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Employee background checks —
are you within your rights?

The employer's dilemma: negligent hiring versus
violation of civil rights.

Editor's Note: This is the second of a two-part series about negligent hiring. It discusses those questions an employer can ask job applicants without violating civil rights laws or the Illinois Human Rights Act.

By Janet E. Goldberg
and Constance L. Bauer

The Illinois Human Rights Act (Illinois Revised Statutes, Ch. 68, §2-103) flatly prohibits employers from inquiring on a written application whether a job applicant has ever been arrested. Moreover, courts in Illinois and elsewhere have found such inquiries to violate the civil rights laws because they operate to discriminate against racial and ethnic minorities.

Not surprisingly, since Section 2-103 of the Illinois Human Rights Act was adopted, there have not been any reported Illinois cases which have found a cause of action for negligent hiring to exist on the basis of the employer's failure to inquire about a job applicant's arrest record. Thus, employers should not ask prospective employees, either during a job interview or on a written application, whether they have ever been arrested.

Criminal conviction records

Section 2-103 of the Illinois Human Rights Act expressly provides the prohibition against inquiring into arrest records. It does not, however, preclude a local governmental unit or a school district from using criminal conviction records obtained from the Illinois Department of Law Enforcement in evaluating the qualifications and character of prospective employees.


An employer should not automatically bar an applicant from consideration for employment because the applicant has been convicted of a crime.

However, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) has held that a flat rule disqualifying those with criminal convictions may result in illegal race discrimination under the civil rights laws. Thus, an employer should not automatically bar an applicant from consideration for employment because the applicant has been convicted of a crime.

The EEOC has held that employers may ask whether prospective employees have ever been convicted of a crime. However, the EEOC warns that to avoid violating the civil rights laws, employers should make sure that criminal conviction inquiries are necessary to safe job performance and are related to bona fide occupational qualifications. Further, criminal convictions should only bar employment if they have a direct relationship to the requirements of the particular job.

For example, an employer might legally deny a convicted child molester a position involving direct supervision of children, such as director of a youth recreational program, but he would probably violate the civil rights laws by denying the same applicant a job as a bank teller.

EEOC rulings

The EEOC has found the relationship between a criminal conviction and the prospective position too remote to justify

Illinois Parks and Recreation 11 May/June 1988


Criminal conviction records ...

Persons falling under the authority of §2-103 of the Illinois Human Rights Act may send a formal request for applicants' criminal conviction records to:

Director Jeremy Margolis
Illinois Department of State Police
500 Armory Building
Springfield, IL 62706

or

Bureau of Identification
260 N. Chicago St.
Joliet, IL 60431-0260.

The Illinois General Assembly passed a bill which will be effective July 1, 1990, pursuant to which any employer will be able to obtain conviction records. The Uniform Conviction Information Act (P.A. 85-922) provides for uniform public access to conviction records maintained by the Illinois Department of State Police. Certain restrictions apply, and they are set forth in the Act.

rejection of the applicant where an employer refused to hire a black mechanic because of a prior gambling conviction, and where an employer failed to hire a black crane operator because of a conviction for armed robbery.

In another case, however, where an employer refused to hire a black applicant for a custodial job because of a felony robbery conviction, the EEOC found no violation of the civil rights laws. The distinguishing factors in that case were that a custodian would have access to the master keys, and that the crime involved (i.e., robbery) directly related to the duties of the job.


Criminal conviction inquiries must be necessary to safe job performance and related to bona fide occupational qualifications.

Ameliorating factors

Even where a direct relationship between a conviction and the job is found, employers must still evaluate other factors to determine whether the applicant could perform acceptably in spite of the conviction. Evidence of efforts at rehabilitation, a good work record, and the remoteness in time of the conviction have been found by the EEOC and the courts to outweigh considerations of job-relatedness.

For example, in a recent case, the Illinois Appellate Court found that an employer had violated the civil rights laws when he refused to hire a black applicant for the position of "police officer learner" because of the record of his arrest and conviction for unlawful possession of a weapon. The Court reasoned that it was unlikely that the applicant would engage in this or any other type of wrongdoing in the future (1) since the applicant had only been convicted of a single misdemeanor charge, (2) the conviction had occurred five years before he applied for this job, and (3) the applicant had established a history of responsible police work involving the use of a gun during the five years following his conviction.

To best protect themselves from legal action, employers should take such ameliorating factors into consideration when making a hiring decision; however, the evidence of ameliorating factors must be very strong to overcome the existence of a job-related conviction, particularly where the job involves a high degree of risk to the public.


The evidence of ameliorating factors must be very strong to overcome the existence of a job-related conviction.

Finally, the EEOC does not consider it a violation of the civil rights laws to base an employment decision on the falsification of an answer to a conviction inquiry, as long as the employer applies a neutral rule in a non-discriminatory manner. Thus, an employer may disqualify a minority applicant for falsely responding to the employer's conviction record inquiries, if the employer disqualifies every applicant who has falsified such responses.

Conclusion

Recently, several courts around the country have found that employers may have a duty to conduct background investigations on prospective employees where the employer might reasonably anticipate that members of the public would be placed in a position of injury due to the nature of the available position.

However, inquiries into an applicant's criminal history, and subsequent denials of employment by the employer on the basis of the applicant's criminal record, are loaded with problems for employers. Accordingly, employers must proceed with caution.

ABOUT THE AUTHORS: Janet E. Goldberg is a partner and member of Sachnoff, Weaver & Rubenstein, Ltd.'s labor and employment law group. She received her JD from the University of Illinois College of Law in 1975, and she is admitted to the Illinois and Missouri Bars.

Constance L. Bauer is an associate at the law firm of Sachnoff, Weaver & Rubenstein, Ltd. She received her JD from the University of Michigan Law School in 1986, and she is admitted to the Illinois Bar.


Illinois Parks and Recreation 12 May/June 1988


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