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Can You Get TSA PreCheck With A Criminal Record?

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Maybe you were caught shoplifting when you were 18 and got charged with a misdemeanor but only had to pay a fine. Or perhaps you drove home from a party when you were in your mid-20s, crashed into a tree, and got a DWI or even a DUI. Or, who knows, maybe you grew up in a tough neighborhood, had a bunch of felonies on your record and were sent to prison. You served your time decades ago, turned your life around and are now a law-abiding citizen.

The Sentencing Project is a Washington, D.C.-based research and advocacy center that works to reduce the use of incarceration in the United States and to address racial disparities in the criminal justice system. They say that as of 2015, between 70 million and 100 million – or as many as one in three Americans – have some type of criminal record.

The Brennan Center for Justice at New York University Law School is a nonprofit law and public policy institute. They said, also in 2015, that nearly half of Black males and almost 40% of white males have been arrested at least once by age 23.

Y’all, that’s a whole lot of people who have been arrested at one point or another.

For people with all these types of backgrounds, the same question has come up time and time again – can you get TSA PreCheck if you have a criminal record?

The simple answer? Maybe. It depends.

The TSA PreCheck program, of course, does a background check on all applicants. Their process includes looking at local, state and federal databases, as well as checking applicants against the no-fly list, criminal records and other potentially relevant sources of information. Applicants also have to submit fingerprints, so an FBI screening can be done.

In the end, the program only permits eligible, “low risk” travelers to enjoy expedited security screening at airports. If you have a history with the law, whether or not you’re considered “low risk,” or eventually can be considered as such, depends on when you got into trouble with the law, and for what.

According to this page of TSA.gov, you are permanently disqualified from PreCheck if you have any of the following offenses:

Or you may only have interim disqualification from PreCheck, and then you may be eligible after a certain amount of years. Also from TSA:

Conviction for one of the following felonies is disqualifying if the applicant was convicted, pled guilty (including ‘no contest’), or found not guilty by reason of insanity within seven years of the date of the application; OR if the applicant was released from incarceration after conviction within five years of the date of the application.

A person will also be disqualified if they’re wanted or under indictment in any civilian or military jurisdiction for a felony listed above, until the want or warrant is released or the indictment is dismissed.

Besides what’s included as a permanent or temporary disqualifier, TSA agents also have the authority to make judgment calls on what constitutes a threat. For example, although not listed above, anecdotal evidence suggests that a DUI less than 10 years old can disqualify an applicant from acceptance into the PreCheck program.

Because the TSA website is not super specific about how an applicant qualifies (or not) for the PreCheck program, the TSA customer service line is available for questions. Their number is (866) 289-9673.

If you’ve applied for TSA PreCheck and received a Preliminary Determination of Ineligibility, the notification they send should explain the basis for the ineligibility determination. You do have the right to appeal the TSA’s determination, and it would prudent to do so if you think they’ve made a mistake (i.e. you had a DUI but it was 14 years ago, you had a conviction but it was dismissed, etc.) If you decide to go that route, look into hiring a TSA PreCheck appeal lawyer.

Feature Photo: Designed by Freepik

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