In a move that promises to bolster its employment screening services,
publishing and information powerhouse Reed Elsevier said Thursday, February 21,
that it plans to acquire data broker ChoicePoint for $4.1 billion.
Alpharetta, Georgia-based ChoicePoint provides risk management services,
including criminal history searches, attitude assessments and other employment
screening services. Other major screening vendors include USIS, First Advantage
and Acxiom.
Reed Elsevier already has a presence in the background screening field
through its LexisNexis unit. It offers applicant screening as well as skills
assessment services.
“The market growth in risk information and analytics is highly attractive and
ChoicePoint brings important assets and market positions that fit well with our
existing business and, in combination, can be leveraged to provide enhanced
products for customers,” Reed Elsevier CEO Crispin Davis said in a
statement.
ChoicePoint was founded in 1997 in a spinoff from Equifax, the U.S.-based
credit bureau. In the company’s decade of operation, annual revenue grew from
about $400 million to approximately $1 billion.
“Since 1997, ChoicePoint has been a leader in our industry,” ChoicePoint CEO
Derek V. Smith said in a statement. “We developed innovative products that
helped our customers be successful. We created wealth for our shareholders. We
built a workplace culture and a respect for personal privacy that is recognized
as among the best in our industry and all U.S.-based businesses.”
ChoicePoint’s privacy record was stained a few years ago when the company
announced it had sold information about many consumers to people who turned out
to be identity thieves.
ChoicePoint said it sent notices to about 163,000
individuals who may have been affected by fraudulent and improper access to
ChoicePoint information services. The security breach led to a settlement with
the U.S. Federal Trade Commission in which ChoicePoint agreed to pay $10 million
in civil penalties and $5 million to be used to reimburse consumers for expenses
incurred because of identity theft caused by the breach.
—Ed Frauenheim