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Committee refers bill allowing limited access to expunged records for firearms permit checks

March 04, 2026 | 2026 Legislature MN, Minnesota


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Committee refers bill allowing limited access to expunged records for firearms permit checks
Vice Chair Witte presented House File 3762, a targeted bill to permit issuing authorities limited access to expunged records solely for permit‑to‑carry and permit‑to‑acquire determinations. The author said the bill does not create new disqualifiers but allows sheriffs to see sealed records where those records may reveal statutory prohibitions during the 30‑day statutory review window.

Mark Empting, Clay County sheriff and Minnesota Sheriffs Association representative, said expunged records can remove critical context—such as domestic‑related conduct or reduced felony pleas—that matters to firearm eligibility. “If a disqualifying event is sealed from us, we cannot lawfully deny that permit,” Empting said, arguing the proposal is a narrow operational fix to preserve the integrity of background checks.

Committee members voiced privacy concerns about opening expunged records and asked whether the gap could be fixed by relaying relevant information to federal databases (NICS) during expungement. Chair Mueller and others also asked the author to confirm the bill’s effective date; counsel noted that because the bill is a policy bill and is silent on effective date, the default would be Aug. 1 unless amended to make it effective upon enactment. Nonpartisan counsel described the applicant appeal process: an applicant denied has 20 business days to submit additional information; the sheriff must respond within 15 days, and the applicant may seek de novo district court review.

Vice Chair Witte said he was willing to work with BCA and other partners on timing and data solutions; the committee referred HF3762 to the general register by voice vote. The transcript records the referral but does not include a roll‑call tally.

Next steps: HF3762 moves to the general register; members signaled interest in exploring alternative data flows and an effective‑date amendment.

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