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FBI History — Part 6
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Guarding Citizen and Business -
Value of F; ingerprint | Records i in n Preventing : .
Employment of Criminals under False Pre-~
_tenses and in Tracing Witnesses”
came into widespread usage in law en-
forcement work, that the general public
has associated this indispensable means of
identification with crime and criminals. |
When considering the many identification
bureaus throughout the world, the Identifica-
tion Division of the United States Bureau
of Investigation is recognized nationally and
internationally as possessing the largest res-
ervoir or source of criminal identifying data
‘in existence. .
The Bureau has more: than 3.5176, 000 finger-
prints and more than 4,696,000 index cards
in its collections, involving about 2,550,000
different individuals. During the last fiscal
year 573,731 fingerprint cards were received
in the Bureau and 39 per cent of these were
identified with prior records. -At this time
nearly 2.200 additional cards are being re-
ceived in the Bureau daily from more than -
5,800 contributing law enforcement agencies
in the United States and foreign countries.
This huge source of identification data, in
addition to furnishing indispensable data for
law enforcing agencies, also has additional
uses which sre available to the individual.
How can an employer defermine through
the setvices of the Bureau if a prospective
employe has a criminal record? How may «
citizen determine the whereabouts of neces-
sary witnesses or Prospective defendants in
elvil sults? -- .* Moth
oe. ee ee
440s: Set
_ By JOHN EDGAR. HOOVER, Coe ge
' .- These questions represent ‘two phases ¢ of .
the Bureau's work in the civil identification
field. In addition to these uses, the records
. of the Bureau are frequently of aid in identi-
fying unknown deceased persons or amnesia
victima, stk
When the records contatried ‘in ‘the “Bue
““reau's files were found to possess such great |
_ Value for criminal purposes, many law ene :'
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. "+ Director, United States Bureau of Investigation Sot
18 PROBABLY because fingerprints first | forcement agencies initiated the practice ‘ot
‘ routing or clearing through the Bureau, fin-
gerprints of applicants for positions as peace
officers to determine whether they had pre-
vious criminal records. In addition, various
branches of the armed services af the United
Gtates, upon occasion, have cleared their fin-
gerprints through the Bureau in this man--
ner, identifications averaging $ per cent of |
all these prints handied
The United States Civil Service Gommis-
sion adopted this practice about four years
ago. In a large number of cases it was found
that persons whose offenses were detected
through the fingerprints, had given untruth-
ful qnswers to questions on. the application
. blanks. .
Results obtained in such ‘fdentification work
were so favorable that on July 1, 1933, the
Civil Service Fingerprint Division was con-
solidated with that of the United Btates Bu-
€ . .
Bince the major pert of the Agesprint
identifications made by the Bureau are
handled through the prints submitted by
local law enforcement agencies, a business _
man or large employer of Jabor would have = -
to secure the cooperation of his local law ~
enforcement agencies in submitting any fin-
gerprints to the Bureau. If these agencies
are willing to send the fingerprints in to
Washington, the Bureau of Investigation will .... .
search for any existing record without charge:
to the local officers.
The second class of civil prints is that __
which deals with the identification of un-
known deceased persons or amnesia victims.
The Bureau's work in examining fingerprint
cards forwarded by law enforcement officers’
in the cases of persons who have been found --
dead, either from violence or natural causes,
Linited. State Jaw - repin MS.
fee 1b ®
Wire (PSS.
Fe ee my a ee
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