Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Justices indicate their interest in NRA’s suit over free speech

- LINDSAY WHITEHURST

WASHINGTON — Supreme Court justices appeared receptive Monday to National Rifle Associatio­n claims that a former New York state official violated its free-speech rights by pressuring banks and insurance companies to blacklist the group after the deadly school shooting in Parkland, Fla.

The NRA is suing former New York State Department of Financial Services superinten­dent Maria Vullo, who the group says used her regulatory power to economical­ly punish the group for its gun-rights stance in violation of the First Amendment.

The Biden administra­tion has backed some of the NRA’s claims and encouraged the high court to reverse a lower court decision to toss out the suit. The NRA is being represente­d by a group often on the other end of the political spectrum: The American Civil Liberties Union.

“This is a First Amendment case. All they need to do is to show that the desire to suppress speech was a motivating factor,” Justice Samuel Alito said. Other justices in the court’s majority-conservati­ve wing also appeared receptive to the NRA’s suit.

Vullo, for her part, said she rightly investigat­ed NRA-endorsed insurance policies sometimes referred to as “murder insurance,” her attorney Neal Katyal said. She did speak out about the risks of doing business with gun groups, but didn’t exert any improper pressure on companies, he said.

Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson questioned whether lawsuits like the NRA’s could hobble regulators when interest groups are involved: “How do we avoid a world in which advocacy organizati­ons are exempt from regulation?”

The NRA says Vullo leveraged a state investigat­ion into the legality of NRA-endorsed insurance products to pressure insurance companies, saying she would go easier on them if they cut ties with the NRA.

The group had been working with insurance companies to offer its members policies that covered losses caused by firearms, even when the insured person intentiona­lly killed or hurt somebody.

Vullo says the products clearly violated state law, including by covering intentiona­l acts and criminal defense costs, and the pressure claims are “implausibl­e and insufficie­nt.” The probe started before Parkland and the insurance providers ultimately paid multimilli­on-dollar fines.

She also sent out guidance letters to banks and insurance companies warning about the “reputation­al risks” of working with the NRA. The NRA says her words had significan­t sway because of her position and several companies cut ties with the group, costing it millions in revenue.

Vullo says the letters were evenhanded and sent at a time when companies all over the country decided on their own to distance themselves from the NRA after the 2018 school shooting in Parkland that left 17 people dead.

A federal appeals court in New York sided with her, finding that she was doing her job and had qualified immunity as a government official. The NRA appealed that ruling to the Supreme Court.

That’s when the Justice Department weighed in. The solicitor general said the NRA’s claims about leveraging the investigat­ion were plausible enough that the suit shouldn’t have been tossed out by a lower court, but also cautioned against an overly broad ruling that could wrongly restrict officials’ free speech.

The ACLU, for its part, has said it opposes the NRA’s views in general but that the case could be a “playbook” for government officials to target other groups.

“Government officials are free to encourage people not to support political groups they oppose. What they cannot do is use their regulatory might to add ‘or else’ to that request,” said ACLU Attorney David Cole.

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