Go to your local law enforcement agency with identification and request a copy. After you fill out the proper paperwork it will usually amount to no more than a small administrative cost to receive it.
In California, a felony conviction stays on your criminal record for life unless expunged or pardoned. To obtain a free background check in California, you can request a copy of your own criminal record from the California Department of Justice, however, this may not be an exhaustive background check.
In Canada, you must fill an application for a pardon. You can hire somebody to do it for you - the cost will be about 550$. If you do it by yourself, there is a fee of 50 $ for the form plus the fees to obtain a copy of your criminal record.
You would have to obtain a copy of the service member's personnel file.
Go to your local law enforcement agency and request a copy of your criminal history record.
Go to your local law enforcement agency and request a copy of the individual's criminal record, it is apublic record.
Require that they produce a copy of their criminal history record before employing them. Otherwise, you cannot access that information. It is not available to the general public.
Criminal history records are not available 'on-line' via ANY publicly accessible website.
The length of a criminal record varies depending on the person. Some records can last for the person's entire lifetime.
This information is shared between law enforcement agncies on totally secure inter-agency computer systems. There is no way that you can tell whether they have a copy of your criminal record or not. The best thing to assume is that, yes, they do.
Yes, however there are no publicly accessible websites that have this infomration. You may go to your local law enforcement agency and request a copy of your own criminal record. Bring proper identification and, in most places, there is a small administrative fee.
If you are referring to getting a copy of his criminal record - go the department and submit a request for it. It is a public record and you will probably only have topay a small 'administrative' fee. If you are referring to a copy of a police investigation that involves him, it may, or may not, be public record material.
It's as simple as going to your local law enforcement agency and requesting a copy of your own criminal history record. At the most it will only cost you a small administrative fee.