The Morning Call

NRA fined $2.5M, insurance sales

- By Michael Hill

ALBANY, N.Y. — The National Rifle Associatio­n is banned from marketing insurance in New York for five years and will pay $2.5 million to settle an investigat­ion into “dangerous” policies promoted to gun owners as a way to cover costs in self-defense shootings, state financial regulators said Wednesday.

The New York State Department of Financial Services announced the consent order with the gun advocacy group after a three-year investigat­ion.

State regulators said the NRA violated insurance laws and regulation­s by acting as an insurance producer without a license by taking part in efforts to solicit and market insurance products, including the NRA’s Carry Guard program.

Carry Guard insurance was launched in 2017 and was promoted to gun-owners as needed coverage to help cover civil and criminal legal costs in the case they shot someone in selfdefens­e. Gun-control advocates called it “murder insurance.”

“The NRAviolate­d the NewYorkins­urance law by soliciting dangerous and impermissi­ble insurance products, including those within its Carry Guard program that purported to insure intentiona­l acts and criminal defense costs,” department superinten­dent Linda Lacewell said in a statement.

The NRA is banned from marketing insurance in New York or receiving compensati­on in connection with any newly issued New York insurance policies for five years, even if the NRA obtains a license, under the order.

“The DFS inquiry, which began with a roar, ends with a whimper,” William A. Brewer III, counsel to the NRA, said in an email. “The consent order contains no admissions by the NRA, and no NRA member money will fund this settlement.”

From 2000 to 2018, the NRA worked with the Lockton Affinity Series of Lockton Affinity, LLCto offer insurance products to NRA members, their families and affiliated New York businesses. The NRA received “substantia­l” compensati­on, including royalties based on premiums. That means the NRA acted as an insurance producer under New York law, requiring the organizati­on to be licensed, according to the DFS.

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