| This was taken from a front page article from the December 13th edition of the Philadelphia Daily News: 
 "Innocent 'felon': Background check gave false info
 
 KEVIN **** openly admits that he pleaded guilty in 2002 to misdemeanor charges of simple assault, harassment and related offenses
 for fighting with his ex's new boyfriend.
 "I know what I did was wrong," said ****, a William Penn High and Thompson Institute
 grad. "It's the first and only time I've ever been in trouble. It was a
 dark time in my life, and I put myself through a lot of unnecessary
 nonsense."
 ****, 32, of North Philadelphia, even put it on "Hehis job application in September at GameStop, a video-game store at 22nd
 Street and Lehigh Avenue in North Philadelphia. So he was stunned when,
 after a month of employment, his manager called him into his office
 Oct. 19 and asked if anything was on his record that he hadn't
 disclosed.
 said, 'If there was, would you be surprised?' " **** recalled. "I
 told him I'd be shocked, and a few minutes later, they fired me for
 nondisclosure of information."
 Through no fault of his own, **** had fallen victim to what some experts say is a disturbing consequence of background checks - erroneous information gathered by
 careless or unscrupulous data brokers.
 **** said he Arepeatedly asked whether he was being fired for the 2002 charges. He
 said his manager emphatically told him, "No," but refused to tell him
 why he was being fired. **** said he never received a copy of his
 background check or a termination letter from GameStop.
 job sought at Walmart About the same time, **** had an
 interview for an overnight-manager position at a suburban Walmart. After
 being out of steady work for more than a year, he had planned to work
 both jobs.
 He gave the company permission to do a complete background check and disclosed in writing his misdemeanor convictions, he said.
 Aweek later, Walmart sent him a denial letter and a copy of his
 background check conducted by General Information Services, a
 background-screening company based in South Carolina.
 That background check said **** had been convicted in 1996 of felony
 cocaine possession in Gloucester County, Va., and sentenced to 10 years
 in prison.
 "I have never even been to Gloucester County, Va.," **** said. "Back then, I was still in high school." After receiving the report, **** said, he called GIS to dispute the
 information.
 More than two weeks later, the company cleared his criminal-background check of the false felony-cocaine charge, according
 to GIS records he received.
 On his own, **** had his fingerprints taken at the Pennsylvania State Police'sBelmont Barracks and sent them to the Virginia State Police to
 demonstrate that he was not the man on their records, he said.
 "GISsaid they dealt with it, but I didn't want to leave any stone
 unturned," he said.
 It was too late for employment at Walmart, where Hutchinson had been red-flagged not only for the false cocaine
 charge but also for his legitimate misdemeanors, he said.
 And "TheyGameStop, where **** said the bosses knew about his misdemeanors
 when they hired him, refused to hire him back after the felony-cocaine
 charge was cleared.
 told me I had to reapply to see if I could get another position with
 the company," he said. "Why should I have to reapply when you let me go
 off of false pretenses? You didn't even give me a chance to explain."
 TheDaily News was unable to confirm that GIS was the company that
 also conducted ****'s criminal-background check for GameStop. A
 GIS spokesman said he could not disclose clients' names, and a GameStop
 corporate spokesman said in an e-mail that the company "does not provide
 public comment on employment matters."
 ****, however, said aUnemploymentGIS representative told him by phone that the company also had
 conducted his GameStop background check. **** added that
 GameStop's human-resources department confirmed that they had used GIS.
 in jeopardy
 Meanwhile, GameStop also is trying to appeal ****'s unemployment benefits. In a Dec. 3 letter to Pennsylvaniaunemployment-compensation authorities, a cost-management agency
 contracted by GameStop wrote that **** had been "discharged for
 falsification of his application. He did not list on his application a
 felony for drug possession and distributing."
 Now, ****, whohas not had steady work since April 2009, wonders how many other jobs
 for which he applied turned him down because of the inaccurate
 background check.
 "I've applied for many different positions," he said. "God only knows how many positions I applied to and they saw this
 mistake and it got read over and over and over."
 Unfortunately, toLillie Coney, associate director of the Electronic Privacy Information
 Center in Washington, D.C., ****'s is a familiar story.
 "Backgroundchecks are pretty routine now, even for positions that don't require
 trust that they manage money or things of value," she said. "There's no
 way to know that the error rates are not off the charts."
 Chris Lemens, general counsel for GIS, said the company has "fewer than two errors in
 10,000" cases. He declined to say how many cases GIS completes in a day
 or a month.
 And the "two errors," he said, are cases in which 'Therepeople received copies of their criminal-background checks from
 prospective employers and disputed them themselves.
 may be thousands' Coney said many people may never know
 about an inaccurate background check, especially if an employer never
 gave them a copy. If a person never got a job, he or she simply may have
 assumed that someone else was more qualified, she said.
 "Forevery one person you hear this happens to, there may be thousands of
 people who don't know this happens," she said.
 "This the worst-case scenario because you're not going to be brought to trial to
 argue your innocence because you've already been found guilty and you
 don't even know it."
 Lemens, who said he was prohibited from speaking about specific cases, said GIS' background checks are not
 guaranteed accurate.
 "Of course not," he said. "You know when you see in the movies there's some kind of instantaneous universal
 background check performed? There is nothing like that. This is a
 process performed by humans. . . . Whenever there is a human element,
 there could be inaccuracies."
 Lemens said the company has run intosituations in which court records are inaccurate or "even made up."
 "We,of course, can't make sure the public records are accurate," he said.
 That'spart of the problem with data brokers, Coney said. "They know the
 documents they are getting have errors, but it does not stop them from
 using [them]," she said.
 "The core foundation of their business istelling their customers how many bad people they know about. They are
 not into telling someone what a wonderful person this is, because they
 don't want to be held accountable if something goes wrong."
 Coney said the only way to manage the unregulated data-broker industry is to
 make it transparent and allow people to view their backgrounds
 regularly, as they can with their credit scores.
 "Individuals are the only ones who are going to know if the information is accurate," she
 said.
 No one is held accountable when a bad background report is produced and sent to an employer, Coney said.
 "The problem is theyare not getting penalized for doing this, so they keep using bad data
 practices," she said. "They are vilifying the names of the people who
 have no idea their names are even out there."
 For Kevin ****, the problems persist. "I don't want to be out of work," he said yesterday. "I wanted to work, I wanted to collect a
 paycheck, I wanted to work two jobs at one time. . . .
 "Overall, it really has put my back against a wall, and the worst thing about it
 is it wasn't of my doing. I actually wish that some people in higher
 places could hear my story and see that some people actually do want to
 work."
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