Executive Vice President and CEO Doug Hamlin and new board member Jeff Knox say NRA must return to its original mission.
The National Rifle Associationās (NRA) new leadership is asking a New York state judge to allow it to continue reforms it says began before New Yorkās attorney general kept her campaign promise to bring the gun rights advocacy group to court.
In February, a New York jury found Wayne LaPierre, the NRAās former executive vice president and CEO, liable for the misuse and mismanagement of millions in charitable funds and ordered him to pay $4.3 million in damages.
Other NRA officials were ordered to pay restitution and one agreed to testify for the state in the lawsuit filed by New York Attorney General Letitia James.
Mr. Cohen will decide whether the NRA can file for bankruptcy, be assigned a trustee or special master to oversee its operations, or be allowed to resume operations on its own.
Likewise, annual dues dropped more than 50 percent from a high of $175.6 million in 2013 to $83.3 million in 2022.
Doug Hamlin was elected to replace Mr. LaPierre as the NRAās executive vice president and CEO during a May 20 board of directors meeting in Dallas, Texas. He told The Epoch Times that NRA leaders have learned from the scandals that brought down his predecessor.
Mr. Hamlin said the NRA has new leadership and a new outlook. According to Mr. Hamlin, the new slate of officers is committed to transparency and accountability. This includes a whistleblower program to encourage people to report problems and a chief compliance officer who reports directly to the board of directors.
He said that the traditionally media-shy organization is turning over a new leaf.
āThe fact that Iām having this conversation with [a reporter] is something that may not have been happening over the past five years,ā Mr. Hamlin told The Epoch Times.
He said that even with its losses, the NRA is still the largest pro-Second Amendment organization in the United States.
āItās been difficult. But I think our demise has been greatly exaggerated,ā he said.
āCourse Correctionā
Board member and long-time critic of NRA leadership, Owen Mills, agrees with Mr. Hamlin. He was one of the board members who raised the alarm about what he considered improper spending and a lack of financial accountability under Mr. LaPierreās leadership. However, he said that the NRA has turned a corner.
In a June 27 deposition filed with the New York court, Mr. Mills stated that NRA leadership has implemented corrective actions and can be trusted to resume operations.
āI think with the course correction that began in the late teens with our new officer slate that we are on the correct path. I think that weāre past the issues we had before,ā Mr. Mills said in the deposition.
Some board members donāt agree.
Reform
Newly-elected board member, Jeff Knox, said the NRAās descent began when the organization shifted its focus from shooting sports and gun safety to politics. Mr. Knox leads the Firearms Coalition and has been involved with the NRA for most of his life.
ā(The NRA) grew, in my opinion, into a fundraising organization that used gun rights as the lever to fundraise. And shooting sports became an afterthought,ā Mr. Knox said.
Mr. Knox is one of four new board members, along with Kansas District Court Judge Phil Journey, NRA life member and activist Dennis Fusaro of Virginia, and Rocky Marshall, founder and CEO of Frontier Truck Gear from Boerne, Texas, who were placed on the ballot by petition from NRA members.
They ran as the reform candidates. All are longtime NRA members. A couple of them are former board members.
Mr. Knox would like to see the board pared down to 10 or 15 members with nonprofit or corporate board experience. Unlike Mr. Mills, he wants the board restructured and operations resumed under third-party oversight.
āSo (the court) can see that, yes, we are staying on the straight and narrow. I think that thereās still potential for the wrong-headed amongst us to try and take us down the wrong road again,ā Mr. Knox said.
He did not respond to an email request for comment, but information on his website says RestoreNRA.com is a legal fund āset up to directly pay the legal fees incurred in [pursuing] this effort to rescue, reform, and restore the NRA.ā
āI am asking the New York court to appoint an independent Special Master to restore the NRA so that it is done by NRA members for NRA members,ā Mr. Journey wrote on the website.
Mr. Knox said the NRA started as an organization to teach marksmanship and gun safety. It focused on hunting, self-defense, and shooting sports. He said the NRA needs to get back to that middle ground.
āWe need to be focused on providing our members with value-added for their membership, both in the political realm and in the practical realm,ā Mr. Knox told The Epoch Times.
Mr. Knox said the evolution of the NRA began with its initial support for the National Firearms Act of 1934 and, 34 years later, the Gun Control Act of 1968. Both of which the NRA now opposes.
Then, as now, NRA members were generally law-abiding citizens, said Mr. Knox. He said the laws were sold as crime-fighting tools that NRA members expected to have little impact on their lives.
āWe found out that it didnāt make anything better. And that it was easier for [law] enforcement groups to go after us than it was for them to go after bad guys,ā Mr. Knox said.
āWeāre an easier target.ā
Because of this many NRA members began to push for more political action.
āUphill Battleā
At the 1977 annual meeting in Cincinnati, a contingent of Second Amendment hardliners spoke up. Labeled the Cincinnati Revolt, that meeting shifted the focus, but the momentum after the meeting pushed the NRA too far, Mr. Knox said.
Mr. LaPierre was elected CEO in 1991. Outspoken and not easily intimidated, he was simultaneously praised by NRA members for his dedication and criticized by detractors for his abrasiveness.
As the NRAās membership, funding, and influence grew, so did allegations of out-of-control spending. At the 2019 annual meeting in Indianapolis, the then-president of the NRA, Oliver North, questioned Mr. LaPierreās leadership and the organizationās financial accountability.
Mr. LaPierre stymied Mr. Northās effort, but he couldnāt stop the wave of mistrust and disillusionment from NRA members.
Current members say they support the organizationās mission.
Several of the more than 70,000 NRA members at the Kay Bailey Hutchison Convention Center in Dallas last May told The Epoch Times they are willing to give the NRA a chance to redeem itself.
Mike Runnels of Big Sandy, Texas, said he had heard some issues raised about Mr. LaPierre but didnāt know the details. He said itās vital to have an organization to defend the Second Amendment so he will keep his membership.
āIām gonna still believe in what its intention is, and that is to preserve our Second Amendment rights. But itās gonna be tough, itās gonna be an uphill battle,ā he told The Epoch Times.
Dom Ford, a retired U.S. Marine from Keller, Texas, joined the NRA a few years ago. He said he feels personally responsible for defending his Second Amendment rights. While he expressed some concern over the scandal, Mr. Ford said he would give the NRA a chance to prove itself.
āIf something comes to a really significant head, then I’ll walk away, but right now, I trust the brand. Iām willing to see, you know, what kind of significant changes in management occur,ā he told The Epoch Times.
Mr. Knox pointed out that while the NRA lost 1 million members, the other gun rights groups gained only about 100,000.
He says this leaves approximately 900,000 gun owners unaffiliated. The NRAās leadership must find a way to draw those members back, he said.
āIf weāre going to survive, weāre going to need the support of our members, our former members, our future members, the industry, and especially our donors,ā Mr. Knox said.
āI hope that we can earn that trust.ā
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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