Orange County NC Website
10/01/2022 <br />CJISD-ITS-DOC-08140-5.9.1 <br />H-2 <br />FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION <br />CRIMINAL JUSTICE INFORMATION SERVICES <br />SECURITY ADDENDUM <br />Legal Authority for and Purpose and Genesis of the <br />Security Addendum <br />Traditionally, law enforcement and other criminal justice agencies have been <br />responsible for the confidentiality of their information. Accordingly, until mid-1999, the <br />Code of Federal Regulations Title 28, Part 20, subpart C, and the National Crime Information <br />Center (NCIC) policy paper approved December 6, 1982, required that the management and <br />exchange of criminal justice information be performed by a criminal justice agency or, in <br />certain circumstances, by a noncriminal justice agency under the management control of a <br />criminal justice agency. <br />In light of the increasing desire of governmental agencies to contract with private <br />entities to perform administration of criminal justice functions, the FBI sought and obtained <br />approval from the United States Department of Justice (DOJ) to permit such privatization of <br />traditional law enforcement functions under certain controlled circumstances. In the Federal <br />Register of May 10, 1999, the FBI published a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, <br />announcing as follows: <br /> 1. Access to CHRI [Criminal History Record Information] and Related <br />Information, Subject to Appropriate Controls, by a Private Contractor Pursuant <br />to a Specific Agreement with an Authorized Governmental Agency To Perform <br />an Administration of Criminal Justice Function (Privatization). Section 534 of <br />title 28 of the United States Code authorizes the Attorney General to exchange <br />identification, criminal identification, crime, and other records for the official <br />use of authorized officials of the federal government, the states, cities, and <br />penal and other institutions. This statute also provides, however, that such <br />exchanges are subject to cancellation if dissemination is made outside the <br />receiving departments or related agencies. Agencies authorized access to <br />CHRI traditionally have been hesitant to disclose that information, even in <br />furtherance of authorized criminal justice functions, to anyone other than actual <br />agency employees lest such disclosure be viewed as unauthorized. In recent <br />years, however, governmental agencies seeking greater efficiency and <br />economy have become increasingly interested in obtaining support services for <br />the administration of criminal justice from the private sector. With the <br />concurrence of the FBI’s Criminal Justice Information Services (CJIS) <br />Advisory Policy Board, the DOJ has concluded that disclosures to private <br />persons and entities providing support services for criminal justice agencies <br />may, when subject to appropriate controls, properly be viewed as permissible <br />disclosures for purposes of compliance with 28 U.S.C. 534. <br /> We are therefore proposing to revise 28 CFR 20.33(a)(7) to provide <br />express authority for such arrangements. The proposed authority is similar to <br />the authority that already exists in 28 CFR 20.21(b)(3) for state and local CHRI <br />systems. Provision of CHRI under this authority would only be permitted <br />pursuant to a specific agreement with an authorized governmental agency for <br />the purpose of providing services for the administration of criminal justice. <br />The agreement would be required to incorporate a security addendum approved <br />by the Director of the FBI (acting for the Attorney General). The security <br />Docusign Envelope ID: D040EFAB-2D80-498F-8058-E854C6400347