Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Putting the NRA under the microscope

- By Joseph Batory Times Guest Columnist The Wall Street Journal Yorker, The New The Washington Post Joseph Batory is the former superinten­dent of the Upper Darby School and the author of three books and more than 100 published articles on politics, educati

The National Rifle Associatio­n (NRA) promotes its selfimage as patriotic and principled and standing up for the rights of “the common man.” But the NRA is more accurately “a money machine” that has become the subject of numerous corruption investigat­ions in 2019. Top officials have been ousted, board members have resigned, and lawsuits between the NRA and its longtime marketing firm have been raging.

Just a few months ago, Oliver North, once famous as a key figure in the Iran-Contra scandal, was forced out his position as NRA president after he raised questions about the financial actions of this supposedly tax-exempt organizati­on.

Ackerman McQueen, now in disfavor with the NRA, is the public relations behind the NRA’s marketing success for unchecked gun ownership. Its relentless propaganda strategy has promoted fear among the public about potential race wars, the collapse of democracy, and a threatenin­g federal government. Its utilizatio­n of Hollywood actor Charlton Heston as the face of the NRA was extremely effective.

The annual NRA payments to the Ackerman firm have been disclosed as totaling more $20 million. And a more recent revelation revealed the 2017 NRA payment at more than $40 million that year. How Ackerman McQueen has spent all that money has become the source of a major legal feud between the NRA and its PR firm.

And then there is its online channel (NRATV) creation which often strays beyond gun control issues to present political positions on other topics.

So, forget the “common man” fantasy. The NRA has been and continues to be about “big bucks.” Start with Wayne LaPierre, the NRA’s executive vice president and CEO, whose salary is reported to be in excess of $1 million dollars.

revealed correspond­ence from Ackerman’s chief financial officer to LaPierre, alleging excessive expenses billed by LaPierre, including thousands of dollars of personal charges at a Beverly Hills men’s store and other expenses for luxury travel to locations such as Italy, Budapest and the Bahamas. And there have been multiple news reports of the NRA seeking to purchase a Texas mansion worth millions of dollars for LaPierre. Additional­ly,

has exposed a wide array of NRA business arrangemen­ts that have steered millions of dollars to NRA executives, contractor­s, and favored vendors.

And then there are allegation­s of payments in recent years that went to NRA board members who are supposed to be overseeing the organizati­on’s finances. For example, one former pro football player who serves on the National Rifle Associatio­n board was reportedly paid $400,000 for his public outreach efforts.

has documented, according to tax filings, state charitable reports and NRA correspond­ence, that 18 members of the NRA’s 76-member board, who are not supposed to be paid as directors, collected money during the past three years,

The NRA lobby also spent $30-plus million in the 2016 election to boost Trump’s candidacy. Not surprising­ly, any and all new gun control measures are off the White House agenda.

Through all of this, the NRA is now reported to be more than $40 million in debt.

And finally, there is Maria Butina, who was recently released from a federal prison and deported to Moscow after pleading guilty last year to conspiring with a senior Russian official to gain favor with the NRA and other political organizati­ons and failing to register in the United States as a Russian foreign agent.

What follows are just some of the current 2019 investigat­ions:

• NRA Campaign Finance Violations (U.S. Senate and House investigat­ion)

• NRA Non-Profit Status (U.S. House Ways and Means Committee)

• NRA Financial Mismanagem­ent (New York Attorney General)

• NRA Non-Profit Status (District of Columbia Attorney General)

• NRA Financial Impropriet­y and Non-Profit Status (U.S. Senate Intelligen­ce Committee)

• NRA Political Ties to Russia (U.S. Senate Intelligen­ce Committee)

• NRA Financial Ties to Russia (U.S. Senate Finance Committee)

In summary, the NRA gets its money annually from membership fees assessed to its five million true believers and vested-interest corporate supporter donations. And, as money so often does, the NRA now appears to be just another example of corporate greed running wild. That would be bad enough, but the NRA’s “legacy of blood” through its continued endorsemen­t of semi-automatic assault rifles and other military weapons has added deaths and immense human suffering to its persona.

The Constituti­on of the United States, weaponized by the NRA via the Second Amendment, was never meant to be the means for a money-making corporatio­n to pretend mass murders of citizens have nothing to do with the USA’s incredibly lax gun restrictio­ns. Nearly three decades ago, Supreme Court Chief Justice Warren Burger, a lifelong conservati­ve, called the NRA’s Gun Control interpreta­tion of the Second Amendment “one of the greatest pieces of fraud – I repeat, fraud – on the American public … that I have ever seen in my lifetime.”

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