Judges: MARK WHITE, Attorney General of Texas
Filed Date: 12/6/1979
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/6/2016
Honorable Joe Resweber Harris County Attorney 1001 Preston Suite 634 Houston, Texas 77002
Re: Access by an individual to his own criminal history record.
Dear Mr. Resweber:
You request our opinion on whether the Harris County Sheriff is required to furnish an individual with a copy of his own criminal history record.
No Texas statute speaks directly to this question. Criminal history record information is excepted from required public disclosure under an exception to the Texas Open Records Act. V.T.C.S. art. 6252-17a, § 3(a)(8). This was established in Houston Chronicle Publishing Co. v. City of Houston,
The Texas Open Records Act deals primarily with the general public's right to information, and does not provide for a special right of access to the subject of records except in two situations. Special access is given to a governmental employee to his own records in a proviso of section 3(a)(2), and a student is given a right of access to his own records under section 3(a)(14). However, the Texas Open Records Act is not the only means by which information may be obtained, and this office has said that the Act does not restrict a right of access based on an individual's special interest in the information. Open Records Decision No. 127, p. 6 (1976).
The basis on which the court in the Houston Chronicle case, supra, held that criminal history records should not be publicly disclosed was the ``potential for massive and unjustified damage to the individual' which could result from indiscriminate release of such records. The court also noted that unauthorized disclosure could jeopardize the availability of federal technical and financial aid and assistance provided under the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968, as amended.
A common-law right of access which entitles an individual to inspect records held by the government concerning that individual has been recognized. In Hutchins v. Texas Rehabilitation Commission,
Your brief discusses the provisions of the Federal Freedom of Information Act,
Another federal statute and the regulations issued thereunder may affect the disclosure of criminal history record information held by a state or local agency in Texas. The Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968, and amendments thereto, established the Law Enforcement Assistance Administration (LEAA) which provides federal technical and financial aid and assistance to state and local agencies. See
(g) Access and review. Insure the individual's right of access and review of criminal history information for purposes of accuracy and completeness by instituting procedures so that —
(1) any individual shall, upon satisfactory verification of his identity, be entitled to review without undue burden to either the criminal justice agency or to the individual, any criminal history information maintained about the individual and obtain a copy thereof when necessary for the purpose of challenge or correction. . . .
Pursuant to this requirement in the federal regulations, the Criminal Justice Division of the Office of the Governor has proposed to adopt rules and guidelines which have been published in the Texas Register, vol. 4, No. 78, pp. 3767-3770, October 16, 1979.
Pertinent portions of the proposed guidelines provide:
.011. Access and Review.
(a) Any individual shall, upon satisfactory verification of his identity, be entitled to review without undue burden to either the criminal justice agency or the individual, any CHRI [criminal history record information] maintained about the individual and obtain a copy of the portion challenged thereof when necessary for the purpose of challenge or correction.
(b) Points of review shall be the Texas Department of Corrections (for inmates of TDC only), DPS Headquarters, and all sheriffs' offices, police departments, and federal criminal justice agencies which have fingerprint identification capability.
(c) Administrative review shall be provided and necessary correction made of any claim by the individual to whom the information relates that the information is inaccurate or incomplete.
In addition to the above provisions relating to an individual's right of access to criminal history record information about him held by an agency subject to the federal regulations because of receipt of federal LEAA funds, separate provisions of the regulations deal with agencies which participate in the National Crime Information Center (NCIC) operated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Section 20.34 of the LEAA regulations provides:
§ 20.34 Individual's right to access criminal history record information.
(a) Any individual, upon request, upon satisfactory verification of his identity by fingerprint comparison and upon payment of any required processing fee, may review criminal history record information maintained about him in a Department of Justice criminal history record information system.
(b) If, after reviewing his identification record, the subject thereof believes that it is incorrect or incomplete in any respect and wishes changes, correction or updating of the alleged deficiency, he should make application directly to the agency which contributed the questioned information. The subject of a record may also direct his challenge as to the accuracy or completeness of any entry on his record to the Assistant Director of the FBI Identification Division, Washington, D.C., 20537. The FBI will then forward the challenge to the agency which submitted the data requesting that agency to verify or correct the challenged entry. If the contributing agency corrects the record, it shall promptly notify the FBI and, upon receipt of such notification, the FBI will make any changes necessary in accordance with the correction supplied by the contributor of the original information.
Your question is posed in terms of whether the Harris County Sheriff is required to furnish an individual a copy of his own criminal history record. The federal LEAA regulations providing a right to access require only that the individual be given a copy of the information about him ``when necessary for the purpose of challenge or correction.'
You also ask whether the Harris County Sheriff is required to furnish a copy of a criminal history record to an individual other than the one to whom the record pertains. The federal LEAA regulations and the proposed guidelines of the Criminal Justice Division speak only in terms of an individual's right of access and review upon satisfactory verification of his identity. They do not appear to contemplate that the individual may exercise this right through an agent. Generally, a person may by contract establish a legal relationship with another to authorize the other to transact business or manage some affair for him. See 2 Tex. Jur.2d, Agency § 1. The relationship of attorney and client is one of agent and principal. Dow Chemical Co. v. Benton,
You next ask whether the Sheriff is required to obtain identification from the person seeking to inspect his own record, and what type of identification is required. The LEAA regulations applicable to agencies which have received federal funds,
The drafters of the subsection expressly rejected a suggestion that would have called for a satisfactory verification of identity by fingerprint comparison. It was felt that States ought to be free to determine other means of identity verification.
You next ask whether the Sheriff is required to obtain a fee from the person requesting access to his criminal history record. The general rule is that in the absence of some enactment providing for remuneration for a particular service, no fee may be demanded therefor. 52 Tex. Jur.2d, Sheriffs, Constables, and Marshalls § 38, Attorney General Opinion H-796 (1976). See Templeton v. Ryburn,
Very truly yours,
Mark White Attorney General of Texas
John W. Fainter, Jr. First Assistant Attorney General
Ted L. Hartley Executive Assistant Attorney General
Prepared by William G Reid Assistant Attorney General
Albert Johnson v. Selma Wells ( 1978 )
Texas Employers Insurance Ass'n v. Wermske ( 1961 )
Dow Chemical Company v. Benton ( 1962 )
Hutchins v. Texas Rehabilitation Commission ( 1976 )
Houston Chronicle Publishing Co. v. City of Houston ( 1976 )
Houston Chronicle Publishing Co. v. City of Houston ( 1975 )