National Law Enforcement Telecommunications System Law and Legal Definition
The National Law Enforcement Telecommunications System (NLETS) is an information sharing network. It is an interface to search each state's criminal and driver records and the License Plate Reader (LPR) records going back one year maintained by the U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP). The NLETS helps a law enforcement agency in one state to search for someone's criminal and driver records in another state. NLETS potentially serves as a better tool to search for minor misdemeanors and traffic violations that would not be in the National Crime Information Center.
Legal Definition list
- National Labor-Management Panel
- National Labor Relations Board
- National Labor Relations Act (NLRA)
- National Labor Relation Board
- National Invasive Species Council
- National Law Enforcement Telecommunications System
- National Lawyers Guild
- National Manufactured Housing Construction and Safety Standards Act
- National Marine Fisheries Service
- National Maximum Speed Law
- National Mediation Board [NMB]
Related Legal Terms
- 9-1-1 System
- ABA-Approved Law Schools
- Ability to Pay [Tax Law]
- Above the Line Costs (Entertainment Law)
- Absence Rate [Employment Law]
- Absolute Law
- Academy for International Conflict Management and Peacebuilding [USIP]
- Accelerated Cost Recovery System
- Access Control List [National Security]
- Access Control Mechanism [National Security]