PA Lawmakers Rethink Funding For Child ID Kits After Investigation


ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up to receiveย our biggest storiesย as soon as theyโ€™re published.

This article is co-published with The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan local newsroom that informs and engages with Texans. Sign up forย The Brief Weeklyย to get up to speed on their essential coverage of Texas issues.

Byย Jeremy Schwartzย |ย ProPublica

The National Child Identification Program has received contracts from multiple states to supply fingerprinting kits for schoolchildren despite providing no evidence that they have ever been used to find a missing child. Credit: Photo illustration by ProPublica and The Texas Tribune. Source images: Kits from the National Child Identification Program.

Two months after Texas lawmakers stripped millions of dollars from a company that supplies child identification kits, a bill to fund a similar program in Pennsylvania is facing key opposition.

Advertisements


In March, two Pennsylvania senatorsย filed legislationย that called for purchasing and distributing child identification kits for all of the stateโ€™s first graders. The kits, which would cost the stateย about $350,000, needed to use โ€œinklessโ€ fingerprinting technology, according to the bill.

Such a provision would provide an advantage to one vendor: the National Child Identification Program, a Waco, Texas, company run by former NFL player Kenny Hansmire, who has a track record of failed businesses and has been disciplined by Connecticut banking regulators.

On May 2, the bill sailed through the Senate Education Committee on a unanimous vote, a key step that was celebrated by the companyโ€™s representatives and the legislationโ€™s authors. During a press conference that day, Hansmire turned to a common phrase he uses to promote the kits, calling the bill a โ€œgift of safetyโ€ and urging the lawmakers to support the measure.

Advertisements


โ€œWeโ€™re asking the state of Pennsylvania to step up, the Senate and the House to step up,โ€ he said.

A week later, ProPublica and The Texas Tribune published an investigation that found no evidence that the kits had ever been used to find a missing child and that the company had used exaggerated statistics as it sought to secure government dollars across the country.

Advertisements


After the investigation was published, Texas lawmakers โ€” who had approved legislation in 2021 that delivered nearly $6 million to the company โ€” zeroed out future funding for the effort.

Pennsylvania lawmakers also began taking a closer look at the company. The billโ€™s authors removed the requirement that kits be โ€œinkless,โ€ and the measure passed the full Senate last month with a 34-15 vote. Now the bill is awaiting a hearing in the House Education Committee. But the chair of that committee told the news organizations that he has no plans to bring the legislation forward for a vote.

Jason Thompson, a spokesperson for bill sponsors Sens. Scott Martin and Camera Bartolotta, both Republicans, said the removal of the provision that required the kits to be โ€œinklessโ€ would allow a wider pool of potential vendors to seek a state contract. Hansmire has claimed that his companyโ€™s inkless technology makes its kits superior.

Advertisements


โ€œUnderstanding the clear value of providing these kits to young people, Senator Bartolotta and Senator Martin amended their bill to provide additional flexibility to ensure whatever kits are distributed to students meet the needs of Pennsylvania families, law enforcement and taxpayers,โ€ Thompson said.

But that change was not enough to persuade multiple state lawmakers who questioned the use of taxpayer funding to pay for the kits, including Rep. Peter Schweyer, chair of the House Education Committee.

Advertisements



โ€œThis just never seemed like it was all that well thought out,โ€ Schweyer, a Democrat, said, adding that addressing school violence and mental health are more urgent priorities. โ€œIโ€™d rather hire a couple more cops or spend money on a couple more psychologists in our most at-risk schools.โ€

Two Democratic senators offered similar concerns.

Advertisements


Sen. Maria Collett said she was worried that the legislation, as originally proposed, appeared to benefit a single vendor. She noted that several nonprofits in the state already provide child ID kits for free to parents who want them.

โ€œTo ask the taxpayers of Pennsylvania to invest hundreds of thousands of dollars, year over year, to a private vendor for a product that we have no data showing the efficacy of is unconscionable, in my opinion,โ€ she said.

Advertisements


Sen. Nikil Saval said the news organizationsโ€™ investigation raised concerns among lawmakers.

โ€œA number of us, initially, were supportive of the effort,โ€ Saval said. โ€œFrankly, the reporting gave a number of us pause.โ€

Beyond questions of the kitsโ€™ effectiveness, the news outletsโ€™ investigation found Hansmire had a string of failed businesses, had millions of dollars in outstanding federal tax liens and had previously been barred from some finance-related business in Connecticut by banking regulators because of his role in an alleged scheme to defraud or mislead investors.

Advertisements


Hansmire, who did not respond to emailed questions for this article, has said the kits help law enforcement find missing children and save time during the early stages of a search. But none of the law enforcement agencies contacted by the news outlets could recall the kits having assisted in finding a missing child.

Hansmire also previously said that his legal disputes, including his sanction in Connecticut, had been โ€œproperly resolved, closed and are completely unrelated to the National Child ID Program.โ€ He claimed to have โ€œpaid debts entirelyโ€ but did not provide details.

Advertisements

The Pennsylvania House Education Committee is scheduled to reconvene in late September, following the Legislatureโ€™s summer break.

If the committee takes no action, another legislative avenue called a โ€œcode billโ€ could potentially provide funding for the kits, but Schweyer said he isnโ€™t aware of a push for such a move.

โ€œIt doesnโ€™t feel like thereโ€™s a lot of momentum for it here,โ€ he said. Schweyer added: โ€œFor now, itโ€™s a dead issue in Pennsylvania.โ€

Advertisements

Report a correction via email | Editorial standards and policies