skews13
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- Mar 18, 2017
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Attorney General Letitia James of New York has opened a formal investigation into the National Rifle Associationās nonprofit status and asked the organization and several affiliated groups to preserve financial records.
According to The New York Times, Jamesās office sent letters to the NRA and its affiliates on April 26. The Times reports that several businesses close to the NRA also received subpoenas.
When she was running for office in 2018, James said she intended to scrutinize the NRA. But this move was likely spurred by media reports about financial improprieties at the gun group, including our investigation published with The New Yorker.
For that story, Trace staff writer Mike Spies obtained a set of handwritten memos drafted by Emily Cummins, the NRAās former managing director of tax and risk management. The documents describe expenses that were not disclosed on the NRAās past tax filings and shady business practices that left the organization vulnerable to self-dealing. āNRA pays overbilled, deceptive, vague invoices to āpreferredā vendors and contractors,ā one entry says. Another notes that NRA staff were ābeing told to process payments w/o documentation.ā Some payments passed through multiple entities controlled by the same people.
Spies asked Marc Owens, who served for 10 years as the head of the Internal Revenue Service division that oversees tax-exempt enterprises, to review the records he obtained. āThe materials reflect one of the broadest arrays of likely transgressions that Iāve ever seen,ā Owens said. āThere is a tremendous range of what appears to be the misuse of assets for the benefit of certain vendors and people in control.ā He added that the apparent abuses could lead to the revocation of the NRAās tax-exempt status.
News of Jamesās investigation broke during a turbulent annual meeting of the NRA, which was marked by a power struggle between Executive Vice President Wayne LaPierre and President Oliver North. On Saturday morning, North announced that he would be stepping down.
New York Opens Investigation Into NRAās Tax-Exempt Status
It's just a matter of time.
According to The New York Times, Jamesās office sent letters to the NRA and its affiliates on April 26. The Times reports that several businesses close to the NRA also received subpoenas.
When she was running for office in 2018, James said she intended to scrutinize the NRA. But this move was likely spurred by media reports about financial improprieties at the gun group, including our investigation published with The New Yorker.
For that story, Trace staff writer Mike Spies obtained a set of handwritten memos drafted by Emily Cummins, the NRAās former managing director of tax and risk management. The documents describe expenses that were not disclosed on the NRAās past tax filings and shady business practices that left the organization vulnerable to self-dealing. āNRA pays overbilled, deceptive, vague invoices to āpreferredā vendors and contractors,ā one entry says. Another notes that NRA staff were ābeing told to process payments w/o documentation.ā Some payments passed through multiple entities controlled by the same people.
Spies asked Marc Owens, who served for 10 years as the head of the Internal Revenue Service division that oversees tax-exempt enterprises, to review the records he obtained. āThe materials reflect one of the broadest arrays of likely transgressions that Iāve ever seen,ā Owens said. āThere is a tremendous range of what appears to be the misuse of assets for the benefit of certain vendors and people in control.ā He added that the apparent abuses could lead to the revocation of the NRAās tax-exempt status.
News of Jamesās investigation broke during a turbulent annual meeting of the NRA, which was marked by a power struggle between Executive Vice President Wayne LaPierre and President Oliver North. On Saturday morning, North announced that he would be stepping down.
New York Opens Investigation Into NRAās Tax-Exempt Status
It's just a matter of time.