Hiring the right talent is critical but one overlooked detail in your background screening process can cost your company millions. Employers often assume background checks are routine, yet the legal landscape tells a different story. The majority of lawsuits tied to employment screening aren’t about discrimination or bad hires—they’re about technical compliance mistakes under the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA). These errors are easy to make and expensive to fix.
Research shows that approximately 73% of FCRA-related lawsuits against employers stem from these three common mistakes:
- Non-compliant disclosure forms
- Missing or delayed pre-adverse action notices
- Inadequate authorization forms
The consequences can be significant: statutory damages of $100–$1,000 per violation, plus attorney fees, with settlements often reaching mid-six to seven figures.
Emerging Risk: Disparate Impact Discrimination
Background check policies and particularly those applying strict pass/fail criteria based on criminal history can unintentionally violate Title VII if they disproportionately impact protected groups. The EEOC has successfully challenged such blanket policies in litigation.
EEOC guidance emphasizes individualized assessments, considering:
- The nature of the offense
- Time elapsed since the offense
- Relevance to the job
Relying on generalized exclusions without job-specific review creates legal risk. Additionally, many state and local laws impose specific requirements for individualized assessments.
Best Practices to Reduce Lawsuit Risk
To minimize exposure from background screening:
- Use standalone, plain-language disclosure forms before any check.
- Obtain written authorization in a separate form, not embedded in applications.
- Follow the adverse action protocol: provide a pre-adverse notice with a copy of the report and summary of rights, and wait at least five business days before issuing the final notice.
- Allow candidates to dispute findings.
- Implement individualized assessments, especially for criminal record policies.
- Regularly audit processes and train HR staff on evolving regulations.
Disclaimer: This communication is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. The summary provided in this alert does not, and cannot, cover in detail what employers need to know about the amendments to the Philadelphia Fair Chance Law or how to incorporate its requirements into their hiring process. No recipient should act or refrain from acting based on any information provided here without advice from a qualified attorney licensed in the applicable jurisdiction.

