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Sex Offender Registry Search

Public Registry Screening for Position-Appropriate Workforce Protection

Some roles involve access to children, vulnerable individuals, private residences, schools, healthcare environments, hospitality properties, customer facilities, or other settings where employers may require an additional level of screening.

STC VeriShield helps employers coordinate sex offender registry searches as one component of a secure, position-specific background screening process.

  • Public registry sources
  • Position-based selection
  • Secure applicant workflow
Registry Review Position-appropriate search support
N
National Search Support Available participating registry sources
Reviewed
S
State Registry Sources Jurisdiction-specific public information
Checked
V
Potential Match Review Identity details and source confirmation
Secure
Search Standard Supplemental

Registry review used with jurisdictional criminal searches and appropriate match verification.

An Additional Layer of Screening

Use registry information as part of a broader background check

Public sex offender registry searches may help identify information made available by participating jurisdictions.

Registry coverage, public disclosure rules, search functionality, and available identifying details vary by state, territory, tribe, and local program.

Because public registry data has limitations, the search should supplement—not replace—county, state, federal, national, alias, and identity-based screening where appropriate.

Roles that may warrant registry screening

The employer should connect the search to job duties, access, work environment, population served, and applicable requirements.

  • Education Personnel
  • Childcare Workers
  • Healthcare Staff
  • Home Health Personnel
  • Residential Service Workers
  • Hospitality Staff
  • Property Management
  • Volunteer Programs
  • Public-Facing Roles
  • Vulnerable-Person Access
Registry Screening Components

Search, review, verify, and document

A responsible workflow recognizes source limitations and requires careful review of potential matches.

N

National Registry Search Support

Search available participating public registry sources through an approved screening workflow.

S

State Registry Review

Review applicable state or jurisdiction-specific public registry information.

A

Alias and Name Review

Include legally permissible aliases or prior names when appropriate to the selected package.

ID

Identity Comparison

Compare available identifying details before treating a result as a potential match.

CR

County Criminal Searches

Use court-record searches to confirm relevant criminal history in appropriate jurisdictions.

ST

State Criminal Searches

Add available state-level criminal record searches when appropriate.

F

Federal Criminal Searches

Coordinate federal criminal court searches for applicable federal jurisdictions.

P

Position-Specific Package

Combine registry review with services appropriate for the duties and access of the role.

Registry data requires careful interpretation

  • Registry information and public disclosure practices vary among jurisdictions.
  • A name-only result should not be treated as a confirmed applicant match.
  • Potential matches should be compared using available identifying information and source details.
  • The search should supplement appropriate jurisdictional criminal record screening.
  • Employer decisions should follow applicable law, approved policy, and consumer-report procedures.
Registry information may be incomplete, delayed, jurisdiction-limited, or subject to public-disclosure restrictions. STC VeriShield coordinates the workflow but does not determine the employer’s final decision.
Avoid Name-Only Decisions

Verify potential matches before relying on a result

Common names, incomplete identifiers, outdated addresses, and variations among public registry systems can create uncertainty.

A responsible process compares available identity information, reviews the originating registry, and uses court-record searches when appropriate.

When screening information may affect employment, employers should follow approved notification, dispute, and adverse-action procedures.

Secure Registry Search Workflow

Select the role, search the sources, and review the result

The workflow should be documented and limited to authorized employer personnel.

1

Confirm the Need

Identify the job duties, access, work environment, and reason for including registry screening.

2

Collect Securely

Obtain required authorization and accurate applicant names, aliases, and identifying information.

3

Search and Confirm

Review available registry sources and investigate potential matches using source information.

4

Use Responsibly

Document the review, protect the result, and follow approved employment-decision procedures.

Additional protection for trust-based and public-facing roles

Registry search support for education, childcare, healthcare, residential, hospitality, property, volunteer, and vulnerable-person access roles.

Position-Appropriate Workforce Protection

Add the right search without relying on a single source

Registry screening can provide an additional layer of information for designated positions, but it is strongest when combined with identity and jurisdictional court searches.

STC VeriShield helps employers build a package based on job duties, access, risk, work location, and company policy.

The goal is a secure, documented process that supports informed decisions while protecting applicant information.

Discuss Registry Screening

Need sex offender registry screening for a designated position?

Contact STC VeriShield to discuss the role, public registry search, identity review, supporting criminal searches, and secure reporting process.

Contact STC VeriShield