Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

Personal info on California gun owners wrongly made public

- By Don Thompson

SACRAMENTO » The California Department of Justice on Wednesday acknowledg­ed the agency wrongly made public the personal informatio­n of perhaps hundreds of thousands of gun owners in up to six state-operated databases, a broader exposure than the agency initially disclosed a day earlier.

Rob Bonta, the Democrat who heads the agency and is running for reelection in November, said he was “deeply disturbed and angered” by the failure to protect the informatio­n his department is entrusted to keep. He ordered an investigat­ion and promised to fix any problems.

“This unauthoriz­ed release of personal informatio­n is unacceptab­le and falls far short of my expectatio­ns for this department,” he said.

The California Rifle and Pistol Associatio­n noted that the release came days after the U.S. Supreme Court threw out New York's requiremen­t that those seeking to carry concealed weapons provide a reason. That also derailed California's similar requiremen­t, though state lawmakers and Bonta are working to impose new requiremen­ts.

The associatio­n said the “unconscion­able” release included informatio­n on law enforcemen­t officials including judges, as well as others who had sought permits “like rape and domestic violence victims.”

Names, dates of birth, gender, race, driver's license numbers, addresses and criminal histories were exposed for people who were granted or denied permits to carry concealed weapons between 2011 and 2021, the department said. Social Security numbers and financial informatio­n were not disclosed.

In addition, the state's Assault Weapon Registry, Handguns Certified for Sale, Dealer Record of Sale, Firearm Certificat­e Safety and Gun Violence Restrainin­g

Order dashboards were affected, the department said. Officials said were investigat­ing the extent to which personal informatio­n was exposed in those databases.

The informatio­n on concealed carry permits was publicly available on a spreadshee­t for less than 24 hours, officials said, from the time the department updated its Firearms Dashboard Portal on Monday afternoon until it shut down the website Tuesday morning.

“It is infuriatin­g that people who have been complying with the law have been put at risk by this breach,” said Butte County Sheriff Kory Honea, president of the California State Sheriffs' Associatio­n. He said sheriffs are concerned about the risk it poses to permit holders.

Bonta's office could not immediatel­y say how many individual­s are in each database, whether the data was downloaded and how often, and when the public website would be restored.

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