Monday, December 17, 2012

Government Arrest Records

Government Arrest Records are kept by law enforcement officials worldwide. However, you may be able to find arrest record information on several sites on the internet as well. Normal everyday people are interested in finding out about the affairs of others specifically if they know or are related to the person. If you were to have a family member in prison, you would rightfully want to see their record, even if it's simply out of curiosity, therefore many sites are now beginning to show peoples arrest records online.

When a police officer pulls you over for whatever your crime may be they often check your Government records to find out any pertinent information they need to know about you. The records will tell them if you have any warrants or what you had previously been arrested for. Many people often at times get a background check confused with an arrest record. Although these records may seem to be one in the same they have some important differences. A background check will list everything a person has done in their past including any jobs that they held, or any last names that they had gone by.

When you look up someone's government arrest record it states any crimes that they were arrested for and or put in prison for. An arrest record can give someone a lot more details on a person then a simple background check. Government arrest records can go all the way back to someone's first offense even if it had happened 20 years prior. A government arrest record will follow you everywhere you go in the United States. Simply because all law enforcement databases are hooked up to the same server in most attributes.

Many government arrest records sites offer free services to find the arrest record on the person that you may be seeking. Some sites however will charge a small administration fee if you wish to have a certified copy of the document mailed to you. You may also choose to print the information off online for no cost at all. It's a lot more convenient to print the information out that way you can file it if need be for anything at all.

If you have been arrested for any offense it's a smart idea to obtain a copy of your government arrest records. Although having the records may seem burdensome at times, it's a good thing to have. Not only can you show proof of things that you may be accused of but you have a firm understanding of your own record, in case you are asked about it when you are seeking any form of employment. It's important to know vital things about yourself instead of let them slide to the way sides. Although your Government Arrest Records are not a vital piece of information that you must have at all times, it doesn't hurt to know what's in your arrest report.

Real ID, Fake ID, Pass ID - What's Up in the Air With a National Identification Card

Opponents of the REAL ID Act of 2005 were given a bit of hope earlier this year when Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano stated that she wanted to repeal the Act, a law which has been perceived by many as the federal government's failed plan to impose a national identification card through state driver's licenses and identification cards. What has taken place since early February is a cosmetic makeover called "The PASS ID Act," an act that has revived the push for a national identification card.

As currently worded, the PASS ID Act (S. 1261) seeks to make many of the same ineffectual, dangerous changes the REAL ID Act attempted to impose. On its face, the PASS ID Act operates on the same flawed premise as the REAL ID Act - that requiring various "identity documents," and storing that information in government databases for later access, will magically make state drivers' licenses and identification cards more legitimate, which will in turn improve national security.

Proponents of the PASS ID Act seem to be ignoring the possible impotence of such an identification card scheme. Individuals motivated to obtain and/or utilize fake identification will instead use fake identity documents to procure "real" drivers' licenses or state identification cards. The PASS ID Act also creates new identity theft risks for every individual possessing a driver's license or state identification card in that the act calls for the scanning and storage of applicants' identity documents (birth certificates, visas, etc.) within government databases only accessible by "authorized individuals." A prime target for malicious identity thieves will be the sensitive personal identifiers of each and every individual possessing a driver's license or state identification card. Despite some changes to the proposed legislation, the PASS ID ACT is detrimental for privacy much the same as the REAL ID Act.

Health care reform is commanding tremendous attention on Capitol Hill at the moment, so the PASS ID Act remains stagnant. After the late summer recess pay attention, though, because proponents of the PASS ID Act will be back. Despite provisions that claim to allow states the freedom to issue non-federal identification cards, the PASS ID Act will require everyone boarding a plane or entering a federal building for "any official purpose" to show a federally recognized identification card. At the moment, the only "card" within this category is the state drivers' license or identification card.