There are many online websites where you can obtain a National Crime Information Center background check. The best place to check would be the website, FBI Gov.
A federal conviction found in the NCIC may in some states be discovered during a background check. States that defer to the federal NICS check may not find any such conviction. However, states like Oregon that run independent searches will find any NICS, NCIC and a few other data bases convictions.
The background check can be a broad as the employer can afford. No employers except those designated law enforcement agencies by state statute can get NCIC national background data.
If the warrant was entered into the interstate system (NCIC) yes, it will show up.
If it was entered into the interstate criminal justice system computer (NCIC) yes, it will.
Yes, warrants are typically issued nationwide and can show up on a background check regardless of the state where they were issued. It is important to address any outstanding warrants promptly to avoid potential legal consequences.
Request it through your NAVY detailer. You must go through special screening and a background check through the FBI NCIC computer database.
Depending on what state you are in determines who does the background check on you when you are attempting to get something expunged from your criminal record. Usually it's the state bureau of investigation for that state. And yes they check everything.
Employer have access to conviction-only criminal records. Not arrests or warrants. THose are on NCIC, prohibited to employers except law enforcement.
There are some online services that offer free criminal background checks, but they may not always provide comprehensive or up-to-date information. For more reliable and detailed results, it is often advisable to use professional background check services that may charge a fee.
No. Many commercial websites advertise the capability of supplying "complete" background checks but it is not true -and- it costs money to use their services. These sites only have access to the PUBLICLY AVAILABLE records. The only system that has the capability to do a complete criminal history check is not available to the public. It is the National Crime Information Center (NCIC) computer. The use of NCIC is restricted to law enforcement and the courts ONLY. If you wish to check your own record, go to the nearest law enforcement agency and request a copy of your own record. The only charge should be a small 'administrative' fee in order to look it up and reproduce it.
NCIC is the National Crime Information Center
This means the individual has been convicted of a homicide that does not fall into any of the NCIC's assigned categories. "Free text" is so the filing agency can provide details if it wishes.