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Why
should I fingerprint my kids?
A person’s fingerprints never change, and are one of the most valuable
investigative tools available to law enforcement. In the unfortunate event
of a missing child, fingerprints can be used to track the movements of
the child and the abductor. During the crucial first moments after a child
is discovered missing, parents are often too emotionally upset to remember
details such as the child’s height, weight, and blood type. child identification
kits (like our Baby Prints, Kid Prints & Teen Prints Sasfety ID Kits)
condense this information into a compact booklet that can be simply handed
to the first investigators on the scene.
How
do I know I've Fingerprinted My Child Correctly?
In most all ID kits or fingerprint programs designed for the parent, caregiver
or layperson to do the fingerprinting, instructions are usually included.
According to the information we have been provided by the agencies mentioned
above, only 20% of the print needs to be of good quality in fingerprints
in order for the police to get a match. This means out of 10 fingers only
two fingers have to be been done right. Our belief is that the average
adult, with average intelligence, and average reading skills can do a
great deal better than that minimum 20%.
There are a very select few individuals and organizatoins that promote
the premise that only police agencies or forensic personnel or others
professionally trained, are capable of doing an adequate job of fingerprinting
children. These organizations and individuals most often are also selling
an expensive or inexpensive program that has you the pareanat sending
them your child's picture and personal information and then waiting several
weeks for that information to come back to you in the form of an id card,
or digitized fingerprint and data card.
Aren’t
child identification cards the same thing?
No. An identification card is usually laminated and therefore once made
can't reused. That is why it is important to have them re-done each year.
The parent should be carrying the ID card on them, child ID kits are kept
in one safe location, easily accessible for use by the police agency investigating,
in the event of an emergency. Other forms of identification can be placed
on the child's person, but should not take the place of a parent carrying
one as well.
Can fingerprinting protect my child
from abduction?
Fingerprinting won’t help to prevent abduction, or even keep a child from
running away. However, fingerprinting a child will likely encourage dialogue
between parents and the child about the issue of safety. Child safety
color books, websites like our Kid
Tips 101 and The Teen Scene,
the site you are on here is for adults, and other free materials are available
as resources on safety rules and tips for both parent and child.
Isn’t fingerprinting children and non-criminals
an invasion of privacy?
Some people think so. That is why our child ID Kits are designed to be
completed and stored by parents, at home. This eliminates the need to
take the child to the police or sheriff’s office, to have the child fingerprinted
by an unfamiliar person, or to have the child’s fingerprints kept in the
public record.
I’ve already photographed and videotaped
my child…isn’t that enough?
Video tapes are nice, but not realistic for providing the police that
instant and immediate data and photograph information theyneed. If you
are committed to taking advantage of every available tool for protecting
your child, he or she should certainly be fingerprinted every year. Fingerprints
are one of the most effective tools for locating a missing person.
If fingerprints never change, why should
I update them each year?
Local, state and federal police agencies have all told us that the formation
of the print itself stays the same, but between the ages of birth to about
12 years of age, the depth and clarity of a fingerprint becomes more defined,
easier to read and print. From that point on, they say that you should
still continue to fingerprint your kids up through age 18. There are many
things that can alter a print, even temporarily; it can be as simple as
a paper cut, a burn, a cut from a knife or broken glass. All of these
and other possibilities can change the immediate and sometimes long term
form of a fingerprint. These changes can often help in quicker identification
of a found child, saving hours and sometimes days of the identification
process.
Who is qualified to fingerprint children?
This question might be easier to answer if it was who is NOT qualified.
If you do not want to believe what I tell you here, (and I am telling
you that YES, you are qualified to take someone's fingerprints) then call
your local police, sheriff or highway patrol office, your local state
department of justice, the federal department of justice, the FBI, and/or
your local Boy Scouts of America district office, or Fingerprint
Merit Badge Counselor. Ask them if you, as a layperson, with the proper
instructions, written or verbal, could take a usable print from a child
or adult.
OPINION
I will be the first to say that any method you use to document vital information
on your children is a good thing. It is my belief, and the concepts that
motivate this organization that you should have those made available to
you in as inexpensive, and easy to access manner as possible. The most
important thing is that you do the following every year for each of your
children. (It can't hurt to have it on your college age kids and yourself
as well)
Fingerprint both hands (fingers and palm)
Footprint
babies through about age 4
Take
a good quality head and shoulder picture
each year annually
Have
a viable DNA sample stored
For
more information go HERE
(Printable
Copy Here...set your printer to double side, this is a two sided copy)
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