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Related: About this forumGap found in background screening for gun permits
This will make the anti CCW people out there feel a lot better. Typical government SNAFU.
Those with illegible fingerprints escape further scrutiny.
For as long as a decade, Florida has not been conducting further background checks on applicants for gun-carry permits in cases in which the fingerprint cards submitted were illegible.
Each of the two state agencies involved thought the other was doing the necessary additional screening. Neither was.
After two failed attempts to obtain good-quality fingerprints, state law requires a search for prior arrests using the candidate's name. Such nationwide background checks are performed by the FBI. To obtain the service, however, Florida must ask for the FBI's help.
The state Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, which administers the concealed-weapon licensing program, thought the Florida Department of Law Enforcement was requesting the assistance. The FDLE, meanwhile, thought the agriculture department was.
"I assumed they did," FDLE bureau chief Martha Wright, who oversees background checks, said of her colleagues at Agriculture. "I'm surprised that they don't."
Sterling Ivey, Agriculture spokesman, said his office was unaware the checks weren't being requested by the FDLE until informed by the Sun Sentinel.
"We have had several internal meetings today regarding the potential gap you identified," Ivey said Wednesday. Further meetings will take place on how to correct the problem, he said.
"We are going to work with FDLE to complete the name checks," Ivey said.
The Agriculture Department found Florida hasn't been requesting the FBI's assistance in providing screening by applicant name since 2002. At the time, the Concealed Weapon Permitting Program was housed at the Florida Department of State.
Without any disqualifying offenses reported, applicants with the illegible prints would have been approved for the carry permits, administrators said.
Neither the FDLE nor the Agriculture Department could say how often that may have happened, or how frequently successive fingerprint submissions are rejected because they are of poor quality.
Vendors who process fingerprints say the skin on the fingertips of some people is too thin or worn to produce a clear print. Age and occupation can be a factor. People whose hands often come in contact with chemicals or water can be affected.
The Agriculture Department has a form letter that it sends to gun-carry applicants when their fingerprint samples are deemed insufficiently legible. It asks the applicants to submit a second set.
"This will be the last fingerprint submission we will request: no further submissions are necessary after two cards have been rejected by the FBI because of legibility problems," the letter says.
***MORE AT LINK***
http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/palm-beach/fl-gun-permit-checks-20120608,0,6036271.story
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Gap found in background screening for gun permits (Original Post)
Meiko
Jun 2012
OP
People with criminal intent do not register their names with the State to carry a gun
SkatmanRoth
Jun 2012
#2
slackmaster
(60,567 posts)1. That looks to me like a management problem
Fixing it will not require rocket surgery.
SkatmanRoth
(843 posts)2. People with criminal intent do not register their names with the State to carry a gun
The laws regulating the carrying of guns in Alaska, Arizona, and Vermont are not unreasonable.
mvccd1000
(1,534 posts)3. "Only the government should be trusted with guns."
Because they do such a bang-up job with everything else, right?