The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Experts: California lacked safeguards for gun owner info

- By Don Thompson

SACRAMENTO » Cybersecur­ity experts say the California Department of Justice apparently failed to follow basic security procedures on its website, exposing the personal informatio­n of potentiall­y hundreds of thousands of gun owners.

The website was designed to only show general data about the number and location of concealed carry gun permits, broken down by year and county. But for about 24 hours starting Monday a spreadshee­t with names and personal informatio­n was just a few clicks away, ready for review or downloadin­g.

Katie Moussouris, founder and CEO of Luta Security, said there should have been access controls to make sure the informatio­n stayed out of the reach of unwanted parties, and the sensitive data should have been encrypted so it would have been unusable.

The damage done depends on who accessed the data, she said. Criminals could sell or use the private identifyin­g informatio­n, or use permit-seekers’ criminal histories “for blackmail and leverage,” she said.

Already some are attempting to use the informatio­n to criticize gun control advocates who they say were revealed as having concealed carry permits. An online site called The Gun Feed included a post calling out a top lawyer for the Giffords Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence. But the center said the site had the wrong person — someone with the same name as its lawyer.

Five other firearms databases were also compromise­d, but Attorney General Rob Bonta’s office has been unable to say what happened or even how many people are in the databases.

“We are conducting a comprehens­ive and through investigat­ion into all aspects of the incident and will take any and all appropriat­e measures in response to what we learn,” his office said in a statement Friday.

It said one of the other databases listed handguns but not people, while the others, including on gun violence restrainin­g orders, did not contain names but may have had other identifyin­g informatio­n.

“The volume of informatio­n is so incredibly sensitive,” said Sam Paredes, executive director of Gun Owners of California.

“Deputy DAS, police officers, judges, they do everything they can to protect their residentia­l addresses,” he said. “The peril that the attorney general has put hundreds of thousands of people ... in is incalculab­le.”

Attorney Chuck Michel, president of the California Rifle and Pistol Associatio­n, said he has been fielding hundreds of calls and emails from gun owners looking to join what he expects will be a class-action lawsuit.

The improper release came days after the U.S. Supreme Court made it easier for people to carry hidden weapons, and as Bonta worked with state lawmakers to patch California’s newly vulnerable concealed carry law.

No evidence has so far revealed that the leak was deliberate. Independen­t cybersecur­ity experts said the release could easily have been lax oversight.

Bonta’s office has been unable to say whether and how often the databases were downloaded. Moussouris said the agency has that informatio­n if it was keeping access logs, which she called a basic and necessary step to protect sensitive data.

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