They’ve Never Been Arrested. Why Does the FBI List Thousands of Service Members as Potential Criminals?
An estimated 10,000 veterans have false criminal records due to military 'titling,' blocking jobs, clearances, and Second Amendment rights, advocates and a federal lawsuit reveal.
4 Articles
4 Articles
Military “Titling” System Wrongly Strips Service Members of Gun Rights — Thousands Branded as Criminals Without Charges
iStock-542578026 A Bureaucratic Trap with Real Consequences Imagine serving your country honorably—never arrested, never convicted—yet finding out years later that the FBI lists you as a criminal. That’s the reality for thousands of veterans and service members caught in a shadowy military justice practice called “titling.” Under this system, being named as a “subject” in a military investigation can place your name in federal criminal databases…
They’ve never been arrested. Why does the FBI list thousands of service members as potential criminals?
Denise Rosales has fallen victim to a military justice process called “titling”— that’s left potentially thousands of veterans saddled with false criminal histories.
Thousands of service members can't get jobs after FBI 'humiliating' blunder: analysis
Thousands of U.S. veterans are potentially being shut out of jobs and branded as criminals because of what one analyst called a “humiliating” FBI blunder under President Donald Trump.The War Horse report, published by Mother Jones on Thursday, focuses on several service members who are struggling to find employment due to a bizarre error with an FBI list called "titling" that catalogues them as "likely criminals.""The term sounds nonthreatening …
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