Marin Independent Journal

Researcher­s on gun violence can receive data, court rules

- By Cathie Anderson

California's Department of Justice can continue to share firearm data with researcher­s studying the causes of gun violence, per a new court order.

The Fourth District Court of Appeal ruled that firearm data can be accessed by the University of California Firearm Violence Research Center and others as directed in Assembly Bill 173, which required the study of gun violence, the impact of it and effective responses.

Attorney General Rob Bonta hailed the threejudge panel's decision regarding Barba v. Bonta as a victory in the state's ongoing campaign to curb gun violence.

In the case, plaintiffs sought to prevent researcher­s from accessing data on firearms purchases in California, saying it violated their privacy. They had secured a preliminar­y injunction from a trial court that prevented the DOJ from releasing the informatio­n.

The court's decision, issued Friday, overturned that injunction. The lower court had not weighed the state's establishe­d public health interest when it allowed the preliminar­y injunction, the appeal court justices said, and gun rights groups didn't effectivel­y rebut Bonta's evidence showing the need for empirical research.

“AB 173's informatio­nsharing serves the important goal of enabling research that supports informed policymaki­ng aimed at reducing and preventing firearm violence,” Bonta said. “Research and data are vital in our efforts to prevent gun violence in California and provide a clear path to help us save lives.”

Brad Benbrook and Steve Duvernay of Benbrook Law Group, the attorneys representi­ng the plaintiffs, did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

The court order allows the DOJ to resume providing the data to the University of California Firearm Violence Research Center and other qualified researcher­s, Bonta said.

Garen J. Wintemute, director of the Violence Prevention Research Program at the University of California, Davis, called the decision “an important victory for science.”

Wintemute and his team have used the data extensivel­y to study the impact of gun violence and potential ways to prevent deaths.

“It reaffirms the value of objective evidence in understand­ing and intervenin­g on important health problems, firearm violence among them,” Wintemute said. “For more than 30 years, researcher­s at UC Davis and elsewhere have used the data in question to conduct vital research that simply couldn't be done anywhere else. We're glad to be able to return to that important work, which will improve health and safety here in California and across the country.”

California law has required the DOJ to maintain records of handgun sales in California since the 1950s, Bonta noted in the news release about the court decision. Legislator­s recently added sales of long guns and ammunition.

This data provide an opportunit­y for research not available anywhere else, the DOJ stated, and UCD researcher­s have been using the informatio­n in studies since 1989.

In 2016, the state Legislatur­e directed the Regents of the University of California to establish a Firearm Violence Research Center to produce interdisci­plinary research on the nature and consequenc­es of firearm violence, DOJ officials said. The UC center also works with policymake­rs to identify, implement and evaluate innovative firearm violence prevention policies and programs.

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