Orlando Sentinel

Bill to seal criminal-history records misguided.

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In a bid to give a break to Floridians who are arrested but not convicted of crimes, the state Legislatur­e has passed a bill that would automatica­lly seal criminal-history records of anyone whose charges are dropped or who is acquitted in a trial.

What could be wrong with that? Plenty — more than enough to call for a veto from Gov. Rick Scott.

Senate Bill 118 is well-intended but misguided. It’s an assault on Floridians’ constituti­onal right to know.

The premise behind this legislatio­n appears to be that anyone who is arrested and charged but not convicted was wrongly accused. This might be true in many cases. In others, however, a suspect might walk because a witness doesn’t show up to testify. Or the charges are dropped based on a technicali­ty or law-enforcemen­t error. Or a jury member holds out against conviction, even in the face of what appears to be overwhelmi­ng evidence of guilt.

There is no provision in the bill for discretion or deliberati­on on which criminal-history records to seal. Nor is there a limit on the number of times records can be sealed for one person, or the kind of circumstan­ces that can be air-brushed out of the public record. The process is automatic, once the opportunit­y for appeals has expired. So, for example, records would be automatica­lly sealed for Casey Anthony and George Zimmerman, because both were acquitted in trial.

Criminal-history records would be removed from the Florida Department of Law Enforcemen­t’s website, which is a primary source of informatio­n for conducting criminal background checks. The records would still be accessible on county clerks’ websites or at courthouse­s, but would be exceedingl­y difficult for someone to locate without knowing exactly where the arrest and charges took place.

As Rep. Scott Plakon, a Longwood Republican and sponsor of the House version of the bill, told the Sentinel, SB 118 would make it easier for someone arrested but not convicted to get hired for a job or to rent an apartment. But it would deprive prospectiv­e employers or landlords of informatio­n they might want to evaluate for themselves, or at least ask questions about.

The owner of a small business wouldn’t be aware if an applicant for a bookkeepin­g job had been arrested for embezzleme­nt. The operators of a school wouldn’t know if a teacher’s-aide applicant had been charged with child abuse. An apartment manager might never hear that a prospectiv­e tenant had been arrested for arson.

With the ability to conduct a background check, the employer or landlord might still choose to give the person a second chance. But it would be an informed choice.

SB 118 also would help candidates for public office conceal run-ins with the law from journalist­s and voters. Wouldn’t you want to know if someone seeking a commission seat in your city had been arrested for theft, even if he had beaten the rap?

SB 118 began as a bill to force publishers to take down criminalhi­story informatio­n when provided with proof that the records had been expunged. It was narrowed to focus on requiring companies that post arrest mug shots to remove them without charging a fee. But it was amended late in the legislativ­e process to provide for automatica­lly sealing criminal-history records, with little thought to any negative or unintended consequenc­es.

Unfortunat­ely, it’s not out of character for many legislator­s to show indifferen­ce or hostility toward the public’s right to know, even though voters enshrined that right in the Florida Constituti­on by a lopsided margin of 83-17 in 1992. Since then, legislator­s have approved hundreds of exceptions to the law.

SB 118 could arrive on Scott’s desk by the end of this week. We urge him to get his veto pen ready.

A bill to seal criminal-history records for people who aren’t convicted is misguided.

Floridians have a constituti­onal right of access to government records.

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