Albany Times Union

NRA board member upends bankruptcy

His goal: To block AG James from dissolving the group

- By Neil Weinberg and Steven Church

A gun-collecting Kansas judge is leading a new crusade to save the National Rifle Associatio­n from two existentia­l threats: New York’s attorney general and the executives who currently run the organizati­on.

Phillip Journey, a family court judge in Wichita and member of the NRA’S board, inserted himself into the group’s bankruptcy to try to block New York’s top law enforcemen­t official from dissolving the 150-year-old group and distributi­ng its $200 million in assets to other, less controvers­ial gun-rights organizati­ons. To do so, he says he must take on a culture of subservien­ce and alleged financial misdeeds that has sprung up around the group’s top executive, Wayne Lapierre.

In February, Journey urged the court to call a timeout in the bankruptcy case and appoint an independen­t examiner. That, Journey says, is the only way to get to the bottom of a dispute riddled with allegation­s of fraud and self-enrichment by NRA executives, conflicts of interest among attorneys and creditors and claims of overreach by New York Attorney General Letitia James, who had called the gun-rights group a “terrorist organizati­on” even before she took office.

“A lot of times, bankruptcy looks like a dog pile,” Journey, who sold about 100 weapons from his personal collection to fund his successful campaign for his judicial seat last year, said in an interview. “All I want is to open the door, let in an examiner and see where to go. Restore corporate governance and let the NRA operate like it’s supposed to.”

The legal maneuverin­g comes as recent mass shootings in Georgia and Colorado have reignited a hyperparti­san debate over the Second Amendment and the NRA’S extensive lobbying against gun control.

U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Harlin “Cooter” Hale is scheduled to start a multiday hearing April 5 that could strengthen James’ effort to shut down the NRA. James has urged Hale to either appoint a trustee to run the NRA or throw out its bankruptcy case, which would make it easier for her to seize the group’s assets if she prevails in her New York lawsuit.

The bankruptcy judge has warned James that in deciding whether to strip the NRA of the protection­s it has in Chapter 11, he will consider what she plans to do with the organizati­on’s money if she wins her case in New York. As long as the NRA remains in bankruptcy, James would likely need Hale’s permission to redistribu­te its assets.

Matthew Bruckner, an associate professor of law at Howard University, says that courts are inclined to comply with requests to appoint an independen­t examiner in cases like the NRA’S, where the assets in question exceed $5 million. What’s more, in the NRA’S case the court is likely to give weight to the fact that the request is coming from a board member with Journey’s background, he added.

“Phil Journey is a serious person making serious allegation­s,” Bruckner said. “The fact that he’s a judge indicates he’s not likely to make these allegation­s lightly.”

Journey, a former president of the Kansas State Rifle Associatio­n, says he felt compelled to launch his Gofundme-financed legal effort after spending a week reading up on the case following skin cancer surgery that left his face too disfigured to preside over family court cases, where physical abuse is common.

In an interview, he declined to call for Lapierre’s immediate ouster, arguing instead that a new investigat­ion backed by the bankruptcy court would help determine the fate of the NRA’S leadership.

NRA Second Vice President Willes Lee said in a statement that Journey’s motion is “not genuine nor credible.”

The NRA filed its Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition in January as part of a bid to restructur­e and transfer its charter from New York to Texas. It said at the time that it remained not only solvent but “in its strongest financial condition in years.”

The filing came five months after James sued the NRA for violating her state’s nonprofit laws. She has since accused the NRA of using bankruptcy in a “bad faith” bid to undercut a case in which she’s charged the group, Lapierre and three other executives with illegally diverting tens of millions of dollars from its charitable mission.

The NRA’S First Vice President Charles Cotton said in a statement that the board voted on Sunday to support the reorganiza­tion strategy.

Still, Journey has enlisted an ally on the NRA board. R.B. “Rocky” Marshall, the owner of Frontier Truck Gear in Center Point, Texas and a former Baker Hughes division president, has joined Journey in his call for an examiner. Marshall, who has a firing range on his ranch near San Antonio, said it was clear NRA executives weren’t interested in talking and most of its directors hadn’t even read James’ lawsuit.

“If you’re in bankruptcy court, it means you’ve made a lot of mistakes to get there,” says Marshall. “The more I dug into the filings, the more shocking the mismanagem­ent became.”

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