Criminal background check SC

Criminal background check SC

Background Investigations delivers a broad range of information solutions suited to satisfy numerous needs. From checking on the neighbor to learning about ourself to determine if there may be anything to give consideration to. The background check databases are well known market leaders for public record information, arrest assessments, telephone and home address data, social websites info, and more. The goal is to empower the public with the information they want to make fast & wise decisions.

Just Click Here or Check out FreePeopleScan.com to begin your immediate scan right away!

But for many former inmates, the criminal acts in their past often translate into lost jobs, education and housing opportunities long after they have paid their debts to society, Blassingame and others say. That’s because those crimes still show up on background checks run by potential employers, landlords and others. To help some ex-offenders, S.C. lawmakers recently made it easier for the convicted to erase crimes from their publicly available records. This year, the state expanded the list of convictions eligible for expungement — the process by which a charge or conviction is removed from someone’s public record. Most notably, that list now includes ways to expunge multiple related offenses if they carry no more than 30 days and a $1,000 fine, and first-offense convictions for possession with the intent to distribute drugs, including cocaine, crack and meth.

https://www.thestate.com/news/local/crime/article219378185.html

A familiar sound haunts Andrew Singleton from a night more than a decade ago, when he cocked and pointed a shotgun at three people he and his friends were robbing. “There’s this sound you hear, when that chamber is loading back, and that sound is terrifying,” Singleton said. “I’ve heard it many times. Immediately, it’s like everything just froze.” The decision landed Singleton in prison from 2008 to 2010. After eight years on parole and staying out of trouble with the law, Singleton recently received some long-awaited news. In September, the state of South Carolina granted Singleton’s request for a pardon — a state panel essentially ruled that he is forgiven for his crime and that he’s paid his debt to society. The pardon comes with real benefits: it ends his parole, allowing him to move freely around the country for work or pleasure. As an HVAC repairman, he anticipates the pardon will also help him get more work, including on military bases and other federal property.

https://www.thestate.com/news/politics-government/state-politics/article219722745.html

Lawmakers are calling it a jobs bill and prison reform- advocates say it's a second chance. Either way, a new law is expected to put more former inmates to work, and fill a growing workforce need in the state, and it's been done without Governor McMaster’s support. The expungement law will allow some nonviolent past offenders who have stayed out of trouble to get their crimes removed from their record, so they can find jobs without that stigma. It was passed at the end of June, after Democrats and Republicans in both chambers overrode the Governor's veto. The expungement bill expands some of the nonviolent crimes that can be cleared from a person's criminal record, like low level drug offenses for those who stay clean for 3 years.

https://www.foxcarolina.com/news/new-expungement-law-could-help-put-former-offenders-to-work/article_380fbebb-e34e-56e8-b72c-afbf0e157a14.html

State law enforcement is receiving $900,000 from the federal government to improve background checks for guns bought in South Carolina. U.S. Attorney Bill Nettles announced the grant Friday. The state Law Enforcement Division applied for it after the Legislature passed a law in May meant to prevent mentally ill residents from buying guns. The money will be used to improve the state's use of the National Instant Criminal Background Check System. The federal database is used to verify whether someone attempting to buy a gun can legally own one. The law was meant to ensure that the names of people who have been declared mentally ill by a South Carolina court or been involuntarily sent to a mental institution go into the database.

https://www.wltx.com/article/news/sled-getting-900000-to-improve-background-checks/101-327130593

criminal background check sc

criminal background check scarborough

criminal background check scotland

criminal background check scams

free criminal background check sc

criminal background check nova scotia

criminal background check for school volunteers

criminal background check illinois school code

criminal background check for schools

criminal background check nursing school