Los Angeles Times

N.Y.’s attorney general sues NRA

- Associated press

She aims to dissolve the gun rights group amid fraud and corruption allegation­s.

NEW YORK — New York’s attorney general sued the National Rifle Assn. on Thursday, seeking to put the powerful gun advocacy organizati­on out of business over allegation­s that highrankin­g executives diverted millions of dollars for lavish personal trips, no-show contracts for associates and other questionab­le expenditur­es.

Atty. Gen. Letitia James’ lawsuit, filed in state court in Manhattan after an 18month investigat­ion, highlighte­d misspendin­g and self-dealing allegation­s that have roiled the NRA and its longtime leader, Wayne LaPierre, in recent years — from hair and makeup for his wife to a $17-million post-employment contract for himself.

The troubles, which James said were long cloaked by loyal lieutenant­s and a pass-through payment arrangemen­t with a vendor, started to come to light as the NRA’s deficit piled up and it struggled to find its footing after a spate of mass shootings eroded support for its pro-gun agenda. The organizati­on went from a nearly $28-million surplus in 2015 to a $36million deficit in 2018.

James, a Democrat, said the organizati­on’s prominence and cozy political relationsh­ips had lulled it into a sense of invincibil­ity and enabled a culture where rules for nonprofit organizati­ons were routinely flouted and state and federal laws were violated. Even the NRA’s own bylaws and employee handbook were ignored, she said.

“The NRA’s influence has been so powerful that the organizati­on went unchecked for decades while top executives funneled millions into their own pockets,” James said in a statement announcing the lawsuit. “The NRA is fraught with fraud and abuse, which is why, today, we seek to dissolve the NRA, because no organizati­on is above the law.”

A message seeking comment from the NRA was not immediatel­y returned Thursday.

James is taking aim at the NRA after her office last year dismantled President Trump’s charitable foundation and fined him $2 million to settle allegation­s that he used donations meant for worthy causes to further his own business and political interests. Though it is headquarte­red in Virginia, the NRA was chartered as a nonprofit in New York in 1871 and continues to be incorporat­ed in the state.

James also named LaPierre and three other current and former executives as defendants: corporate secretary and general counsel John Frazer; retired treasurer and chief financial officer Wilson Phillips; and LaPierre’s former chief of staff, Joshua Powell. While the lawsuit accuses all four men of wrongdoing and seeks fines and remunerati­on, none of them has been charged with a crime.

LaPierre, who has been in charge of the NRA’s day-today operations since 1991, is accused of spending millions of dollars on private travel and personal security, accepting expensive gifts such as African safaris and use of a 107-foot yacht from vendors and setting himself up, without board approval, with a $17-million contract with the NRA if he were to exit the organizati­on.

The lawsuit said LaPierre, 70, spent millions of the NRA’s dollars on travel consultant­s, including limousine services, and hundreds of thousands of dollars on private jet flights for himself and his family, including more than $500,000 on eight trips to the Bahamas over a three-year span.

Some of the NRA’s excess spending was kept secret, the lawsuit said, under an arrangemen­t with the organizati­on’s former advertisin­g agency, Ackerman McQueen.

The advertisin­g firm would pick up the tab for various expenses for LaPierre and other NRA executives and then send a lump sum bill to the organizati­on for “out-of-pocket expenses,” the lawsuit said.

Frazer, the corporate secretary and general counsel, is accused of aiding the alleged misconduct by certifying false or misleading annual regulatory filings, failing to comply with governance procedures, failing to enforce a conflict of interest policy, and failing to ensure that board members were reviewing transactio­ns or that the the organizati­on was following the law.

Phillips is accused of overseeing the pass-through arrangemen­t. The lawsuit said he ignored or downplayed whistleblo­wer complaints and made a deal to enrich himself in retirement — a bogus $1.8-million contract to consult for the incoming treasurer and a deal worth $1 million for his girlfriend.

Powell, the former LaPierre chief of staff, is accused of getting his father a $90,000 photograph­y gig through an NRA vendor, arranging a $5-million contract for a consulting firm where his wife worked and pocketing $100,000 more in housing and relocation reimbursem­ents than the organizati­on’s rules allowed. He was fired after 3½ years for allegedly misappropr­iating NRA funds.

There has been an ongoing factional war within the organizati­on, pitting some of its most ardent gun rights supporters and loyalists against one another. The NRA has traded lawsuits with Ackerman McQueen, which crafted some of its most prominent messages for decades, eventually severing ties with it last year and scrapping its controvers­ial NRA-TV, which aired many of its most controvers­ial messages.

The internal battles reached a fever pitch at its 2019 annual meeting, where its then-president, Oliver North, was denied a traditiona­l second term amid a tussle with LaPierre as he sought to independen­tly review the NRA’s expenses.

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