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SEARCH Mid-Year Meeting Federal Legislative Briefing

SEARCH Mid-Year Meeting Federal Legislative Briefing. Robert R. Belair SEARCH General Counsel January 28, 2005 St. Petersburg, Florida. Criminal Justice Funding. FY 2005 CJS Appropriation provides level funding with some decreases The Conference Report includes the following:

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SEARCH Mid-Year Meeting Federal Legislative Briefing

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  1. SEARCH Mid-Year MeetingFederal Legislative Briefing Robert R. Belair SEARCH General Counsel January 28, 2005 St. Petersburg, Florida

  2. Criminal Justice Funding • FY 2005 CJS Appropriation provides level funding with some decreases • The Conference Report includes the following: • Byrne Discretionary Grants: $170 million • Byrne Formula Grants: $634 million • COPS: $606 million • COPS Technologies: $138.6 million • DNA Backlog: $110 million • Weed and Seed: $62 million • CITA: $28.45 million Robert R. Belair

  3. Criminal Justice Funding • BJS: $34 million • NIJ: $55 million • RISS: $40 million • LLEBG: zeroed out, merged into Byrne • Missing Children: $46.9 million • NCHIP: $25 million • White Collar Crime: $9 million • Offender Reentry: $10 million • Interoperable Communications: $100 million • Global Justice Info Sharing Initiative: $10.5 million Robert R. Belair

  4. Criminal Justice Funding • SEARCH received its first ever decrease, from $2.0 million to $1.75 million • Number of Byrne earmarks jumped from about 100 earmarks in ’04 to 238 earmarks in ’05 • Number of “national earmarks” jumped from 20 to 54 • Technology related earmarks reduced in Byrne to less than 10% Robert R. Belair

  5. Criminal Justice Funding • Little or no growth is expected for ’06 Justice Assistance funding • Earmarking is expected to continue to explode • Block grant funding is expected to decrease Robert R. Belair

  6. Homeland Security Funding • In October, Congress approved the DHS appropriations bill • The bill includes: • ODP discretionary grants: $3.086 billion • ODP formula grants: $1.1 billion • Terrorism grants: $400 million Robert R. Belair

  7. Homeland Security Funding • High-threat area grants: $885 million • Firefighter grants: $715 million • Information analysis and infrastructure protection grants: $761.6 million Robert R. Belair

  8. Homeland Security Funding • Passenger screening: $1.45 billion • US-VISIT: $340 million • Information technology investment and enhancement: $208 million Robert R. Belair

  9. Background Check Legislation • On December 17th, the Congress enacted S. 2845 (H.R. 10), the Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004 • Extends the Protect Act’s pilots and study for National Child Protection Act background checks for another 12 months (until the fall of 2005) Robert R. Belair

  10. Background Check Legislation • Enacts private security officer background legislation: • Private security industry authorized to submit fingerprints to the ID Bureau in a participating state in which the employer is located for a state and national criminal record background check • All states deemed to be “participating states” unlessthe state adopts a law opting-out or the governor issues an order opting-out • All participating states are permitted to assess “reasonable fees” Robert R. Belair

  11. Background Check Legislation • As originally introduced in the House, H.R. 10 would have permitted any employer, with state authorization, to obtain access to IAFIS for background checking • As amended in the House, H.R. 10 would have required the Attorney General to conduct a pilot to test the feasibility of employer access to IAFIS Robert R. Belair

  12. Background Check Legislation • As adopted in conference, S. 2845 requires the Attorney General to conduct a comprehensive study of criminal background check issues. The study must address: • All statutory requirements for criminal history record checks that are required to be conducted by the Department of Justice • The effectiveness and efficiency of utilizing commercially available databases as a supplement to IAFIS checks • Any security concerns created by the existence of these commercially available databases • The effectiveness of utilizing state databases Robert R. Belair

  13. Background Check Legislation • Any feasibility studies by the Department of Justice regarding the resources and structures to establish a system to provide criminal history information • Privacy rights and other employee protections • The scope and means of processing background checks for private employers utilizing data maintained by the FBI in cases where the authority for such checks is not available at the state level • Any restrictions that should be placed on the ability of an employer to charge an employee or applicant for the check Robert R. Belair

  14. Background Check Legislation • Requirements that should apply to the handling of incomplete records • The circumstances under which the actual criminal history record (rap sheet) should be disseminated by the employer • The type of restrictions that should be imposed concerning response times • Any infrastructure that may need to be developed to support these checks, including the means by which information and fingerprints are collected and submitted and the system capacity needed to process such checks at the federal and state level Robert R. Belair

  15. Background Check Legislation • The Attorney General has only six months to complete the study • After six months, the Attorney General must file a report with the House and Senate Judiciary Committees conveying recommendations for “improving, standardizing, and consolidating the existing statutory authorization, programs and procedures for the conduct of criminal history record checks for non-criminal justice purposes” Robert R. Belair

  16. Background Check Legislation • In conducting this study, the Act requires the Attorney General to consult with “representatives of state criminal history repositories, the National Crime Prevention and Privacy Compact Council, appropriate representatives of private industry, and representatives of labor, as determined by the Attorney General” Robert R. Belair

  17. Background Check Legislation • DOJ study under way at the same time as nearly identical SEARCH/BJS Task Force Study and Report • Explosion in backgrounding and 9/11 concerns are motivating Congress to comprehensively reform the CHRI background check process Robert R. Belair

  18. Background Check Legislation • Congress came close to acting preemptively and definitively last year • May be late in ‘05 or ‘06 before Congress becomes fully engaged Robert R. Belair

  19. DOJ Reauthorization • March 31, 2004: House passed H.R. 3036 • Eliminates most OJP discretionary grant programs; merged these programs into new state and local block grant programs • Partially reorganizes OJP including an Office of Applied Law Enforcement Technology to “provide leadership and focus to those grants of the Department …for…using or improving law enforcement computer systems.” Robert R. Belair

  20. DOJ Reauthorization • Creates a Community Capacity Development Office within OJP • Promotes coordination of public and private efforts and resources • Provides information, training and technical assistance • Provides support for inter- and intra-agency task forces Robert R. Belair

  21. DOJ Reauthorization • Reauthorizes COPS but effectively merges OJP and COPS • Strengthens BJS’ responsibility for criminal history improvement; NICS improvement; and state participation in national CHRI programs • Eliminates BJA • Reauthorizes Crime Identification Technology Act (CITA) Robert R. Belair

  22. DOJ Reauthorization • Creates a permanent Office of Weed and Seed Strategies • Requires states to upload to CODIS the DNA of all persons convicted of a violent felony • Creates anti-terrorism training grants for state and local law enforcement • Strips DOJ of authority to reorganize OJP without first obtaining congressional authorization Robert R. Belair

  23. DOJ Reauthorization • Senate bill, S. 2863, introduced by Judiciary Committee Chairman Orrin Hatch (R-UT) on Sept. 29, 2004 Robert R. Belair

  24. DOJ Reauthorization • Includes express language authorizing SEARCH’s National Technical Assistance and Training Program • Sec. 237. SEARCH, THE NATIONAL CONSORTIUM FOR JUSTICE INFORMATION AND STATISTICS. (a) IN GENERAL.- Pursuant to subpart 1o of part E of title I of the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968, the Director of the Bureau of Justice Assistance shall make grants to SEARCH, the National Consortium for Justice Information and Statistics, to carry out the operations of the National Technical Assistance and Training Program operated by SEARCH under the direction of the Office of Justice Programs. (b) AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS. – There are authorized to be appropriated in each of fiscal years 2005, 2006 and 2007, $4,000,000 to carry out this section. Robert R. Belair

  25. DOJ Reauthorization • Senate bill does not include most of House OJP reorganization provisions • Merges Byrne formula and Local Law Enforcement block grants • Enhances BJS authority for NCHIP and integrated CHRI system authority • Provides authorization for NCPC (McGruff) with a 30% match • Provides authorization for Boys and Girls Clubs Robert R. Belair

  26. NICS Legislation • Bills introduced in 10th Congress aimed at forcing states to report to NICS • Mental health • Misdemeanor domestic violence • Felony dispositions • “Carrot and stick” approach, including a $250 million grant program • Broad agreement that NICS needs improvement. Wide fear of bringing gun legislation to floor. Robert R. Belair

  27. Other Legislative Issues • FBI computer systems • Uniform biometric • Breeder documents • Computer security • Immigration reform • Offender reentry • Access to court records and public records • Data mining and Matrix Robert R. Belair

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