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Politics & Government

RAND Retracts Study Linking Crime Hikes With Pot-Shop Closures

Public safety advocates widely criticized the report and questioned the study's data.

The RAND Corp. on Monday officially retracted a study that linked increases in crime to the closing of marijuana dispensaries around Los Angeles.

Public safety advocates widely criticized the report and questioned the study's data, prompting the Santa Monica-based think tank to review its study. RAND initially on Oct. 12.

The review found the study did not include crime data reported by the Los Angeles Police Department, according to RAND, which plans to conduct a new analysis that could take months to complete.

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The study's authors were unaware that data from third-party crime-mapping service CrimeReports.com did not include LAPD data, RAND Vice President of Infrastructure, Safety and Environment Debra Knopman said.

"The whole idea of the study was to try to get insight as to whether or not there was an effect on crime, whatever direction, as a consequence of the city's closure order of some dispensaries. Having an incomplete data set renders that kind of analysis invalid," Knopman said.

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Knopman called the retraction a "rare failure" of the company's peer review system.

"We take our commitment to quality and objectivity seriously so we have retracted the study in order to correct it,'' she said.

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