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Why are background checks important to ME?
ME Services, Inc. proudly displays the Technician Seal of Safety, a professional contractor organization that advocates the use of pre-employment
background checks and drug testing as allowed by law.

Now, many contractors in
the home services business do not bother to practice such stringent policies.
But that’s what distinguishes these elite contractors from the rest. When you see the Technician Seal of Safety™ you know you’re dealing with a professional who cares about your personal safety, the safety of your family, and the well-being and security of your home.
Dangerous house calls.
How much do you know about
the people working in your home?
From abcnews.com
June 28 — Most of us can't imagine inviting a convicted felon into our home.
However, many families are doing just that.
The recent revelation that Utah police investigating the kidnapping of Elizabeth
Smart are focusing attention on an ex-convict who worked as a handyman in the
Smarts' home is bringing more attention to the problem.
Criminal background checks are required for workers in some professions — like
teachers, school bus drivers and some health-care workers — but they are not
mandated for most other jobs.
As a result, all around the country there are examples of home service companies
taking on dangerous employees. In Kansas City, ex-convict Wesley Purkey was
working as a plumber when he beat to death an 80-year-old woman. In California,
ex-convict Mesa Kasem worked as a deliveryman for an auction house when he and
an accomplice murdered one of the clients. And in Pennsylvania, convicted felon
John Cramer was working as a meter reader when he raped a woman in her home. In
each of these cases the employer did not conduct a criminal background check.
Some law enforcement officials believe all employers who provide home services
should conduct background checks and they should not hire anyone with a criminal
record. There are, tragically, many examples that bolster his argument.
Six years ago, Don and Terina Ferminick and their and five-month-old daughter
had just moved to Alameda, Calif., where Don took a position as a church
minister. "Our life was wonderful," Ferminick says of his life then. But
Ferminick's family was permanently scarred when Giles Nadey came to clean the > carpets of the church rectory.
Terina went to the rectory to pay Nadey and never returned. That evening
Ferminick went to check on Terina and found his wife stabbed to death and
covered with blood. There was even blood on the walls. "I guess through the
course of events, he sodomized her, and I guess to cover up what he had done he
decided to take her life," Ferminick says.
Nadey was later convicted of the murder and sentenced to death. What was
particularly troubling to Ferminick was the thought that his wife's murder might
have been prevented. Had Nadey's employers bothered to run a background check,
they would have learned that he had two previous felony convictions. Nadey even
acknowledged his criminal record on his job application, but the company still
hired him to clean carpets in people's homes.
Two years later, in the same county, Kerry Spooner-Dean, a 30-year-old
pediatrician, was viciously stabbed to death by another carpet cleaner named
Jerrold Woods. Woods had eight prior convictions for armed robbery, but the
carpet cleaning company never did a background check. Dan Dean, the victim's
husband, recently won a $9 million judgment against the company.
Too Expensive to Monitor?
Domino's, which settled a lawsuit with a Nebraska woman who was raped by David
Taitte, one of its deliverymen, notes that it delivers over 7 million pizzas a
week and this was the first incident of its kind.
The company canceled the contract with the local franchise because it failed to
check Taitte's driving record, but it does not require its franchise owners to
do criminal background checks. Company officials say the procedure would be too
expensive and complicated.
Taitte is serving 25-30 years in a Nebraska prison for the rape. At the time he
applied for his job at Domino's, he had already been in jail 16 times, including
once for sexual assault. He says he knew Domino's would not hire him if he
admitted to his convictions. So he left the box blank on the application where
it asked if he was a felon.
Taitte argues that denying ex-cons jobs keeps them from rehabilitating
themselves. "They already served their time and they're just looking to try to
get a new job — start a new life."
But Oakland County prosecutor Jim Anderson, whose office handled both the
Ferminick and the Spooner-Dean murders, calls the issue a "no-brainer."
Consultant Barry Shamis, like Anderson, believes that people are put at risk
when companies fail to do background checks on workers who provide in-home
services. "If you don't do criminal background checks, you're making a huge
mistake."
Shamis says many companies are afraid of the cost of background checks, but
argues that the checks are relatively inexpensive. Companies like American
Background say they can do a fairly thorough check of a job applicant's history — county by county — for $30 to $60. And Tony Raker, who works for the company,
says the checks turn up criminal records with a startling frequency — more than
one in every 10 employees. At one company, 22 percent of the applicants for the
job of cable TV installer come up with criminal records.
Can They Afford Not to?
More and more companies that don't conduct checks have to deal with expensive
lawsuits.
Sears Roebuck and Co. settled a lawsuit for an undisclosed amount with a
Maryland woman who was assaulted in her home by one of its carpet cleaners.
Again, the worker had a long criminal record when he started cleaning carpets
for Sears. Though he technically worked for a subcontractor that did not do a
background check, the victim filed a lawsuit against Sears. The company now
requires background checks of all their home service workers.
In another example, Kristi Reade successfully sued the Kirby Company, which
makes vacuum cleaners, after a salesman sexually assaulted her nine years ago.
At the time, the assailant was on probation for indecency with a child and the
independent distributor that hired him never checked his background.
Kirby says it "has sold millions of machines to satisfied individuals" and
although background checks were suggested in the past, the company has "modified
its prior policy to require distributors to conduct these background checks."
As for Reade, she and her family have moved to a different state and she says
she never opens her door to any workers unless someone else is there with her. "Until companies make a commitment to check every person they hire," she says,
"Every time a woman lets someone into her home, she's at risk."
ME Services
McCormick Electrical Services, Inc.
606 E. Center St.
North Liberty IN 46554-9035
574-656-3500
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