Legislative & Judicial Update

Third Party Investigations
In California, the following bill was previously noted as
being of possible interest:
SB 1432 (Alpert) - This bill
would allow Human Resource consultants to conduct third party investigations of
harassment in the workplace. They will not have to be licensed, will not have
any oversight, and will allow out of state HR consultants to come into CA to
conduct the investigations. This practice has been against the law for the last
20 years, but only has come to public awareness in the last 18 months. This bill
was introduced to bring the law in line with practice. This bill has been
shelved in Committee and will not be moving this year.
Federal Legislation: The following bill exemplifies
the continuing disconnection between the desire of legislators to protect the
privacy of consumers and the fact that the closing of information sources and
public records only puts the public at greater risk. If someone cannot find out
about your history in the community, then you can not find out the history of
someone who is doing things to you or your company. It cuts both ways. Certainly
as security professionals we have learned that our responsibilities encompass a
wide range of tasks which require information to complete. This is particularly
true in fraud and other investigations that are a low priority to law
enforcement. At the same time that this bill is being considered in Congress,
the Secret Service is taking no cases with less than $100,000 in loss and the
FBI is referring cases to the Secret Service. This is all at the same time that
many law enforcement agencies in the Bay Area either refuse to work these cases
or state that the District Attorney's are unwilling to prosecute. Go on the Internet and read the text of this bill, it will certainly be educational.
- S 2328: Feinstein-
Identity Theft
This bill is attempting to remove access to all types of
information on consumers. If passed, security professionals would have
difficulty finding witnesses, finding fraud, and confirming Social Security
Numbers for background screening. In Section 8 investigative files would be
subject to consumer review, including files containing witness and victim names.
This bill is currently being heard in committee.
- Follow-up · HR 3404:
Sessions- FCRA Changes
This bill to exempt many post employment investigations
from the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) was heard in committee 5/4/2000, no
other significant progress has been made with this bill at this time.
Thank you for your interest in this report. Please contact
me if you have any questions.
By James S. Cawood, CPP
Legislative Liaison
|