New York AG files suit to dissolve NRA
Gun control advocates
repurposed a frequent refrain of the pro-gun movement Thursday, offering
"thoughts and prayers" to the National Rifle Association after New
York Attorney General Letitia James announced that she had filed a
lawsuit seeking to dissolve the organization.
James, who called the
NRA a "terrorist organization" during
her 2018 campaign and has supported efforts by New York lawmakers to strengthen
gun control laws, said the lawsuit was driven not by her views on gun violence
but by an 18-month-long investigation which uncovered rampant corruption and
self-dealing at the NRA.
In the suit filed in
the New York State Supreme Court, James alleged that CEO Wayne LaPierre and
three other current and former officials violated "numerous state and
federal laws” by enriching themselves and their families through the nonprofit
group's coffers, costing the NRA $64 million in just three years.
James is seeking to
remove LaPierre and general counsel John Frazer from their positions and to bar
them as well as former chief of staff Josh Powell and former chief financial
officer Woody Phillips from ever serving on a nonprofit board in New York
again.
March for Our Lives, the grassroots group started by survivors of the 2018 Parkland, Florida high school shooting, was among those that ironically offered "thoughts and prayers" to the NRA as Republican lawmakers backed by the powerful gun lobby frequently do following mass shootings.
James accused LaPierre of overseeing "a culture of self-dealing, mismanagement, and negligent oversight at the NRA that was illegal, oppressive, and fraudulent."
"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
Thursday. "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."
In the lawsuit, James
alleged that LaPierre and other top officials signed off on financial documents
they knew to be false; that LaPierre spent hundreds of thousands of dollars in
NRA money on private plane trips; and that the CEO and his family were
frequently “gifted the use of a 107-foot yacht” by an NRA vendor.
The investigation also
uncovered "improper expense documentation, improper wage reporting, [and]
improper income tax withholding." James did not say whether the alleged
federal tax violations could be referred to the IRS for a further probe.
James told reporters
that the findings of her investigation were so significant that simply removing
the NRA's leaders from their posts would not be a sufficient consequence for
the organization.
"The corruption
was so broad and...they have basically destroyed all the assets of the
NRA,"
James said. "We needed to dissolve this organization just as we did the Trump Foundation."
James said. "We needed to dissolve this organization just as we did the Trump Foundation."
On social media, March
for Our Lives credited increasingly vocal gun control advocates with helping to
elect politicians like James, making the "takedown of the NRA"
possible.
"Our power means
lawmakers must listen," the group said. "Our power means we refuse to
fear for our lives. We refuse to live without justice. It's our power and we
will use it."