DEFINITIONS
CONVICTION OR NOT?
WHAT HAPPENS NEXT?
CLIENT CALLS
TRUE OR FALSE
100

This Latin term means "will not prosecute" and appears as "Nol Prossed" on a KRESS report.

What is Nolle Prosequi?


100

Guilty — the result of a criminal trial that ends in a judgment that the accused is guilty as charged.

What is a Conviction?

100

Before an employer can take final adverse action, they must send this along with a copy of the background report.

What is a Pre-Adverse Action Notice?

100

A client asks "what does Nol Prossed mean?" You say: "The prosecutor _____ the charges."

What is dropped?

100

TRUE or FALSE — Ban-the-Box laws ban background checks entirely.

What is FALSE? (They regulate WHEN in the process criminal history can be asked about)

200

The umbrella term for the court's final determination of a criminal case — could be guilty, dismissed, or anything in between.

What is Disposition?

200

Nol Prossed — the prosecutor dropped the charges.

What is a Non-Conviction?

200

After sending a Pre-Adverse Action Notice, the employer must wait this many days (federal minimum) before making a final decision.

What is 5 days? (Note: varies by state — some require more)

200

A client asks if Deferred Adjudication on a Texas report means the applicant was convicted. Your answer is this one word.

What is No?

200

TRUE or FALSE — A Nolle Prossed charge is a type of non-conviction.

What is TRUE?

300

This regulation requires employers to remove criminal history questions from the initial job application.

What is Ban-the-Box?

300

Deferred Adjudication — the judge deferred a finding of guilt after a guilty plea, pending completion of community supervision.

What is a Non-Conviction?


300

On a Deferred Adjudication case, if the defendant successfully completes all supervision conditions, this is what happens to the charges

What is they are dismissed — with no conviction recorded?

300

A client asks if they can use a dismissed charge to deny employment. You always direct them here.

What is their legal counsel?


300

TRUE or FALSE — Dismissal With Prejudice means the case can be refiled.

What is FALSE? (With Prejudice = permanently closed. Without Prejudice = can be refiled)

400

This type of dismissal means the case is permanently closed and cannot be brought again.

What is Dismissal With Prejudice?

400

Dismissal Without Prejudice — the case was dropped but could potentially be refiled.

What is a Non-Conviction?

400

In California, if a charge was dismissed, this is what a CRA like KRESS must do with that record.

What is not report it? (California prohibits CRAs from reporting dismissed charges)

400

A client in New Jersey asks why a dismissed charge from 3 years ago is not on the report. This is the reason.

What is New Jersey law prohibits CRAs from reporting dismissed records?


400

TRUE or FALSE — Under FCRA, the $75,000 salary exception means non-conviction records can be reported beyond 7 years for higher-paying jobs

What is TRUE? (Unless state law prohibits it — state law always prevails when more restrictive)

500

In background screening, this is the process of applying an employer's criteria to the results of a background check — resulting in "meets" or "does not meet requirements."

What is Adjudication?

500

Nolo Contendere — the defendant pleads "no contest" and the court finds them guilty.

What is a Conviction?

500

Under the FCRA, dismissed records are generally reportable for this many years — unless state law is more restrictive.

What is 7 years?

500

A client says "The disposition is blank — does that mean the person is clean?" This is what you tell them.

What is no — it likely means the case is still open or pending and no final disposition has been entered?

500

TRUE or FALSE — Massachusetts applies the 7-year CRA lookback to ALL records regardless of salary, making it stricter than federal FCRA.

What is TRUE? (Massachusetts has no $75K salary exception)