FBI
File Fact Sheet
- The primary function
of the FBI is law enforcement.
The FBI does not keep a file on every citizen of the United States.
- The FBI was not
established until 1908 and we have very few records prior to the 1920s.
- FBI files generally
contain reports of FBI investigations of a wide range of matters, including
counterterrorism, foreign counter-intelligence, organized crime/drugs, violent
crime, white-collar crime, applicants, and civil rights.
- The FBI does not
issue clearances or nonclearances for anyone other than its own personnel
or persons having access to FBI facilities. Background investigations
for security clearances are conducted by many different government agencies.
Persons who received a clearance while in the military or employed with
some other government agency should write directly to that entity.
- An FBI identification
record or "rap sheet" is NOT the same as an FBI "file"—it
is simply a listing of information taken from fingerprint cards submitted
to the FBI in connection with arrests, federal employment, naturalization,
or military service. The subject of a "rap sheet" may obtain a
copy by submitting a written request to FBI, CJIS Division, Attn: SCU, Mod.
D-2, 1000 Custer Hollow Road, Clarksburg, WV 26306. Each request must have
proof of identity which shall consist of name, date and place of birth,
and a set of rolled-ink fingerprint impressions placed upon fingerprint
cards or forms commonly utilized for applicant or law enforcement purposes
by law enforcement agencies, plus payment of $18.00 in the form of
a certified check or money order, payable to the Treasury of the United
States.
- The National Name
Check Program (NNCP) conducts a search of the FBI's Universal Index to identify
any information contained in FBI records that may be associated with
an individual and provides the results of that search to the requesting
federal, state, or local agency. For the NNCP, a name is searched in a multitude
of combinations and phonetic spellings to ensure all records are located.
The NNCP also searches for both "main" and "cross reference"
files. A main file is an entry that carries the name corresponding to the
subject of a file while a cross reference is merely a mention of an individual
contained in a file. The results from a search of this magnitude can result
in several "hits" and "idents" on an individual. In
each instance where UNI has identified a name variation or reference, information
must be reviewed to determine whether it is applicable to the individual
in question.
- The Record/Information
Dissemination Section/Freedom of Information-Privacy Acts (FOIPA) search
for records provides copies of FBI files relevant to a FOIPA request for
information. FOIPA provides responsive documents to requesters seeking "reasonably
described information." For a FOIPA search, the subject name, event,
activity, business, or event is searched to determine whether there is an
investigative file associated with the subject. This is called a "main
file search" and differs from The NNCP search.
For general information about the FBI,
check out website at
[http://www.fbi.gov]