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Tougher sex offender laws make it easier to conduct thorough background checks!  While this article does not lend itself directly to employment background investigations, tougher laws are good for our industry.

Sex Offender Law Sent to Governor

BY GEORGE PAWLACZYK AND BETH HUNDSDORFER
News-Democrat

A proposed law to correct an earlier error in a statute, which was supposed to prohibit child sex offenders from living within 500 feet of an in-home day care, has passed both the House and the Senate and awaits Gov. Rod Blagojevich’s signature.

The governor has 60 days from receiving the bill to sign it.

House Bill 4402 resulted from an investigative story published Feb. 17 in the News-Democrat that reported that none of the state’s home-based day cares was actually covered by a 2006 law specifically designed to protect them.

The flaw was in the 2006 law’s definition of a “day care,” which was defined as any licensed for nine or more children. None of the state’s approximately 10,000 in-home day cares had more than eight children because of a regulation of the Department of Children and Family Services requiring that an assistant be hired if the home was licensed for nine or more kids.

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No one will be around my children without a proper background check!

Prom limo driver had a suspended license, is sex offender

By J.J. Huggins and Bill Cantwell

HAVERHILL — Some parents of Haverhill High School students are angry that their children were driven to the prom by a limousine driver who had a suspended license and is a convicted sex offender.

Police said they will summons to court Troy Barrett, 29, of Lee, N.H., on a charge of driving with a suspended license. Police said he was driving a limousine owned by Ambassador Travel of Salisbury that was hired by several Haverhill High students to take them to the prom Friday night.

Barrett drove the students to the prom at Atkinson, N.H., Country Club. The event ended at 11:30 p.m., and Barrett was about 15 minutes late picking up the 10 students who hired him. The teens said they saw empty beer bottles and a cooler inside the limousine. Barrett said that he transported another party after he dropped them off, the teens said.

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Wednesday, April 2, 2008

Reported by: Stacy Daniel

ARROYO GRANDE

A sex offender in a kindergarten classroom?  It doesn’t sound possible, but it happened at Harloe Elementary School in Arroyo Grande.

Some parents are saying if the school had performed a simple background check, the man never would have been allowed on campus.

Arroyo Grande police say the school was made aware of the situation when an alert parent who works for the Sheriff’s Department recognized the name of the school volunteer.

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In my opinion one of the most over looked and underutilized searches in employment screening is the Sex Offender Registry Search, an inexpensive way to protect your employees, customers and your reputation. There are over 250,000 registered sex offenders in the United States. These people need to work and maintain a living. The question is: are they working for you?

Conducting a Sex Offender Registry search is the most effective way to screen out these predators. A Countywide Felony & Misdemeanor Search will sometimes uncover these crimes but if the perpetrator knows the system, they can outsmart it. A Countywide search is still the most effective way of finding a record if it exists in that particular County. Using additional tools such as the Registry Search will allow you to uncover additional areas not found otherwise. Organizations must be diligent in trying to uncover these misdeeds. Using your entire arsenal of searches to uncover this type of criminal history is imperative. A typical Sex Offender Registry Search will scour a County and, or State Sex Offender Registry to see if your subject has a listing. Per the FCRA, the result would again lead us back to the source of the record to make it compliant and reportable to you.

One of our clients operates several overnight camps for children with terminal illnesses. I have had the pleasure of speaking at their national conferences a few times and the example I use regularly is as follows: People who like numbers find jobs in accounting. People who like medicine find jobs in the medical field. People who like writing find jobs writing. People who like to molest children WILL put themselves in situations where they are around kids. The facts are there: sexual predators feed their hunger by exploiting situations and taking the opportunity presented to them. Unfortunately, sex offenders don’t only prey on children, hiring a sex offender could jeopardize your clients, employees and your reputation.

Click here for some interesting information about recidivism rates among sex offenders. A few interesting Facts:

This information is available for all fifty states due to Megan’s Law. Megan’s Law is named after Megan Kanka, a New Jersey girl who was raped and killed at age seven by a known child molester who had moved across the street from the Kanka family without their knowledge. In the wake of the tragedy, the Kankas sought to have local communities warned about sex offenders in the area and on May 17, 1996, President Clinton signed Megan’s Law.

10 U.S. Dept. of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics. (2004). Census of Fatal Occupational Injuries: Table 4. Fatal occupational injuries by worker characteristics and event or exposure, 2003.
11 U.S. Dept. of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics. (August, 2001). Crime Characteristics: Summary Findings.
12 Resick, P.A., Calhoun, K.S., Atkeson, B.M., & Ellis, E.M. (1981). Social adjustment in victims of sexual assault. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 49, 705-712, as cited in Koss, M.P. (1991). The Rape Victim. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications, p. 62.
13 U.S. Dept. of Justice, National Institute of Justice. November, 2000. Full Report of the Prevalence, Incidence, and Consequences of Violence Against Women. NCJ 183781., pp. 14 – 15.
14 Tjaden, P. & Thoennes, N. (April, 1998). National Institute of Justice Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Research Brief: Stalking in America: Findings from the National Violence Against Women Survey. U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, National Institute of Justice.
15 McFarlane, J., Malecha, A. Gist, J, Schulz, P. et al. (2000). Indicators of intimate partner violence in women’s employment: Implications for workplace action. AAOHN Journal, 48(5), 215.
16 The Body Shop. (September, 1997). The Many Faces of Domestic Violence and Its Impact on the Workplace. New York, NY: EDK Associates.
17 Urban, B.Y. (2000). Anonymous Foundation Domestic Abuse Prevention Program Evaluation: Final Client Survey Report. Chicago, IL: The University of Illinois at Chicago. Contact byurban@aol.com.
18 Burke, D.F. (January, 2000). When employees are vulnerable, employers are too. The National Law Journal.
19 Patrice Tanaka & Company, Inc. October 16, 2002. News Release: Corporate Leaders See Domestic Violence as a Major Problem That Affects Their Employees According to Benchmark Survey by Liz Clairborne, Inc. Contact Lauree Ostrofsky (212) 229-0500, x 236.
20 Partnership for Prevention. (2002). Domestic Violence and the Workplace. Washington, D.C.: Partnership for Prevention, (202) 833-0009 or www.prevent.org.
21 Ibid.
22 Urban, B.Y. (2003). The Attorney General’s Report to Congress: Workplace Responses to Violence Against Women. An unpublished report of the Family Violence Prevention Fund, with release pending.

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03/25/2008

Associated Press

Sometime in the next several months, new online features of the Texas sex offender registry will include the addition of offenders’ places of employment and job titles.

The changes will also let people sign up for e-mail alerts when an offender moves into their neighborhood.

“I’m being told spring,” before it is ready, said Tela Mange, spokeswoman for the Texas Department of Public Safety, which runs the registry. “Spring runs through June.”

The Web site now provides each offender’s name, date of birth, home address, a physical description and photo. It also includes the crime committed and the victim’s age and gender.

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EDITORIAL: Poor judgment on janitor

 

 

Monday, March 24, 2008

St. Tammany Parish school officials say that a state-mandated criminal background check did not exclude the hiring of Dino Jay Schwertz, a 41-year-old school custodian who is accused of raping children in an elementary school restroom.

But there were red flags in Mr. Schwertz’s record that were revealed by the background check, and they should have prompted school officials to reject this job applicant. Instead, he was hired for a temporary job at Abney Elementary School in Slidell, where police say that he raped two 10-year-old boys and molested an 8-year-old and 11-year-old.

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It doesn’t surprise me when the most obvious institutions fail to  conduct adequate background checks which should include sex offender registry searches.  A quote I use in every speaking engagement states: “Temptation knocks only once while opportunity leans on the doorbell!”  Sex offenders put themselves in situations where they are around potential victims.

Ogden School District volunteer dismissed when found on sex offender list

Police chief says district should have conducted background check

The Associated Press

Posted: 11:33 AM- OGDEN – Ogden School District officials say the district didn’t violate state law when it failed to run a criminal background check on school volunteer who was later identified as a convicted sex offender.

District officials say the law requires checks only when a volunteer will have unsupervised contact with school kids – and that wasn’t the case. The volunteer directed traffic in the parking lot at Bonneville Elementary School.

 

Ogden Police Chief Jon Greiner disagrees.   He says the district skirted state law and that checks are required no matter what job a volunteer performs. He says the county attorney should review the situation to see if legal action is warranted.

The district dismissed the man last week after a parent found him listed on Utah’s sex offender registry.

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This is another example of why Nan’s Law should be implemented nationwide. I had the pleasure of speaking before the Pennsylvania State Legislature a few years back in support of this law, so far it appears nothing has happened with it. This story helps justify why background checks are so important, especially in the hotel industry. Its ironic that this article came out the day I returned from speaking at the HR in Hospitality Conference, I used similar examples in my presentation.

Sexual assault has spring breakers concerned about background checks

By: Dave Balut

Clearwater Beach, Florida – A hotel security guard in Panama City Beach is charged with sexually assaulting an 18-year-old woman on spring break and throwing her over a balcony. She survived.

But the attack has some spring breakers in Clearwater Beach wondering about their safety.

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This man filed for District 39 in Lonoke, Arkansas for State Rep….You may not recognize him, but he is Convicted Sex Offender Dwayne Dobbins….After two terms in the legislature as a Democrat he is back for his 3rd and final term…The Democrats have said that they will run a 3rd party candidate against him…All I can say is that this 3rd party candidate better be successful…Below is the AR Dem-Gazette Article…(A bit Graphic)…

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