NRA claims bankruptcy, plans to leave N.Y.
Lapierre: Group will incorporate in Texas in future
Executive Vice President Wayne Lapierre says the nation’s most influential guns-rights group will seek to incorporate in Texas.
The National Rifle Association announced Friday it has filed for bankruptcy protection and will seek to incorporate the nation’s influential gunrights group in Texas instead of New York.
The announcement came months after New York’s attorney general sued the organization over claims that top executives illegally diverted millions of dollars for lavish personal trips, no-show contracts for associates and other expenditures.
The pandemic has also upended the NRA, which last year laid off dozens of employees. The group canceled its national convention and scuttled fundraising. The NRA’S bankruptcy filing listed between $100 million and $500 million in assets and between $100 million and $500 million in liabilities. Still, the NRA claimed the organization was “in its strongest financial condition in years.”
The NRA filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in federal court in Dallas and said it planned to incorporate in Texas, where records show it formed a limited liability corporation, Sea Girt LLC, in November 2020. Sea Girt LLC made a separate bankruptcy filing Friday, listing fewer than $100,000 in liabilities. In its filing, the NRA said its leader, Executive Vice President Wayne Lapierre, made the decision to file for bankruptcy protection in consultation with a “special litigation committee” comprised of three NRA officials formed in September to oversee its legal strategies. The NRA board voted Jan. 7 to clarify Lapierre’s employment agreement, giving him the power to “reorganize or restructure the affairs” of the organization.
“The move will enable long-term, sustainable growth and ensure the NRA’S continued success as the nation’s leading advocate for constitutional freedom — free from the toxic political environment of New York,” the NRA said in a statement.
A message seeking comment was left with a Dallas lawyer who made the bankruptcy filings.
New York Attorney General Letitia James said she would not allow the NRA to “evade accountability” or oversight. Her office’s lawsuit last year highlighted misspending and self-dealing claims that have roiled the NRA and Lapierre from hair and makeup for his wife to a $17 million post-employment contract for himself.
“The NRA’S claimed financial status has finally met its moral status: bankrupt,” James said.
The gun-rights group boasts about 5 million members. Though headquartered in Virginia, the NRA was chartered as a nonprofit in New York in 1871 and is incorporated in the state. The NRA said a committee will study opportunities to relocate segments of its operations to Texas and elsewhere.
The NRA’S largest creditor, owed $1.2 million, is Ackerman Mcqueen, which is the group’s former advertising agency that was behind the shuttered NRA TV service. The NRA sued the Oklahomabased company in 2019, alleging it was being overbilled and said in Friday’s bankruptcy filing that the debt is disputed. The lawsuit is pending. A message seeking comment was left with Ackerman Mcqueen.
In the New York suit, Ackerman Mcqueen was accused of aiding lavish spending by Lapierre and other NRA executives by picking up the tab and then sending a lump sum bill to the organization for “out-of-pocket expenses.“
“No financial filing can ever shroud the moral bankruptcy of Wayne Lapierre and his wife and their lap dogs on the NRA board,” said Bill Powers, an Ackerman Mcqueen spokesperson and former public affairs director for the NRA.
Court records also show more than $960,000 owed to Membership Marketing Partners LLC, a firm that lists its headquarters at the same address as the NRA. Another $200,000 is owed to Speedway Motorsports, the company that owns and operates NASCAR tracks.