Thursday, February 27, 2014

Florida Free Police Records

By Ben Kingsley


The state of Florida is the 22nd most extensive and the 4th most populous of the 50 United States. It is also nicknamed as "The Sunshine State". With its huge number of people moving around in the region, it's difficult to assess the people you are dealing with everyday. If you want to know if you can trust the people in your neighbourhood, you can search through Florida police reports.

Being considered as an open records state, criminal records and background checks are of public domain. Each major arrest is registered, but sealed information will not be revealed to the people. An arrest record contains personal data such as the full name of the person, any other assumed names, birth date, birth place, race and physical attributes such as weight, sex, height, the color of the eyes, photo, arrests, date and place of arrest, any disposition, imprisonment and probation details.

Records of convictions which transpired after the year 1950 are conserved at the Florida Department of Law Enforcement. If the data that you are exploring is dated prior 1950, you can communicate with the county clerk of court where the arrest occurred.

Details of arrest are filed and updated at the different levels of state law enforcement such as the sheriff's offices, criminal justice agencies, highway police officers and the county police departments. These data are then forwarded to the state's central repository which is the Criminal Justice Information Services division of the Florida Department of Law Enforcement. You can search through the agency's extensive database online for a fee of $24.00 per criminal record via credit card. When no data can be located, the amount is still applicable. If you want to make a request through mail, you must fill-out an official request form which you can download from the website. Make sure that you have all the necessary details such as the name of the person or any other known aliases, date of birth, race, sex and Social Security Number, if available. You enclosed the paper in a stamped envelope with your mailing address written on it. You can send your payment in the amount of $24.00 in the form of money order or cashier check.

One must take into account that there is no 100% guarantee that the person you are on the lookout for is the one that is singled-out in the criminal history data, except if it coincides in the fingerprint comparison. You can also verify with the Federal Bureau of Investigation if you want to examine further. The agency keeps identification files with finger marks. To get a copy of the said paper, send your request via mail, with a set of fingerprints and a sum of $18.00.

Police reports play a major role for business entities that are appraising their new workers and those persons who are assessing their neighbors, associates, relatives or anyone. You can confer with the various sites that are reachable via the worldwide web, at any location, in any given time. The end result will come to you in handy, as you can refer to it to protect yourself and your family unit from any trouble.




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