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State Senate passes bill to protect gun owners’ “fundamental right" to privacy

Gun rights supporters at Grand Rapids City Hall in February 2014. (file photo)
Lindsey Smith
/
Michigan Radio
Gun rights supporters at Grand Rapids City Hall in February 2014. (file photo)
Gun rights supporters at Grand Rapids City Hall in February 2014. (file photo)
Credit Lindsey Smith / Michigan Radio
/
Michigan Radio
Gun rights supporters at Grand Rapids City Hall in February 2014. (file photo)

Some records about gun owners in Michigan would be shielded from the public under a bill that passed the state Senate Thursday.The bills had overwhelming bipartisan support. Only two state senators voted against the package.

If passed, the measure would change who can access information, like a person’s name and address, from pistol license applications and a database that tracks pistol histories.

Republican State Sen. Phil Pavlov, R-St. Clair Township, introduced the bill to protect what he calls gun owners’ “fundamental right" to privacy.

“When it comes time for releasing information on gun ownership, we just believe that that deserves a different level of protection and it shouldn’t be public information,” Pavlov said.

The public and the press would lose that access, but police would not.

“If there’s suspicion of a crime that a gun was used in, those are all ways that you can access the system. So law enforcement, certainly they need it for law enforcement purposes. It’s not something that needs to be public information on the streets,” Pavlov said.

The bill comes in response to a New York state newspaper that published information about registered gun owners there. He wanted to prevent it from happening in Michigan.

The bill now heads to the state House.

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