-Caveat Lector-

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,33361,00.html

                 Gun Panel Meets and Comes Under Fire

                                    WASHINGTON � The panel appointed by
                                    President Bill Clinton to study existing research
                                    and data on firearms met for the first
                                    time Thursday and was immediately shot at for
                                    allegedly being stacked with pro-gun
                                    control academics and funded by advocates for
                                    tighter gun control laws.

                                    The panel, called the Committee to Improve
                 Research Information and Data on Firearms, will operate under
                 the supervision of the National Academy of Sciences and the National
                 Research Council, with a final paper due in May 2003.

                 But John Lott, a criminal researcher who is skeptical of gun control 
laws,
                 says the panel is like "a parting present from President Clinton," 
that will be
                 delivered just in time to boost pro-gun control candidates in the 2004
                 elections.

                 "It's not a balanced panel," Lott, a Yale University law professor, 
said
                 Thursday after the committee held its inaugural meeting in 
Washington, D.C.

                 The panel has "selectively picked the questions which focus on all of 
the bad
                 aspects of guns and not the benefits," said Lott. "And, they've been 
selective
                 in who they have put on the panel and they are making sure the report 
comes
                 out just before a major election."

                 According to its mission statement, the committee is supposed to study
                 current firearms research and data, including methodologies and 
prevention,
                 intervention and control strategies," illegal firearms markets and the
                 "complex ways in which firearms may become embedded in the community."

                 The panel has 16 members, including former Carter administration 
Attorney
                 General Benjamin Civiletti, a gun control advocate.

                 "The nation can no longer afford to let the gun lobby's distortion of 
the
                 Constitution cripple every reasonable attempt to implement an 
effective
                 national policy towards guns and crime," Civiletti said in The 
Washington
                 Post in 1992.

                 The panel also includes Steven Levitt, a University of Chicago 
professor who
                 has written extensively on guns and crime and authored a 
controversial study
                 that said the legalization of abortion in the United States in the 
early
                 1970s may explain in part the drop in crime in the last several years.

                 And the committee is funded in part by Joyce Foundation and the David 
&
                 Lucille Packard Foundation, both generous supporters of anti-gun 
groups in
                 the past.

                 But the committee also includes James Q. Wilson, who has supported gun
                 ownership rights in his writings. Wilson, a professor of political 
science at
                 Pepperdine University, said Thursday that he does not believe the
                 committee's mission is to direct policy, rather to take a tough look 
at existing
                 data in hopes of improving resources for policymakers, researchers and
                 social scientists in the future.

                 He said this is the fourth time he has sat on a National Academy of 
Sciences
                 panel and each time he has found it to be balanced and apolitical. 
"My hope
                 and belief is this panel will do the same thing," he said. "I could 
be wrong,
                 but I've been on this loop before and I expect it will be the same."

                 Carol Petrie of the National Research Council says those in charge of 
the
                 selection process took recommendations from the varying Academy of
                 Science departments and tried to avoid choosing persons with "extreme
                 views" either way.

                 "It's not that the people may not have personal biases," she said, 
but they all
                 have "credible, objective views of research." If the committee finds 
that it does
                 not have a balance, she added, they are not averse to adding one or 
two new
                 members.

                 "We wanted people who would be open-minded to the facts," she said. 
"It's a
                 consensus process."

                 Lott did not make the cut. His research of 3,054 U.S. counties over a 
17-year
                 period resulted in a conclusion that tough gun control laws do not 
deter
                 crime, but in those states and counties that have adapted 
concealed-carry
                 laws allowing citizens to carry firearms in public, crime has dropped.

                 His work has been criticized by gun control groups before and today 
was no
                 exception.

                 "Are all his findings believable?" challenged Douglas Weil of the 
Brady
                 Center to Prevent Gun Violence. "Why do we need to know this stuff?"

                 Dave Kopel, research director for the Independence Institute and a 
vocal
                 advocate for Second Amendment rights, charged that the real intent of 
the
                 committee was to debunk research that supports the right to own guns,
                 including Lott's work, which has added scholarly heft to the 
arguments made
                 by gun rights groups in the last two years.

                 "I don't think they can say they have no predisposed outcome," Kopel 
said. "I
                 think it's a group of people who are first class, respectable folks � 
but who
                 are inclined to be on the control side."

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