MDN.ORG:
Missouri Digital News
MDN.ORG
Mo. Digital News
Missouri Digital News
MDN.ORG:
Mo. Digital News
MDN.ORG:
Missouri Digital News
In a broadly bipartisan vote, the House backed legislation that forces the state Department of Revenue to destroy copies of any “source documents” that people have to provide when they apply for an endorsement to carry concealed weapons on their state-issued identification cards. Such documents can include things like gun owners’ birth certificates.
The bill has sped through the Legislature in the wake of a controversy in which the state Department of Revenue and the Missouri State Highway Patrol have been accused of gathering information about Missourians with concealed carry permits and then sharing those records with the federal government.
Before Thursday’s vote, House members expressed outrage at the departments’ actions.
The bill now goes to the state Senate, where Sen. Kurt Schaefer, R-Columbia, has spent the week grilling officials from the Department of Revenue and the highway patrol. Schaefer said Thursday
Schaefer indicated that he might delay passage of the Department of Revenue’s budget until Senate questions about the controversy have been fully answered.
"Based on not only what we know happened but how it was handled afterward, and obfuscated when we tried to find out the truth, there is serious question about the ability of certain persons to carry out their jobs in a reliable and reasonable way, and that's something that also that we're looking at,” Schaefer said.
Reporter Ellie Coatar contributed to this story.