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NREMT Felony Conviction Policy
The NREMT will deny registration or
take other appropriate actions in regards to applicants for registration or
reregistration when a felony conviction has occurred. Decisions effecting
eligibility will be based upon the following categories. Applicants may appeal
decisions made by the Registry as outlined in the National Registry of Emergency
Medical Technicians Registry Disciplinary Policy.
EMT Certification – Criminal
Convictions
Preamble:
EMS
practitioners, by virtue of their state licensure, certification, or national
registration, have unsupervised, intimate, physical and emotional contact with
patients at a time of maximum physical and emotional vulnerability, as well as
unsupervised access to personal property. In this capacity, they are placed in a
position of the highest public trust, even above that granted to other public
safety professionals and most other health care providers. While police officers
require warrants to enter private property, and are subject to substantial
oversight when engaging in “strip searches” or other intrusive practices,
EMTs are afforded free access to the homes and intimate body parts of patients
who are extremely vulnerable, and who may be unable to defend or protect
themselves, voice objections to particular actions, or provide accurate accounts
of events at a later time.
Citizens in need of out-of-hospital medical services rely on the EMS System and
the existence of state licensure/certification or national registration to
assure that those who respond to their calls for aid are worthy of this
extraordinary trust. It is well accepted in the United States that persons who
have been convicted of criminal conduct may not serve as police officers. In
light of the high degree of trust conferred upon EMTs by virtue of licensure,
certification, or registration, EMTs should be held to a similar, if not higher,
standard. For these reasons, the EMS certifying/licensing/registration agency
has a duty to exclude individuals who pose a risk to public health and safety by
virtue of conviction of certain crimes.
General Denial:
Registration of
individuals convicted of certain crimes present an unreasonable risk to public
health and safety. Thus, applications for certification by individuals convicted
of the following crimes will be denied in all cases.
1.
Felonies involving
sexual misconduct where the victim’s failure to affirmatively consent is an
element of the crime, such as forcible rape.
2.
Felonies involving the
sexual or physical abuse of children, the elderly or the infirm, such as sexual
misconduct with a child, making or distributing child pornography or using a
child in a sexual display, incest involving a child, assault on an elderly or
infirm person.
3.
Any crime in which the
victim is an out-of-hospital patient or a patient or resident of a health care
facility including abuse, neglect, theft from, or financial exploitation of a
person entrusted to the care or protection of the applicant.
Presumptive
Denial:
Applications
for registration by individuals in the following categories will be denied
except in extraordinary circumstances, and then will be granted only if the
applicant establishes by clear and convincing evidence that certification will
not jeopardize public health and safety.
1.
Applications for
certification by individuals who have been convicted of any crime and who are
currently incarcerated, on work release, on probation or on parole.
2.
Application for
certification by individuals convicted of crimes in the following categories
unless at least five years have passed since the conviction OR five years have
passed since release from custodial confinement whichever occurs later:
a.
Serious crimes of
violence against persons, such as assault or battery with a dangerous weapon,
aggravated assault and battery, murder or attempted murder, manslaughter except
involuntary manslaughter, kidnapping, robbery of any degree; or arson.
b.
Crimes involving
controlled substances or synthetics, including unlawful possession or
distribution, or intent to distribute unlawfully, Schedule I through V drugs as
defined by the Uniform Controlled Dangerous Substances Act.
c.
Serious crimes against
property, such as grand larceny, burglary, embezzlement or insurance fraud.
d.
Any other crime
involving sexual misconduct.
Discretionary
Denial:
Applications for registration by individuals
convicted of any crimes including DUI, but not including minor traffic
violations may be denied after consideration of the following factors.
1.
The seriousness of the
crime.
2.
Whether the crime
relates directly to the skills of prehospital care service and the delivery of
patient care.
3.
How much time has
elapsed since the crime was committed.
4.
Whether the crime
involved violence to, or abuse of, another person.
5.
Whether the crime
involved a minor or a person of diminished capacity.
6.
Whether the
applicant’s actions and conduct since the crime occurred are consistent with
the holding of a position of public trust.
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