Lodi News-Sentinel

NRA’s nonprofit status in crosshairs amid fraud claims New York prosecutor alleges group leaders used funds for vacations, luxuries, not mission

- By Denis Slattery and Larry McShane

NEW YORK — New York State Attorney General Letitia James is taking dead aim at the National Rifle Associatio­n.

New York’s No. 1 law enforcer filed a lawsuit Thursday seeking to dissolve the nation’s largest pro-gun lobbying group, alleging senior leadership at the registered nonprofit illegally used tens of millions of NRA dollars for multiple vacations, private jets, expensive meals and other luxury items.

NRA CEO Wayne LaPierre, the group’s front man, was called out for spending $800,000 on eight getaways to the Bahamas over three years, along with accepting expensive gifts that included an all-expenses paid African safari with his wife and use of a 107foot yacht from vendors without board approval.

The group, based in Fairfax, Va. but chartered in New York, also appeared to dole out lucrative no-show contracts to former employees in order to “buy their silence and continued loyalty.”

“The NRA’s influence has been so powerful that the organizati­on went unchecked for decades while top executives funneled millions into their own pockets,” said James after the 18-month investigat­ion into the NRA’s charitable mission.

“Today we send a strong and loud message: No one is above the law, not even the NRA, one of the most powerful organizati­ons in this country,” she said, adding the NRA operated as “a breeding ground for greed, abuse and brazen illegality.”

The Manhattan Supreme Court lawsuit seeks to dissolve the NRA and require each of the current and former executives named in court papers to make full restitutio­n. The quartet, including LaPierre, should also be barred from serving on the board of any charity in New York, the lawsuit said.

The lawsuit claims that the organizati­on reported a $27.8 million surplus in 2015, followed three years later by an NRA report that the group was $36 million in the red.

LaPierre, who has led the lobbying group for decades, spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on private trips for himself and his family, the suit alleges. Over the past two years, he also spent $3.6 million on travel consultant­s and several million dollars on private security for himself and his family, according to the suit.

The others named in the suit are NRA general counsel John Frazer, former CFO Woody Phillips and former chief of staff Joshua Powell. All were accused of redirectin­g charitable funds for the benefit of family mem

bers and friends, with Powell’s salary jumping from $250,000 to $800,000 over just two years and Phillips allegedly steering a deal worth more than $1 million to his girlfriend.

Anyone attempting to fire a warning shot over the quartet’s antics faced retaliatio­n from by LaPierre, according to the suit.

The NRA in turn cast the legal action as a political and “baseless, premeditat­ed attack on our organizati­on and the Second Amendment freedoms it fights to defend” — and filed its own lawsuit against James.

“This has been a power grab by a political opportunis­t — a desperate move that is part of a rank political vendetta,” the group said. “Our members won’t be intimidate­d or bullied in their defense of political

and constituti­onal freedom.”

The cash-strapped gun group, which doled out roughly $30 million to help elect President Donald Trump in 2016, was beset

by financial trouble and internal unrest as the NRA’s public support took a hit over a spate of deadly mass shootings from coast to coast.

Last year, the organizati­on

suspended its top lobbyist and one of his deputies, and former NRA president Oliver North stepped down amid accusation­s of an attempted effort to oust LaPierre.

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