(Source: Commercial Appeal, The)

By Erik Schelzig
NASHVILLE - Supporters of blocking public access to the names and
addresses of Tennesseans with handgun carry permits appear to have a
hard time keeping their hands off the records.
Records obtained and reviewed by The Associated Press show that
copies of the state's database of more than 257,000 handgun permit
holders were recently requested by the state Republican Party and a
direct mail contractor that has done extensive work for the GOP's
legislative caucus.
Asked about those requests Monday, House Republican Caucus
chairman Glen Casada said he opposes using the database for
political purposes such as fundraising or get-out-the-vote efforts.
"I know they're going to use it for campaigns, but there's people
that would use it to break into homes and steal guns," said Casada
of Franklin. "And I just wish we could keep personal information
like that private."
The latest effort to close the records came after The Commercial
Appeal posted the full database on its Web site last year. No
Republican opposed closing the records to the public last session.
The bill - which would have closed the records for all uses,
including campaign purposes - failed to pass by just one vote in
June.
State Republican Party chairman Chris Devaney said the party
doesn't take a position on whether the records should be open.
"We are operating under the laws as they are right now, and if
they change we'll operate under those standards," he said. "We were
seeking that information, it's public information, and we wanted to
have it."
Also among those requesting the database was a woman named
Michele Wood, who said she was requesting the records on behalf of
the National Rifle Association. A spokesman for the organization
said Wood does not work for the NRA, and Wood did not immediately
reply to messages seeking comment.
The NRA was a vocal critic of The Commercial Appeal's use of the
handgun database, with chief lobbyist Chris W. Cox saying the
database would give burglars "a lighted pathway to the homes of gun
owners."
Open-government advocates argue that access to the permit records
helps the public monitor whether the state is properly issuing and
revoking permits for those not allowed to carry handguns.
A June 2 request for the permit records came from Ponte Vedra
Beach, Fla.-based Next Wave Communications Inc., the corporate
parent of GOP vendor Majority Strategies.
Majority Strategies has done about $370,000 worth of work for the
state GOP's Tennessee Legislative Campaign Committee since July 2008
and another $245,000 for Republican legislative candidates
individually, according to campaign finance records. Company
officials did not return a phone call seeking comment.
Casada said he considers it a "consistency issue" in calling on
Majority Strategies to refrain from using the database. But he said
there's a difference between the database being published and using
it for campaigning.
"The chances of a burglar getting that information from Majority
Strategies is probably zero, but if you just randomly publish it
there's a pretty good chance," he said.
Others who have requested the database this year include media
outlets like The Associated Press, gun show operator Bob Pope and a
doctoral student in criminology from Texas.
Originally published by Erik Schelzig Associated Press .
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