Asian Fever

Will ID check during visit to MP show on Criminal Record Check

infinifoig

New member
May 9, 2013
16
0
3
I will likely have to be screened for a criminal record check for work and my only interaction with police is being asked for ID at a massage parlour. Does anyone know if this interaction will show up on my criminal record?

sorry if this is the wrong place to post. I’m not really sure where to put it. Thanks for any advice.
 

westcoastrider1982

Well-known member
Jul 16, 2011
5,582
2,402
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I don’t even bring my wallet into a MP!

Cops show up would say
“Sorry I left my wallet and ID at home! Oops!”

I’d also say “I came and paid for a massage. The lady and I hit it off and we decided to have some fun together as 2 consenting adults!”
Then you “tip her for the great massage” you didn’t pay for sex.
 

ftbtosser

Member
Nov 6, 2021
31
33
18
Only crimes you’ve been convicted of will show on criminal record search.
Just want to add on, that if you've been to court for anything it will show up on court services online. Not many people know about that though, and usually it's just disputed traffic tickets.
 
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jpgiganta32

Member
May 23, 2019
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Just beware that there are different types of searches. I haven't really done criminal law since law school, but in talking to police as part of working at a legal clinic, I learned that there is a type of search (I can't remember the name offhand) that basically shows every interaction with the police, whether or not it resulted in a criminal charge. Those interactions don't show up in a criminal record check, but just be aware that the "every time you've ever spoken to a police offer ever" database does exist.
 

infinifoig

New member
May 9, 2013
16
0
3
Just beware that there are different types of searches. I haven't really done criminal law since law school, but in talking to police as part of working at a legal clinic, I learned that there is a type of search (I can't remember the name offhand) that basically shows every interaction with the police, whether or not it resulted in a criminal charge. Those interactions don't show up in a criminal record check, but just be aware that the "every time you've ever spoken to a police offer ever" database does exist.
True but the OP was asking for an employment search which is pretty basic.
Now I’m kinda nervous… will this show up on a criminal record check for the vulnerable sector. I am not going to be working with kids but I do not want this information to show up at all and I’m confused whether or not a simple I’d check would disqualify me.
Thanks for any help/clarification you may be able to provide
 

iliketravel

Well-known member
Aug 2, 2020
251
269
63
Good advice, the border guards AFAIK have access to the "any interaction ever" database.
I'm skeptical about this 'any interaction ever' ledger existing. I was a victim of a crime some years ago. I talked to the officer. But then, since it would be impossible to find the criminal, I said its ok to close it and don't file further. A couple years later I went to the police main headquarters asking for the information what they have about it. I was told since it was closed they have no trace of it. Nada. There must has been something I'd assume as the police came to visit me so they had to write it down in their reports what they did during their shift and more than that it was a case so had to have a number. But when asked - the lady at the computer had no trace of it.
 
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jpgiganta32

Member
May 23, 2019
46
17
8
I'm skeptical about this 'any interaction ever' ledger existing. I was a victim of a crime some years ago. I talked to the officer. But then, since it would be impossible to find the criminal, I said its ok to close it and don't file further. A couple years later I went to the police main headquarters asking for the information what they have about it. I was told since it was closed they have no trace of it. Nada. There must has been something I'd assume as the police came to visit me so they had to write it down in their reports what they did during their shift and more than that it was a case so had to have a number. But when asked - the lady at the computer had no trace of it.
Interesting. My knowledge dates back to ~2013 in law school. We had two police officers (one RCMP and one city, Victoria) tell us the same thing. I wish I could remember the name of the database, but I can't.
 

Pantherdash

Panther
Apr 2, 2007
2,553
220
63
Downtown Vancouver
Interesting. My knowledge dates back to ~2013 in law school. We had two police officers (one RCMP and one city, Victoria) tell us the same thing. I wish I could remember the name of the database, but I can't.
I believe they are called "Street Checks." The police in Toronto some years back were criticized for using them as they were disproportionally used when checking black people. It's up to the individual officer to file the incident report, as I understand it. In an MP, I doubt they'd waste their time filing a name let alone dozens unless you were uncooperative in giving your name (reluctance to give your real name is a big red flag as it indicates you may have outstanding warrants or are part of an ongoing investigation).

Ten to twenty years ago, many Canadian police agencies were using the DISC program. Developed by two Vancouver Police detectives investigating the sex trade, the DISC database included names of johns caught in sting operations. It stood for Deter Identify Sex Consumers. Most Canadian police agencies these days don't bother tracking johns anymore, unless there is evidence of exploitation or minors involved. I doubt DISC even exists anymore.

Panther
 
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Pantherdash

Panther
Apr 2, 2007
2,553
220
63
Downtown Vancouver
Upon Googling "Canadian police databases" I found an article of an audit by the Office of the Privacy Commissioner of Canada in 2011 about the RCMP's use of CPIC (Canadian Police Information Centre) and PROS (Police Reporting and Occurrence System). It was, at the time being used by the RCMP and smaller police agencies of under 300 officers to file incident reports when police came into contact with individuals. They would check CPIC first and if everything was clear, they'd enter the interaction in PROS. The incident would be wiped (theoretically) after 14 months if nothing else had been reported but they found the records were kept for much longer than were necessary according to the audit.

Read about it here https://www.priv.gc.ca/en/opc-actions-and-decisions/audits/ar-vr_rcmp_2011/

Panther
 

PoorGuy

Well-known member
May 11, 2002
1,004
62
48
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Have not province
Thank you for the link westcoast5, I did not about this resource and it is completely open to the public. No wonder my former regular disappeared without a trace. She is in jail!
 

vanperb

What makes a good man?
Jul 9, 2008
1,669
2,485
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Well if you go on bc civil records website https://justice.gov.bc.ca/cso/esear...dAmDxy2m.0e1ba411-53d7-3b0d-8e0a-d5b7d8cafbab anyone can literally search any ones name and all traffic/criminal record/charges show up but not really any ID Checks. Everything else tho is openly available to anyone and everyone just a quick search away…
Completely unrelated to the thread but I looked up a couple of people who disappeared out of my life. I was a little heartbroken but after that search and scanning through the *cases* under their names... I really dodged a bullet.
Thanks man. I'm treating myself to tacos and blowjobs tomorrow because of this.
 

iliketravel

Well-known member
Aug 2, 2020
251
269
63
Interesting search. Thank you for linking to it. Its too bad it only has the provincial option, and that's BC. Do you guys know of a Canada wide search?
 
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