Whistleblower Lawsuit Filed Against NRA In Virginia Court

Apryl Marie Fogel, former Director of the Women’s Leadership Forum, filed suit this past Friday afternoon against the NRA in Fairfax County Circuit Court. The lawsuit alleges the NRA violated the Virginia Whistleblower Protection Law, Va. Code § 40.1-27.3, by terminating her after she had made numerous reports about the misuse of monies in violation of the NRA’s own policies. She reported these violations to, among others, former Executive Director of Advancement Tyler Schropp and current NRA Director Janet Nyce. Nyce also serves as the co-chair of the Women’s Leadership Forum.

Representing Ms. Fogel is attorney Jane Lemley of the firm Harrison and Johnston, PLC of Winchester, Virginia. Lemley is an expert in employment and labor law who has been listed in multiple issues of The Best Lawyers in America.

The suit alleges:

  • Fogel reported to both Tyler Schropp as Executive Director of the Office of Advancement and to the co-chairs of the Women’s Leadership Forum Janet Nyce and Jane Brown.
  • Fogel had worked with other tax-exempt charitable organizations and understood that accurate records of both donations and donors must be kept under Federal and applicable state law.
  • Fogel understood that donor funds given to the NRA and WLF could not be used for “expensive services, lavish gifts, and personal gain.”
  • Fogel erroneously assumed that both Schropp and Nyce were as equally committed as she to “to ensuring that the NRA complied with applicable federal and state law with respect to financial management and use of donated funds.”
  • That contractor MC500 provided “black car services” to Janet Nyce in violation of NRA policy for which the NRA was charged $150 per hour.
  • That contractor MC500 often charged for work that could be done in-house at the NRA and that often was never completed. This included flying Jennifer Bridgeman, the Chief Marketing Officer of MC500, to take minutes at a meeting of the WLF Executive Council at Janet Nyce’s request notwithstanding that NRA staff could complete the same task.
  • Fogel reassigned much of this work to NRA staff as a cost saving and efficiency measure cutting out MC500. This led to Janet Nyce calling and shouting at Fogel as Nyce said it was “her prerogative to incur whatever cost she saw fit for the WLF program.”
  • Fogel reported this to Schropp along with her cost saving measures and was angrily told “to stay in her lane.”
  • After this and other incidents, Schropp and Nyce treated Fogel in such a manner as to create a toxic work environment. Nyce went so far as to convene “a meeting of the WLF staff and leadership at the NRA Annual Meeting in Indianapolis, but excluded Ms. Fogel, the Director of the WLF, from this meeting.
  • Fogel was ordered by Susan LaPierre to purchase a “$240 Baccarat crystal butterfly” as a gift to Indiana First Lady Janet Holcombe using her personal credit card. Upon investigation, Fogel determined making such a gift would violate Indiana law regarding the value of gifts. LaPierre was not pleased to be told this. Following this, she was retaliated against by Mrs. LaPierre, Jane Brown, Nyce, and the infamous former intern Megan Allen who had her apartment expenses paid by the NRA.
  • Fogel became concerned about a potential security breach involving donors due to a Dropbox maintained by MC500 entitled “WLF Shared Folder” that would allow former NRA employees access. Schropp dismissed her concerns but they were validated by NRA Security Manager Bob Jenkins.
  • There was improper and haphazard record keeping when it came to WLF member donations. Often donations would be credited to the wrong person including Janet Nyce.
  • Fogel had her probationary period extended another 90 days in retaliation for reporting these issues.
  • Finally, two days after she reported the security breach and soon after she had delivered a report on NRA-WLF financial mismanagement to Schropp, Nyce, Brown, and director Barbara Rumpel, she was terminated with no explanation.

Fogel is asking that she be reinstated to her former position or a comparable one, that she be paid $150,000 in compensation for lost wages and benefits, that she be awarded attorney costs, and that applicable interest should be paid on the lost wages. She is also asking for a jury trial.

Fogel has communicated to me that she did not want to bring this lawsuit but was facing the statute of limitations on time to bring the suit. Her hope is that a settlement can be reached.

I have had many conversations with her over the past year regarding the NRA and its issues. I believe what she has alleged in this lawsuit. One need only look at those mentioned in the lawsuit to come to that conclusion. You have Tyler Schropp who used the NRA as his personal piggy bank. You have cabal members Janet Nyce and Barbara Rumpel. You have contractors upset that someone interrupted their gravy train. Finally, you have Susan LaPierre herself. What more needs to be said about the veracity of Fogel’s allegations.

I have tried to summarize the case but read all 40 pages of it. It will both sadden and anger you.

Revamped NRA 2024-2025 Committee Assignments

NRA President Bob Barr had made a number of committee assignments that were, in my opinion, ill-conceived in light of Judge Cohen’s interim decision in Phase 2 of the NRA’s trial in New York. Many of the assignments had been in direct conflict with the judge’s decision. However, cooler heads prevailed and Barr has now made a revamped assortment of committee assignments. I understand he made these after discussing them with 1st VP Bill Bachenberg and 2nd VP Mark Vaughan.

Below you will find the new assignments for all committees. Most significantly, Charles Cotton and David Coy neither head nor are members of the Audit or Finance Committees respectively. Moreover, Cotton no longer heads nor is a member of the Ethics Committee.

Here are all the assignments.

(1) ACTION SHOOTING COMMITTEE
Dwight D. Van Horn, Chairman
Don Martin, Vice Chairman
William H. Allen
Clel Baudler
John M. Gordon
George Mowbray


(2) AIR GUN
Edie P. Fleeman, Chairman
Patricia A. Clark, Vice Chairman
Ted W. Carter
Clyde Furr
Amy James
Lisa Kelley


(3) AUDIT
Curtis S. Jenkins, Chairman
Charles R. Beers III, Vice Chairman
Rocky Marshall
Ronald L. Schmeits
Eb Wilkinson


(4) BLACK POWDER
David G. Coy, Chairman
Johnny Nugent, Vice Chairman
David A. Keene
Don Saba
Terri Townsend


(5) BYLAWS & RESOLUTIONS
Carol Frampton, Chairman
Scott L. Bach, Vice Chairman
Larry E. Craig
Phillip B. Journey
John C. Sigler
Danny Stowers
James L. Wallace
Judi White

(6) CLUBS & ASSOCIATIONS
Maria Heil, Chairman
Bill Miller, Vice Chairman
Donald Bradway
Charles L. Cotton
Steven W. Dulan
Rick Ector
Todd Ellis
Al Hammond
Antonio Hernandez
Charles T. Hiltunen III
Tom King
James L. Wallace
Michael O. Ware
Cathy Wright


(7) COLLEGIATE PROGRAMS
Edie P. Fleeman, Chairman
David Raney, Vice Chairman
Paul Benneche
Cathy Callahan
Ted W. Carter
David G. Coy
Isaac Demarest
Bruce Widener


(8) COMPETITION RULES & PROGRAMS
Dwight D. Van Horn, Chairman
Clel Baudler, Vice Chairman
William H. Allen
Thomas P. Arvas
Patricia A. Clark
David G. Coy
Edie P. Fleeman
Tom King
Jay Printz
John C. Sigler
Howard J. Walter


(9) DISABLED SHOOTING SPORTS
Clel Baudler, Chairman
Tom King, Vice Chairman
William Bachenberg
Anthony P. Colandro
Marco Delarosa
Matt Guedes
Graham Hill
Robin Kelleher
Edward Mays
Regis Synan


(10) EDUCATION & TRAINING
Ronnie G. Barrett, Chairman
Todd Ellis, Vice Chairman
Charles R. Beers III
Donald Bradway
Anthony P. Colandro
Charles L. Cotton
James Cozort
Rick Ector
Scott Johnson
Owen Buz Mills
Janet D. Nyce
Mitch O’Neal-Mitchell
Amanda Suffecool
Thomas Tuggle


(11) ELECTIONS
J. William Carter, Chairman
Don Saba, Vice Chairman
Rick Ector
Edward J. Land, Jr.
Steve Schreiner


(12) ETHICS
Blaine Wade, Chairman
Mark Vaughan, Vice Chairman
Ronnie G. Barrett
Clel Baudler
Maria Heil
Jay Printz
Barbara Rumpel

4
(13) F-CLASS HIGH POWER RIFLE
John C. Sigler, Chairman
Howard J. Walter, Vice Chairman
Dan Bramley
David G. Coy
Charles Rowe
Matt Schwartzkopf


(14) FINANCE (7-10)
Eb Wilkinson, Chairman
Patricia A. Clark, Vice Chairman
William A. Bachenberg
Joel Friedman
Curtis S. Jenkins
Bill Miller
Buz Mills
Don Saba
Ronald L. Schmeits
Amanda Suffecool


(15) GRASSROOTS DEVELOPMENT
Cathy Wright, Chairman
Amanda Suffecool, Vice Chairman
James Chapman
Richard S. Figueroa
Sandra S. Froman
Craig Haggard
Jeffrey Knox
David Raney
Mark Robinson
Don Saba
Steve Schreiner
James A. Tomes
Linda L. Walker
Judi White
Eb Wilkinson


(16) GUN COLLECTORS
Blaine Wade, Chairman
Robert J. Wos, Vice Chairman
Paul Babaz
Eric Beeby
Craig Bell
Allan D. Cors
Garry James
Mike Papac
David Prawdzik
Wayne Anthony Ross
Richard F. Shea
Bruce Widener


(17) HEARINGS
Larry Craig, Chairman
Charles Hiltunen III, Vice Chairman
Sharon Callan
Carol Frampton
Niger Innis
Scott Johnson
David Raney
Jay Wallace
Eb Wilkinson


(18) HIGH POWER RIFLE
Howard J. Walter, Chairman
Thomas J. Layou, Vice Chairman
Isaac Demarest
Dennis R. Flaharty
Tom King
Denise Loring
John C. Sigler
Brad Sutherland

(19) HUNTING &WILDLIFE CONSERVATION
Ward M. French, Chairman
Stephen R. Plaster, Vice Chairman
Tim Archer
Charles R. Beers III
Paul Babaz
Jefferey Crane
Carol Frampton
Aurelia Skipworth Giacometto
Mike Ingram
Andrew McIntyre
Mitzy McCorvey
Barry Partlo
Mark Peterson
Tyler Ruhland
Nick Wiley


(20) LAW ENFORCEMENT ASSISTANCE
Jay Printz, Chairman
Blaine E. Wade, Vice Chairman
William H. Allen
Clel Baudler
Sharon Callan
Louis Hunter
Wayne Ivey
Robert Rotter
Randy Sutton
Robert Vadasz
Dwight D. Van Horn
Mark E. Vaughan


(21) LEGAL AFFAIRS
Sandra S. Froman, Chairman
Scott L. Bach, Vice Chairman
Bob Barr
Steven Dulan
Carol Frampton
Charles T. Hiltunen III
Curtis S. Jenkins
John C. Sigler

(22) LEGISLATIVE POLICY
Kayne Robinson, Chairman
Larry E. Craig, Vice Chairman
Joe M. Allbaugh
Scott L. Bach
Bob Barr
Allan D. Cors
Dennis Fusaro
Sandra S. Froman
Graham Hill
Charles L. Hiltunen III
Niger Innis
Curtis S. Jenkins
David A. Keene
Matt Kilgo
Jeffrey Knox
Carolyn D. Meadows
Alan B. Mollohan
James W. Porter II
David Raney
Robert A. Rotter
Barbara Rumpel
John C. Sigler
Linda L. Walker
Eb Wilkinson

Federal Affairs Subcommittee
Sandra S. Froman, Chairman
Charles L. Hiltunen III, Vice Chairman
Allan D. Cors
Graham Hill
Jeffrey Knox
Allan B. Mollohan


International Affairs Subcommittee
Bob Barr, Chairman
Eb Wilkinson, Vice Chairman
Larry Craig
Dennis Fusaro
Niger Innis
David A. Keene
David Raney
Kayne Robinson


State & Local Affairs Subcommittee
Scott L. Bach, Chairman
John Sigler, Vice Chairman
Joe Allbaugh
Curtis S. Jenkins
Matt Kilgo
Rob Rotter
Barbara Rumpel
Linda Walker


(23) MEMBERSHIP
Blaine E. Wade, Chairman
Kayne B. Robinson, Vice Chairman
Paul Babaz
Dean Cain
Anthony Colandro
Todd Ellis
Dennis Fusaro
David E. Fitzmorris
Mitzy McCorvey
Jay Printz
James Schenck
Judi White


(24) MILITARY & VETERANS’ AFFAIRS
Leroy Sisco, Chairman
Jay Printz, Vice Chairman
Joe M. Allbaugh
Ted Carter
Lou Davis
Jack Hagan
Robin Kelleher
Jeffrey Knox
Edward J. Land, Jr.
Scott Neil
David Norcross
George Petersen
John C. Sigler


(25) NOMINATING
Jay Printz, Chairman
Robert Mansell, Vice Chairman
Scott L. Bach
Charles R. Beers III
Cynthia Flannigan
Duane Liptak
David Raney
Bryan Tucker
Judi White

(26) OUTREACH
J. Kenneth Blackwell, Chairman
Antonio Hernandez, Vice Chairman
Betty Cardenas
Chris Cheng
Rick Ector
Rick Figueroa
Lucretia Hughes
Niger Innis
Susannah Kipke
Mark Robinson
Thomas Tuggle
Norma Lee Valle


(27) PISTOL
William H. Allen, Chairman
Kenneth A. Boyd, Vice Chairman
Ted Carter
David G. Coy
Paul Pluff
Robert Vadasz
Tom Yost


(28) PROTEST
Clel Baudler, Chairman
Edie P. Fleeman, Vice Chairman
Ted W. Carter
John C. Sigler
Howard J. Walter


(29) PUBLIC AFFAIRS
Scott L. Bach, Chairman
Ronnie G. Barrett, Vice Chairman
J. Kenneth Blackwell
Dean Cain
Sandra S. Froman
Charles T. Hiltunen III
Greer Johnson
Tom King
Carolyn D. Meadows
Grover Norquist
David Raney
Kayne B. Robinson
Mark Robinson
James Schenck
Dwight Van Horn
James L. Wallace
Jay Wallace


(30) PUBLICATIONS POLICIES
David A. Keene, Chairman
Ronald L. Schmeits, Vice Chairman
Joe M. Allbaugh
Shad Ketcher
Robert Mansell
Owen Buz Mills
Kayne B. Robinson
Blaine E. Wade


(31) RANGE DEVELOPMENT
David G. Coy, Chairman
Ronnie G. Barrett, Vice Chairman
Donald J. Bradway
Anthony P. Colandro
Isaac Demarest
Al Hammond
Robert E. Mansell
Don Saba
Danny Stowers
Robert J. Wos

(32) SHOTGUN
Thomas P. Arvas, Chairman
Kim Rhode, Vice Chairman
David G. Coy
Lynn Gipson
F. Daryl Hayes
Tom King
John Nelson
Anthony Palumbo


(33) SILHOUETTE
Tom King, Chairman
Bill Miller, Vice Chairman
Charles R. Beers III
J. William Carter
Patricia A. Clark
Jim Kidwell


(34) SMALLBORE RIFLE
Patricia A. Clark, Chairman
Howard J. Walter, Vice Chairman
J. William Carter
David G. Coy
Todd Ellis
Edie P. Fleeman
George Harris


(35) SPORT SHOOTING
Jay Wallace, Chairman
David G. Coy, Vice Chairman
Charles L. Cotton
Susannah Kipke
Willes K. Lee
Amy Lovato


(36) WOMEN’S POLICIES
Carol Frampton, Chairman
Maria Heil, Vice Chairman
Amy Heath Lovato
Katalin Kadar Lynn
Mitzy McCorvey
Janet D. Nyce
Kathryn Hicks Porter
Brenda Potterfield
Lane Ruhland
Barbara Rumpel
Linda L. Walker
Judi White


(37) YOUTH PROGRAMS
Patricia A. Clark, Chairman
Janet D. Nyce, Vice Chairman
Todd R. Ellis
Edie P. Fleeman
Vito Germinario
Hilary Goldschlager
Amy Heath Lovato
Craig L. Swartz
Bruce Widener


(38) MEETING SITE SELECTION
Bob Barr, Chairman
William A. Bachenberg, Vice Chairman
Ronnie G. Barrett
Larry Craig
Mark Vaughan


(39) SPECIAL COMMITTEE ON SECURITY OPERATIONS
Kayne B. Robinson, Chairman
Jay Printz, Vice Chairman
Mark Vaughan
Blaine Wade


(40) SPECIAL LITIGATION COMMITTEE
Bob Barr, Chairman
Charles L. Cotton
David G. Coy

(41) SPECIAL COMMITTEE ON RELOCATION
Bob Barr, Chairman
Joel Friedman, Vice Chairman
William Bachenberg
Charles L. Cotton
David G. Coy
Tom King
Mark Vaughan


(42) EVP SEARCH COMMITTEE
Bob Barr, Chairman
David G. Coy, Vice Chairman
Carol Frampton
Curtis Jenkins
Jay Printz
Barbara Rumpel
Blaine Wade

Al Hammond Urges Hamlin To Fire Brewer

NRA Director Al Hammond has sent a letter to the members of the Board of Directors encouraging them to support NRA EVP Doug Hamlin and to encourage Hamlin to fire Bill Brewer and his law firm. From everything I’ve read and everything I’ve heard, Hamlin as EVP has the authority to hire and fire any and all vendors including Brewer. While some are strongly holding to the theory that only the Special Litigation Committee has that power, I think ultimately that they are in error.

From Al Hammond’s letter to the BOD:

Subject: Letter to Support Doug Hamlin to Terminate Bill Brewer

Fellow NRA BOD members,  We have come to a critical time in the history of the NRA.  Myself having worked for the NRA for close to 30 years and then joining the BOD I have never seen this association in such dire straits financially and continuing down a path dooming our beloved NRA. We have to take a stand and turn this organization around.  

The first step is to terminate Bill Brewer and his legal team and allow our elected CEO/EVP to do his job without constraint.  I have sent a letter to Doug Hamlin encouraging him to do so and I would ask you to consider sending one in support of Doug as well. My letter is below. 

Now is the time to stand and be counted and help rewrite history as being part of the patriots who saved not only the NRA but our Country. We owe this to our NRA members, our Country and our children to continue to protect these rights every day.  Now is your chance to be heard. Please send Doug Hamlin a support letter for all the good work he has accomplished and continues to do for our NRA everyday.

Best Regards

Al Hammond

NRA BOD

Hammond then goes on to release the letter he sent to Doug Hamlin in encouragement. You may remember that some of the cabal had referred to Hamlin as the “interim EVP” which he is not. I presume that was because they preferred a more compliant EVP and one not associated with the reformers.

From that letter to Hamlin:

Doug, 

As a member of the National Rifle Association Board of Directors my fiduciary responsibility is to represent our members and promote and protect this great association.

With the continuation and constant legal maneuvering by the Brewer law firm to keep the NYAG law suite and other lawsuits without a resolution it is time to terminate and replace our current legal counsel and replace them with our own internal legal counsel and/or another outside legal counsel firm who can get the job done.

We have paid the Brewer firm in excess of 190 million dollars and we can no longer afford this high priced counsel with dismal positive results.  We are cash strapped and the current legal counsel and our President, Bob Barr, along with the entire Special Litigations Committee seem to have turned a blind eye and insist we continue to use Bill Brewer for not only the NYAG case but other pending cases and any new legal cases we enter into.  Enough is enough.

As the duly elected CEO/EVP you have the full authority to decide on any legal counsel moving forward and termination of any currently being utilized.  I fully support and ask you to dismiss the Brewer Firm from any and all lawsuits currently and any moving forward. Our members have had enough of their hard earned money and the support they have given being squandered on poor legal representation.

Thank you for all that you have done and continue to do to bring back the NRA to what it should be and let’s build a bigger and stronger NRA  working together.

Best Regards

Al Hammond

NRA BOD

Andrew Arulanandam Heads To Idaho

Andrew Arulanandam has officially submitted his papers to retire from the NRA effective September 1st. Doug Hamlin, CEO and EVP, sent out this announcement this morning.

Andrew Arulanandam – a valued member of our NRA team for the past 24 years, will be retiring effective September 1, 2024 to pursue a new opportunity.  Andrew has been an integral part of our organization consistently demonstrating dedication, expertise, and a commitment to professionalism and excellence.  Please join me in expressing the NRA’s deep gratitude and best wishes to Andrew.

Doug Hamlin

Executive Vice President/CEO

National Rifle Association of America

After being promoted from being the NRA’s head PR flack to the Executive Director of General Operations and then becoming Interim EVP after Wayne resigned, I was a bit surprised that that he was allowed to stick around after Doug Hamlin was elected EVP. This is especially true given how Arulanandam fronted for the cabal. That said, it was probably easier to return him to his position in PR with the understanding he would be retiring in a few months. I don’t know whether this allowed him to qualify for the NRA’s old pension but that is neither here nor there. I also don’t know whether his salary was reduced from $450,000 when he returned to the old job.

While the NRA hopefully has seen the last of him, the people of Idaho are getting him back.

Governor Brad Little announced the appointment of Andrew Arulanandam as the new director of the Idaho Lottery and the Idaho State Liquor Division. Arulanandam will take over following the retirement of Jeff Anderson, who had led both agencies until July….

In his new position, Arulanandam will lead two agencies that generate significant economic activity for Idaho. In 2023, the Idaho Lottery and Idaho State Liquor Division returned over $210 million to support state programs such as schools and infrastructure.

Arulanandam will begin his new role in September.

It should be noted that Arulanandam was the Executive Director of the Idaho GOP among other Idaho-based positions before he started working for the NRA. He is also a 1992 graduate of Boise State University.

The house cleaning at the NRA continues as now Arulanandam joins Tyler Schropp in the former NRA employee category. I certainly hope there will be more to come including a certain outside counsel.

Running For NRA Board Of Directors (Updated)

Some people already know this but I am running for the NRA Board of Directors. For a long time I thought I could be most useful outside looking in and reporting on what I saw. I think that is still valuable. Nonetheless, after much discussion between the Complementary Spouse and myself, I decided to take the plunge.

As to why I would submit myself to this, the answer is simple. Someone has to do it and better that the one doing it comes primed for reform. We in the Second Amendment community need a viable NRA. By viable, I mean one that can still put the fear of God in politicians, that will train people in proper firearm use and safety, and that will, in conjunction with other 2A groups, litigate the hell out of gun control laws.

Thanks to my friend Todd Vandermyde, my name has been submitted to the Nominating Committee. Likewise, I have submitted his name in nomination. I have returned the documentation that they have requested and the committee will be meeting in the last part of August to review those names submitted. Obviously, with the parties meeting on August 12th to hammer out the final court order the entire procedure may change. One interpretation of the interim court order is that anyone who met the qualifications – a Life Member of five years – will have their name on the ballot. We shall see.

Regardless of what the Nominating Committee or the court decides, I plan to run by petition. Ideally, I would be a dual-nominated candidate. My rationale is that a candidate who gets on the ballot by petition is there because the members want him or her there. Given my goal is to serve the members to the best of my abilities, that is as it should be.

To have my name placed on the ballot, I need to obtain the signatures of 398 voting members. More is better as some signatures will be ruled invalid. As a reminder, voting members are those who are either Life Members of any level or are Annual Members who have at least five years of continuous membership. The closing date for me to submit the petition with my name and your signatures on it is October 8th. Thus, I would need to have them back in my hand no later than October 1st.

My petition form is below. Please download and print it out on 8.5×11 inch letter size paper in landscape format.

UPDATE: I understand some people have had an issue downloading the petition from Scribd. I am attempting another method of making it available. If you can’t get it one way or another, just email me and I will be happy to send it by email.

In addition to your name and dated signature, the petition requires your membership number and your address as listed in the NRA’s files. If you look at the label on your official magazine, you will find your membership number in the upper right corner (see the picture below). You do not need the leading “zeros” in front of your membership number. Alternatively, your membership number is on your membership card.

Any help you can give in obtaining signatures will be gratefully accepted. I don’t care if it is one signature or multiple pages filled with signatures, they all are needed to get me on the ballot.

If you will email me at jpr9954 AT gmail DOT com, I will send you the address where to mail the signed petitions. Normally, I’d just put my address here but I’ve been getting a lot of spam comments from Russia and China. I don’t want to give them any more leeway if I can avoid it.

Again, thank you.

UPDATE II: I have received a very good response from you the readers. In the last two days I have received almost 20 letters with petitions containing almost 40 signatures. When added to what I picked up at the Gun Owners of America GOALS event in Knoxville this past weekend, I am off to a good start

I need to keep the momentum going. If you belong to a gun or sportsmen’s club, ask your fellow members to sign the petition. If you own a gun store or manage a range, please consider placing my petition on your counter. If you have friends who are as fed up as you and me with the grifting and corruption that has occurred, please forward them my petition. If you are a regular on a firearms, hunting, or outdoor forum, please put up a link to this post there. I will be doing that as well.

Remember, you can email me at jpr9954 AT gmail DOT com for instructions on where to send the petition. Given many procedures of the NRA remain in the 20th Century, petitions are required to be mailed back and not scanned/emailed. If you need a short bio to pass on to your friends, I even have one of those. I will say that was hard to write as I’m not the sort sing my own praises.

NY Court Update And Some Suggestions

NRA In Danger reported yesterday evening that the meeting in the NYAG’s office between the attorneys for both parties would be continued. They will meet again on Monday, August 19th, to hammer out the consent decree. The goal is to present it to Judge Cohen by August 27th. If neither party can agree, they will each present their versions.

Much more interesting in the report was a joint letter that Buz Mills and Rocky Marshall sent to Judge Cohen. The letter states that the leaders of the NRA who have not accepted responsibility “misuse and malfeasance of NRA members’ donations” (Barr, Cotton, etc) do not speak on behalf of the NRA, the majority of its directors, nor its members. They go on to state that elected leaders such as Doug Hamlin, Bill Bachenberg, and Mark Vaughn are being kept out of the negotiations with the NYAG’s office. Finally, Buz and Rocky present what they feel should be in the final decree that would meet with the judge’s six dicta.

It is beyond obvious that the time for a Special Litigation Committee is over. Wayne is gone and John Frazer is no longer the General Counsel. Thus, the rationale for it being established is over. One thing being requested in the letter is that Judge Cohen order it dissolved. That said, this should have come from the Board the moment John Frazer was no longer the General Counsel.

A friend suggested to me yesterday that Doug Hamlin should fire Bill Brewer and his firm immediately. He went further to suggest that Hamlin order Sonya Rowling not to cut or sign any checks payable to Brewer or his law firm. If the Executive Committee were to suspend Hamlin as a result, he thought Andrew Arulanandam would serve as interim EVP. I pointed out that the position of Executive Direct of General Operations is vacant and the bylaws do not provide an immediate replacement for the EVP. Things could get interesting.

Giving it some serious thought, I would go further than my friend. If, as has been suggested by the letter from Buz and Rocky, that duly elected officers of the NRA had been kept out of the negotiations and thus unable to perform their fiduciary duties, then it is time for hardball. By hardball, I mean that they should file bar complaints with the New York State Bar against Bill Brewer, Sarah Rogers, Svetlana Eisenberg, and Noah Peters. Preventing officers and directors of a non-profit corporation from doing their legally required fiduciary duties under NY law is a serious offense. It certainly should be grounds for a bar complaint. I should note that a similar complaint currently exists with the Virginia State Bar against John Frazer from his actions while General Counsel.

I would not be surprised if Judge Cohen demands some answers sooner than later.

Tyler Schropp’s Replacement Named

Doug Hamlin, EVP of the NRA, named James P. “JP” Carter as the new Executive Director of the Office of Advancement this morning. He replaces Tyler Schropp who was “let go” approximately two weeks ago.

Photo from Holding Fast Solutions

From the announcement:

From: Hamlin, Douglas <DHamlin@nrahq.org>
Sent: Monday, August 12, 2024 8:59 AM
To: #All NRA Employees <#AllNRAEmployees@nrahq.org>
Subject: Announcement – Executive Director of Advancement

To All NRA Staff:

I am pleased to announce that beginning Monday, August 19th, 2024, James P. (“JP”) Carter will come onboard as the Executive Director, Office of Advancement.  If his name sounds familiar, it is due to his former service in the Publications division as a successful sales executive.

JP holds an undergraduate degree from the University of South Carolina, an M.B.A. from University of North Carolina Chapel Hill and an M.S. in Project Management from Boston University. He has earned several awards for his leadership abilities at various levels of command with the USMC, a diversity leadership award, as well as a Bronze Star for Combat Valor in Afghanistan. He also serves as a Board Member for the Los Angeles Marine Corps Scholarship Foundation.  His past work history includes senior management positions in both Fortune 500 and middle market companies,  focused on operational strategies and leadership excellence. He brings a team mentality to drive action and encouraging organizations to reach their next level of growth/success.

Most recently,  JP founded and was the CEO of a company focused on revenue growth, operational efficiencies, sound business processes, best practices, and strong leadership. Please welcome JP back to the NRA Family – thank you for your support.

Full Speed Ahead!

Doug Hamlin

Executive Vice President/CEO

National Rifle Association of America

Carter founded and is, or was, CEO of Holding Fast Solutions in Fort Mill, SC. They provide operational consulting and government contracting services. The company is certified as a Service-Disabled Veteran Owned Small Business. While Carter has sales experience as Hamlin notes above, I don’t see that he has any major gift or fundraising experience other than perhaps as a board member with the LA Marine Corps Scholarship Foundation. It would almost seem he was better suited to be the Executive Director of General Operations.

It is my understanding that the job was not advertised nor were any internal candidates considered for the position. If I had to offer a guess, I would say that Hamlin wanted someone in that position who would have his back as well as someone he had worked with in the past regardless of whether the candidate perfectly fit the position. I would also hazard a guess that Carter’s appointment has been in the works for some time now and it was long before Schropp was shown the door.

There is no word on salary or compensation nor did I expect it. Ideally, in my opinion, this type of position should compensated with a modest salary plus a commission on what is brought in. It incentivizes bringing in the money which is the key issue for the NRA currently.

Going Deeper Into Judge Cohen’s Interim Decision, Part 2

As I noted in Part 1, Judge Cohen specified six items of relief in his interim decision. Part 1 cover items one through three and this post will cover the final three. When the trial ended and this decision was rendered, the two items out of the six that got the majority of the attention were numbers four and six.

Jumping right in, item four took direct aim at the NRA’s Audit Committee. Judge Cohen said,

Changing the Audit Committee so that it would not include people, at least not – at the very least not – as chair or co-chair, that served on the committee during the violations found in this action. Despite the changes in some members, there is an argument that there needs to be a sharp break with the past – sharper break with the past – than is reflected in the most recent committee appointments. Similar decisions could be made with respect to other committees, as well.

I believe Judge Cohen took note of NRA President Bob Barr’s assignments to the Audit, Finance, Ethics, Legal Affairs, and Bylaws & Resolutions Committee released on July 10th. He, like many of us, was none too happy to see so many of the Cabal in leadership positions. Chief among those was former NRA President Charles Cotton who was appointed chair of Audit and Ethics, vice chair of Bylaws & Resolutions, and a member of the rest. He had specifically called out Cotton along with Barr for their spin on the jury’s verdict calling it “simply false”.

Barr did take note of Judge Cohen’s “concerns” and replaced Cotton as chair of the Audit Committee with Curtis Jenkins. This was on August 1st. From what I understand, Jenkins and Barr go way back together in Georgia politics. Notice that there is no mention of Cotton being removed entirely from the Audit Committee.

Note that item four did not restrict itself to only the Audit Committee. While that was the only specifically mentioned, Judge Cohen said similar decisions could relate to other committees. David Coy who headed the Finance Committee during the period of the violations is still the chair of that committee. During the jury trial, Assistant Attorney General Monica Connell mentioned 14 board members who had been strong backers of Wayne LaPierre. Thanks to Defense Exhibit 4-2-001, we have those names. Of those 14 board members, eight are on these important committees. Of the remaining six, three have joined with the reformers, two are no longer on the board, and only Tom King was not named to one of these important committees. To think that Judge Cohen is ignorant of that would be wishful thinking by Bob Barr and the rest of the Cabal. I would not be surprised if the final decision is even stronger with regard to those who let the corruption and grifting to flourish under their noses.

Moving on, item five deals with the term of office of the Chief Compliance Officer. Currently, it is a 1-year term just like the EVP, Secretary, and CFO. Judge Cohen suggest that the term of office be extended to a 3-year term at least initially. I think he is rightly concerned that a board controlled by the Cabal could decide to replace the Chief Compliance Officer if he or she didn’t go along with their whims. Judge Cohen would like to make it so that the CCO could only be replaced during that period by the entire board for “good cause”. Some examples of what constitutes good cause would be fraud, theft, drug or chronic alcohol abuse, sexual harassment, or a felony conviction. I believe a bylaw change would be required to put this into effect.

The sixth and final item is a suggestion that there be a bylaw referendum to reduce the size of the board or “to reorganize it to create a smaller, more focused group to oversee the key operations and finances of the organization.” He goes on to suggest what I have been in favor of for a long time. That is, something akin to what many colleges or universities have with a board of trustees and a board of visitors. The trustees or directors deal with the core financial and managerial aspects of the organization while the board of visitors or advisors concentrate on things like fund-raising, building support for the organization, and advisory functions. He goes on to say that a board the size of the NRA’s is just “not a manageable to make decisions on micro issues and, also, to provide close oversight.” He is correct on that and it one of the major reasons Wayne and his fellow grifters got away with it for so long. There is one thing that should not happen when it comes to the reduction in size of the board. That is just to make the existing Executive Committee the new, reduced in size, Board of Directors.

Judge Cohen concludes that these are the types of remedies that he has considered. However, since so much of the bench trial was focused on a special monitor, he wants the parties to discuss it, negotiate, and perhaps to come up with additional remedies beyond those he has suggested for his consent order. He says that ultimately it will be his decision but he would like more precise guidance on what he has suggested.

Attorneys for the Attorney General’s Office and the NRA will meet tomorrow for a face-to-face meeting to hammer out an agreement based upon the judge’s six items as well as any additional items that might be proposed by each side. If they can’t hammer out an agreement on the six items, then they will each work on separate proposals which they will present to Judge Cohen for his consideration. Given the reasonableness of Judge Cohen’s six items especially for the NRA, I would hope that they can come up with a joint agreement tomorrow so that this case can come to a conclusion. The sticking points might be the opening up the 2025-2027 board elections, who else is to be removed from a committee, and the mechanics of reducing the size of the board.

I will be looking out for any news released after that meeting and will report on it when I get reliable information.

Going Deeper Into Judge Cohen’s Interim Decision, Part 1

Judge Joel Cohen issued an interim decision on July 29th in the New York trial of the NRA. Beyond deciding that a special monitor was not warranted, he specified six items of relief that he was considering. He ordered both parties, the NY Attorney General’s Office and the NRA, to do a post-trial briefing and negotiation on the six items. This post will examine items one through three while a second post will look at the remaining three items.

The first item was that some or all of the “NRA Compliance Commitment to Members” be incorporated into a court order. Included in that document were a number of items that would be reported to members on an annual basis. These included, in part, a compliance officer and internal audit annual report on travel and entertainment expenses, contracts, related party transactions, and business ethics. In addition, a report from the independent auditor would be published annually, the IRS Form 990 would be signed by both the CEO and CFO, a bylaw change making the Audit Committee elected by the whole board, adoption of a policy forbidding related party transactions unless approved by the whole board, and mandatory disclosures by any candidate for the Board of Directors. There would also be a secure online portal for board and committee members to access documents prior to meeting. This was over a concern about “leaks”.

Most of these are good ideas and were developed by the entire Audit Committee. I do have misgivings about a policy to “stop leaks” as it seems counter-intuitive to their professed concern about being open with members. I will also say that as a candidate for the board myself I have not yet been asked to consent to a background check or any of the other items. This may be because it will only apply to those actually individuals whose names will appear on the ballot.

Judge Cohen’s second item goes directly to the election of members of the Board of Directors. He wants to make it easier for people to run for the Board for at least the next three years. He took note indirectly of the election of the Four for Reform as well as the Nominating Committee’s continual re-nomination of sitting directors every three years. He found the past work of the Nominating Committee “led to significant and unhealthy entrenchment of both management and the board” which made it very hard for new members to have any impact. As such, he is strongly suggesting that for the next three years that anyone who meets the minimal qualifications for election to the board be allowed to run if they so desire. The current minimal qualifications are that candidates have been a life member for at least five years. He goes on to add that there would be no need to go through the petition process.

The nominating process has already started. The time period for submission of names to the Nominating Committee has closed and documentation from candidates needed to be received by the Office of the Secretary by August 8th. The committee will meet on August 24th to review the potential nominees and make their decision. Petition candidates have until October 8th to have their petition signature sheets returned to the Office of the Secretary. Judge Cohen’s final order on this item could toss all of this. The replacement would be a long ballot consisting of those whose names have been submitted along with anyone else who wanted to run. We shall see.

Item number three on the list is a requirement that the NRA retain an independent compliance consultant of their choice for at least a three year period. This person would work with the Chief Compliance Officer “and staff to make recommendations to the board.” More importantly from the NRA’s perspective, this person would not be reporting to either the Court or the NYAG. The goal of this consultant would be to provide an independent perspective to the board and to help them implement best practices to carry out Judge Cohen’s final directives.

This item makes perfect sense to me. My primary hope is that the selection of this compliance consultant be made by Doug Hamlin without the interference of Bill Brewer or any of the Cabal. As the Chief Compliance Officer cannot be replaced by the EVP and Robert Mensinger was pushed to the NRA by Bill Brewer, any compliance consultant must be truly independent and without taint. Mr. Mensinger may be worth every bit of his $400,000 salary and be cleaner than the driven snow. However, I have a hard time trusting anything or anyone connected to Bill Brewer or Brewer, Attorneys and Counselors. The damage that Brewer has done to the NRA, financial and otherwise, is incalculable. Even Mike Bloomberg and his billions could not have done as much damage.

Part 2 will now look at the final three items in Judge Cohen’s interim decision.

NRA Legal Affairs Committee Meeting?

I saw a comment on NRA In Danger that the NRA’s Legal Affairs Committee is meeting today in Fairfax. It seems to have been confirmed by a response to an email sent to NRA EVP Doug Hamlin.

Supposedly, according to both the comment and a private email I’ve received, the topic of discussion will be on terminating the services of Brewer, Attorneys and Counselors. The word is that both Sandy Froman and Bill Barr will be there.

If that is true and Brewer is terminated, hallelujah!

UPDATE: I have not heard any thing reported as a result of this meeting. In retrospect, there could be one other topic that might have been discussed. That is what is to be discussed in the face-to-face meeting tomorrow between the NYAG’s attorneys and the NRA’s attorneys as they hammer out a joint submission that addresses Judge Cohen’s six items in his interim decision.