Court Denies NRA Bankruptcy Request, Delivers Blow To Group’s Texas Relocation Plan

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A federal bankruptcy court dismissed the National Rifle Association’s bankruptcy filing, which the group filed as a means to relocate from New York to Texas.

Northern District of Texas Bankruptcy Court Judge Harlin Hale ruled that the National Rifle Association (NRA) doesn’t currently face an “existential threat” as outlined in U.S. bankruptcy law by remaining in New York, according to his ruling published on Tuesday afternoon.

“The Court finds there is cause to dismiss this bankruptcy case as not having been filed in good faith both because it was filed to gain an unfair litigation advantage and because it was filed to avoid a state regulatory scheme,” Hale wrote.

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The NRA originally filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on Jan. 15, but said that it was in great financial condition. The Second Amendment advocacy group insisted it filed for bankruptcy solely to escape New York and establish itself in Texas.

NRA CEO Wayne LaPierre said that the group, which has $50 million in net assets, believed New York had become a “toxic, politicized, weaponized” environment. Throughout the trial, NRA lawyers have consistently presented the filing as a way to depart New York.

In August, New York Attorney General Letitia James filed a lawsuit against the NRA seeking to completely dissolve the group over fraud allegations. The lawsuit is the culmination of a tense relationship between the massive gun rights group and the state, which has previously targeted the NRA’s bottom line.

James campaigned for attorney general in 2018 on a platform that included targeting the NRA as an “organ of deadly propaganda.”

But, bankruptcy experts criticized the NRA’s filing as an unorthodox, potentially bad faith move.

“I don’t think this would have been my first option or my second option or my third option,” Jeremy Fischer, co-chair of the American Bankruptcy Institute’s Bankruptcy Litigation Committee, told the Daily Caller News Foundation in January. “I don’t know that bankruptcy is a great fit for what they’re trying to do. I think it would be an option of last resort.”

The NRA didn’t respond to a request for comment.

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