Anytime they have a valid cause to look into someone's background and criminal history in order to further their investigation.
ABSOLUTELY NOT! Criminal history checks are run through NCIC and are not to be allowed outside law enforcement and must be for an active criminal investigation. You are not even allowed to run criminal histories and give them to your court, they have to run their own.
If you never appeared in court and officially "charged" with an offense, there can be no criminal history record of a conviction.
I am not sure but probably the one who was driving backward trying to run from the police
Because a police officer may have to run after and catch a fit criminal to make an arrest.
Yes. Someone else's criminal history has no bearing on your career.
Criminal histories are public records. Go to the Orlando police and ask for a criminal history check on the individual.
Criminal history records are typically maintained by law enforcement agencies and may be accessible through background check services, local police departments, or online databases. You may need authorization or a valid reason to access someone's criminal history, and it's important to follow legal and privacy guidelines when requesting or using this information.
In criminal justice a diversion program is a form of sentencing and such programs are often run by a police department, court, a district attorney's office, or outside agency which is designed to enable offenders of criminal law to avoid criminal charges and a criminal record.
"Known to police" typically refers to an individual who has come to the attention of law enforcement due to previous interactions, such as being arrested, having a criminal record, or being a suspect in a crime. This term implies that the person has a history that law enforcement is aware of.
very hard because he was on the run from police and some people told the king were he was and was charged as a wanted criminal
to be transported
I believe that there is confusion in the questioner's mind over the term "police clearance." As commonly used, that term refers to the record search of the individual's own criminal history. If the individual has a criminal history, the police will furnsih them a copy of it, showing what offense(s) the individual has in his file. If the individual has NO criminal record the police will issue a notice of "No Record On FIle." Hence, the individual will have a "clear" record. Someone who has been arrested, but not convicted, of a crime WILL have a record of the arrest and the reason for it, on flile, thus, that person's record will NOT be "clear."