Personal injury lawyer, Florida represents individuals who may have a criminal background seal or expunge their scandalous past in the form of written records.
The question ultimately arises, ‘should employers be able to find out if a job applicant has served time in prison for a serious crime?’, even if that offense took place several years ago. Should every day people learn that the police arrest thousands of persons for flimsy reasons which prosecutors refused to press charges against every year?
Criminal Justice experts, lawmakers and Florida personal injury lawyers in several states want to cut off public access to this kind of information with laws that seal some of an individual’s public record.
Other people find that cutting off public access, by reporters, data collection firms, employers or editors, to a wide array of conviction or arrest records is like erasing history. It is a dangerous game that would hinder employers trying to screen employees and impede journalists from probing public corruption.
There are always exceptions to every rule, such as when former President George W. Bush had his DUI record sealed, a fact that came out just days before the 2000 presidential election; it would not be prudent to seal records that contain evidence about hazardous products, priests who are accused of abusing children or incompetent doctors. So where do we draw the line?
On the other side of the coin are those people whose criminal record is made up of a one time incident that took place over 10 years ago and was probably a misunderstanding in which their lawyer at the time could not plead their way out of it. These are the types of criminal records that could and should be sealed by a Boca Raton personal injury lawyer.
Many states allow ex-convicts to request the courts seal their criminal records if they’ve been free of arrests for a specific period of time, usually 10 years or longer. Some states, such as Ohio, limit this offer to first offenders. Many proponents argue that arrests that don’t result in charges or convictions can unfairly ruin a person’s ability to obtain employment, credit or a mortgage. The damage is compounded for individuals who may have served prison time and then gone straight.