
in a highly racially disparate manner and that
more than 17,000 defendants had been given a free
pass more than one time with a few identified
instances of defendants receiving withholds as
many as five times. -
31Possible public policy responses
- 5) Keep certain adjudications out of the records
(cont.) In July of last year, the Florida
legislature rewrote the withhold law to
substantially restrict the authority of judges to
issue withhold orders. Yet even the new laws
limited withhold authority is being undermined
by commercial background check vendors who are
providing discretionary decision-makers
information about cases in which individuals had
their convictions formally withheld.
32Possible public policy responses
- 6) Tax credits for risk takers Provide tax
credits to employers, landlords and others who
take risks with prior offenders (though hiring,
leasing to, etc.). While the federal government
has a limited program of this nature in place for
employers, as do a small handful of states, if
the goal is to widely encourage employers,
landlords and others to take a chance on
individuals who bring special problems to the
table with them, these programs will have to be
more generous and more extensive, costing
substantial tax dollars.
33Possible public policy responses
- 7) Liability immunity for risk takers It is
absolutely clear that fear of liability is a
major factor in employer and landlord
discretionary decision-making about prior
offenders. If society wants reduce the
likelihood that prior offenders will recidivate,
the society may have to collectively bear some of
the risk that prior offenders abuse the second
chances they are provided.
34Possible public policy responses
- 8) Services for prior offenders Job training,
subsidized job placements, anger management
certification, and other governmentally supported
efforts to make it more palatable for employers,
landlords, and others to take risks with prior
offenders and might help make prior offenders
appealing employees, tenants, etc. but this seems
like a very hard sell that is also quite
expensive.
35Possible public policy responses
- 1) Record use education
- 2) Restrict access to records
- 3) Restrict use of information
- 4) Purge more records
- 5) Keep certain adjudications out of the records
- 6) Tax credits for risk takers
- 7) Liability immunity for risk takers
- 8) Services for prior offenders
- 9) Others?
36What do you think?
- Which public policy responses do you like?
- What role should all of you take in debates about
these policy questions in your home states? - Should you express your own views or simply wait
for decisions by policy makers? - Do policy makers know that you have extensive
knowledge about the criminal background checks
being conducted (e.g. purpose, volume, etc.)?
37Thanks!( and now, Charlie Friel!)