| Even if your company requires a thorough background check,
including criminal records, you're still taking a gargantuan risk. Let me tell
you about a perfect hire-gone-sour situation we recently found ourselves in.
A client of ours recently extended an offer of employment, which was accepted,
and we established a start date for a promising candidate. Unfortunately, we
found out after the fact that the candidate was listed on the national sex
offender's registry. Here's the real shocker, the candidate's background check
came back clean as a whistle!
It was a general internet search that tipped us off to a potential problem. The
candidate's name was found in an article as the subject of an FBI sting on a
potential internet sex predator. We immediately went to the national sex
offender's registry, and to our dismay, found our new hire's name. When we
explored the situation more carefully, we learned the candidate had a recent
misdemeanor charge for solicitation, not a felony charge. Regardless, the
charge was so new that it didn't show up on a criminal background report, and
we're not confident it would have because it was a low level misdemeanor.
At the beginning of the hiring process, the candidate expressed confidence that
their background check report would return satisfactory. When the topic was
re-visited after our discovery, the candidate was shocked a problem existed
since the offense was only a misdemeanor. Apparently, his attorney's advice was
that pre-employment screening only searched for felonies.
Here's a summary of what we learned through this situation.
• Although traditional background checks are necessary, they are simply
inadequate.
• Candidates may not be purposefully misleading, but rather their reference
point may be different.
• A nation-wide criminal records check simply does not exist. The only thing
close to it is the FBI criminal database, also known as the NCIC (National
Crime Information Center). This database however, is NOT public record and
cannot legally be accessed by anyone other than criminal justice agencies.
• County records searches are more reliable than state records searches,
because state criminal indexes receive their data from each of their respective
counties. This means that if a county fails to report criminal data to the
state, the statewide index may not be complete. Furthermore, it may take weeks,
or even months, for state records to reflect the most common source of a
criminal record.
• Not all court systems have public access terminals to check records with, as
they may not have yet developed a system separating public records from
non-public ones.
• Other resources include thousands of separate criminal indexes maintained at
the numerous, parish, township, and city levels throughout the United States.
Conducting a nationwide search extensive enough to include resources, such as
these, would require accessing each individual index. This would be difficult,
time consuming, and prohibitively expensive. While there are various
investigative firms advertising that they provide "Comprehensive Nationwide
Criminal Records," it is apparent that what they are advertising is too good to
be true.
In summary, we suggest launching a background investigation with a well thought
out application that does two things. First, the application should require
residence details for at least ten years. Without this information, it’s almost
impossible to properly investigate. Lastly, your applications should require
the applicant to approve investigating their background, including criminal
records, at the beginning of the hiring process.
The information applicants provide should be enough to begin searching the
appropriate criminal indexes, and launch a general internet search. Again,
there are no guarantees. But, you now have more than a gut feeling to evaluate
a potential new employee. Remember, it only takes one mistake to severely
damage your brand.
As a result of this incident, UpSearch now provides a general internet search
on all candidates. Although searching the internet is not a substitute for
engaging a pre-employment screening firm, it does help reduce the risk of
hiring someone with an unsatisfactory background.
Good Hunting!
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