Gun Lobby Group Files for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy
By
Jon Queally, staff writer
for Common
Dreams
"Thoughts
and prayers."By Mike Luckovich, Atlanta Journal-Constitution
That
is what many opponents of the National Rifle Association wryly stated in
response to news that the pro-gun lobby group had officially filed for Chapter 11
bankruptcy on Friday in the United States.
In
a statement on its website, the
NRA—which promotes the interests of the gun industry and gun owners unbothered
by the unparalleled level of gun violence seen in the country—said it was
leaving New York state, where it is currently registered, to restructure in
Texas as part of a "new strategic plan" it is implementing.
"Thoughts
and prayers to the NRA fanatical fiends who bear the blood of tens of thousands
on their paws," said Rep. Bill Pascrell (D-N.J.) in
response. "The world will be a better place when the NRA is finally
destroyed. Looks like that day is closer."
While the NRA claims in the statement that it is "in its strongest financial condition in years," it said the strategic plan "involves utilizing the protection of the bankruptcy court" and "dumping New York" so that it can reincorporate in Texas to continue its activities without such a "corrupt political and regulatory environment."
Brady
United, which has called for the NRA's dissolution for decades, said Friday that "news of the NRA
filing for bankruptcy is just the latest proof that the NRA has cheated its
members and American taxpayers in pursuit of an extremist agenda that has made
our country markedly less safe."
David
Hogg—one of the survivors of the 2018 Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School
shooting in Parkland, Florida who later became a vocal gun control advocate—was
among those who welcomed the news late Friday afternoon and thanked all the
tireless activism over the years focused on the NRA's deadly brand of influence
peddling.
"Don't
read this as the NRA is going away," Hogg added. "They are not yet," he
said, "but this is one step closer."
In
August, as Common Dreams reported at the time, New York
Attorney General Letitia James filed a lawsuit against the NRA which sought to
dissolve the organization based on widespread evidence of corruption and
financial self-dealing that violated the state's requirements for nonprofit
status.
In
a tweet on Friday responding to the
NRA's move to divorce itself from New York, James said: "The NRA's claimed
financial status has finally met its moral status: bankrupt."
"While
we review its bankruptcy filing," she added, "we will not allow the
NRA to use this or any other tactic to evade accountability and my office's
oversight."