Quote:
Originally Posted by AGDLynn
http://gbi.georgia.gov/00/channel_mo...980209,00.html
Identity Theft Assistance
As for criminal histories, just remember that some states allow criminal histories maintained by the state crime bureaus to be confidential because it is a compilation of different agencies' information. More and more local agencies, esp. courts, are putting docket information on the web. We get phonecalls/emails about "someone being arrested with my identification"
In Georgia, you can't get a "complete" criminal history unless you have a signed consent release from that person, unless he/she is applying for a specific type of license or employment (i.e., sex crimes and wants to work with children/elderly/mentally ill) and you have the signed consent release and/or their fingerprints.
www.gbi.georgia.gov
click on Services
click on Obtaining Criminal History Information.
There is the Georgia Felony Search but if he/she is convicted for murder and the conviction isn't placed on the criminal history, the result will be "No Record".
The Ga. Dept of Corrections does maintain a website of most offenders incarcerated at some point but I wouldn't take that as an absolute.
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I'm sure all this varies from state to state, and without a PI license (or with, in some cases), being untruthful in order to gain private information is likely a crime.
In Oklahoma, however, *technically* to get a background check by the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation, you need the same. We, however, have a site put up by the Oklahoma Supreme Court which shows the docket history (with most documents scanned in) of all cases filed in the major counties, searchable by name/date/lawyer/etc.
Very useful for me when taking a new case to see what's been filed, download a pleadings file, etc.
The downside is that it shows a lot of things where charges were filed, but were dismissed or pled out to a misdemeanor, etc. For example, your vindictive ex files a Victim's Protection Order case against you (an injunctive restraining order used to keep victims and perpetrators of domestic violence/harassment/stalking who are related/romantically involved, etc. apart). Let's say it's based on false information and the judge denies it.
Unfortunately, unless you get the file sealed, it's going to pop up every time someone does a docket search using your name.
So there are good and bad aspects about this, but on the whole, I can't imagine what I'd do without it.