Police certificate

A police certificate is an official document issued as a result of a background check by the police or government agency of a country to enumerate any criminal records that the applicant may have. Criminal records may include arrest, conviction, and possibly criminal proceedings A police certificate is also known as good citizen certificate (in Hong Kong), good conduct certificate, police clearance certificate, national police history check (in Australia) or judicial record extracts.

Applicants may have to submit fingerprints and certain personal information to request a criminal record check, and the police or government agency may charge a fee.

Purposes

A police certificate may be required if the applicant is:

Scope

Depending on each country's law, applicants may be required to submit police certificates of countries which they have stayed beyond periods as specified by law.

Period of Validity

A police certificate may or may not have a period of validity noted on the certificate, and criteria for recognizing the validity of certificates vary widely. The criteria which different countries use to determine the validity of certificates are often independent of any dates or validity periods noted on certificates themselves.

Australia, for example, recognizes police certificates for 12 months from their issue dates for both visa and citizenship applications, independent of any validity period noted on the certificates themselves. Ecuador, in stark contrast, only recognizes police certificates (as of 2 March 2012) issued within 3 months of the date the certificates are presented (e.g., for a visa application), again independent of any dates or validity periods noted explicitly on the certificates themselves.

As in many countries, determining the validity periods of police certificates is often neither mandated nor noted in any legislation. In Australia, for instance, the approach has simply been adopted by Australia's Department of Immigration and Citizenship for the sake of consistency across varying jurisdictions; in Ecuador, in contrast, the approach has been adopted by the Department of the Interior.

Example: Police Checks in Australia

In Australia, individuals can request a police check which itemizes disclosable court outcomes. All police checks must be undertaken with the informed consent of the person being checked, unless the check is mandated by relevant legislation.[1] This means that persons cannot validly obtain a police check on another individual without that individuals permission.

A person may be required to present a Police Clearance Certificate as part of employment screening, as a pre-requisite for volunteer work, as preparation for a court appearance, to apply for a visa to enter/stay in some countries, or to satisfy a statutory requirement.

Individuals may seek a national criminal history check through two ways:

  1. Their local police service.
  2. A CrimTrac accredited “broker” (e.g. a commercial background checking service provider authorised to conduct national criminal history checks for and on behalf of its customer). Accredited Agencies are listed on Australia's CrimTrac website.[2]

Regardless of whether the applicant applied for a police check through one of the eight state police agencies or the Australian Federal Police, or a CrimTrac approved broker, all police checks are completed through CrimTrac's National Police Checking Service. Applicants who will receive a certificate titled a "National Police Check" if the background check was completed by one of the police agencies, or a "National Police History Check" if completed by a CrimTrac approved broker.

In some cases, Commonwealth agencies such as the Department of Immigration and Border Protection only accept police checks issued by the AFP if used in support of citizenship or immigration related decisions.[3]

In Australia, whilst CrimTrac completes all background checks regardless of the requesting agency, the results that are disclosed for an individual may vary depending on:[4]

  1. The purpose of the background or police check;
  2. The accredited agency’s coordinating police agency (e.g. which state the agency’s head office is domiciled); and
  3. Any relevant State or Territory legislation and/or policies regarding police history information release.

If for any reason the applicant does not agree with the results of their police check, he or she should contact the agency where the police check was submitted so that CrimTrac can initiate a review process.[1]

External links

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/4/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.