Title 34 › Subtitle Subtitle IV— Criminal Records and Information › Chapter 411— ACCESS TO CRIMINAL HISTORY AND IDENTIFICATION RECORDS › § 41106
Allows private security employers to get FBI criminal background checks on their security workers and job applicants through the state agency that handles criminal records, if the state takes part. Employers must get written permission from the person before sending fingerprints or other ID. The FBI will check its records and send results to the state agency, which will either tell the employer certain criminal facts (for states with no state rules) or apply the state’s own rules and report the result. Employers must give the person confidential access to any information the employer gets. Checks may be done only once every 12 months unless there is good reason to do more. The Attorney General had to write rules within 180 days after December 17, 2004, about how to protect, use, and keep the information, who counts as an authorized employer, and reasonable fees. The FBI may charge fees to cover the work and automation, and states can also charge reasonable fees. Using the information for anything other than deciding if someone is fit for security work can lead to fines or up to 2 years in prison. A state can choose not to take part by passing a law or issuing a governor’s order. Definitions: "Employee" means a current worker or job applicant. "Authorized employer" means someone who hires private security officers and is allowed by the Attorney General’s rules to request checks. "Private security officer" means a non-government person whose main job is security (some job types are excluded). "Security services" means acts to protect people or property as defined by the Attorney General. "State identification bureau" means the state agency chosen to send and receive criminal history checks.
Full Legal Text
Navy — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
34 U.S.C. § 41106
Title 34 — Navy
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60