The National Rifle Association’s bankruptcy trial kicked off to fireworks in a federal court in Texas on Monday, as a lawyer from New York Attorney General’s office ripped CEO Wayne LaPierre’s gambit as a “masterclass in bad faith and dishonest conduct.” When the NRA filed a federal bankruptcy petition in Texas earlier this year, the group’s website boasted of being “in its strongest financial condition in years.” The GOP power broker claims that it is “dumping New York” and “utilizing the protection of the bankruptcy court” in order to organize its “legal and regulatory matters in efficient forum.” “By the NRA’s own words, it is not only solvent but financially strong,” Assistant Attorney General Monica Connell told a judge on Monday morning. The NRA has no offices in Texas but has asserted venue via an affiliate, Sea Girt, LLC, an entity that the attorney general described as a “wholly-owned shell company” established in the Lone Star State three months ago as a “toehold” for the proceedings. Attorney Brian Mason , representing the NRA’s former public relations firm Ackerman McQueen, also argued that the bankruptcy petition had been filed in bad faith. “Bankruptcy courts cannot be the subject of fraud,” Mason told the judge, adding that the NRA is trying to “game” the bankruptcy system. The NRA has been embroiled in litigation with New York Attorney General Letitia James (D), Ackerman McQueen, and the gun group’s ex-president Oliver North in the Empire State. The attorney general’s suit threatens to shut the NRA down for violating New York charity law, accusing LaPierre of using the gun group as his “personal piggy bank” and funding his private jet trips to the tropics and African safaris with donor money. The bankruptcy judge was told today that donor money also paid LaPierre’s “wife’s glam squad.” Describing that lawsuit as politically motivated, the NRA noted that James described the group as a “terrorist organization ” on the campaign trail, and LaPierre has denied the allegations of fraud and mismanagement. Turning against its longtime client, Ackerman McQueen’s attorney warned that allowing a solvent entity to declare bankruptcy to skirt liability will “open to floodgates” to other corporations hoping to duck enforcement actions in other jurisdictions perceived to be unfriendly. “Today it’s New York and the NRA, tomorrow it’s X or Y Corporation, in any of the other 49 states,” Mason said. During his opening statement, Mason rolled footage from LaPierre’s deposition where the NRA chief fretted that putting the association into a receivership would effectively “destroy” the organization. As for Ackerman McQueen’s request to dismiss the NRA’s bankruptcy petition, Mason emphasized: “My client does not make this request lightly: Ackerman McQueen stood side-by-side with the old NRA.” That longtime relationship fell apart after the NRA accused North of a plotting a “failed coup attempt” with Ackerman McQueen against the organization’s leadership, roughly two years ago. Ackerman McQueen’s lawyer claims that it was the NRA that became of a “shadow of itself,” beset by “fraud, dishonesty, misconduct and gross mismanagement.” Other former allies have turned against the NRA in court: Its board member and ex-Wichita judge Phillip Journey wants an examiner to probe the group, and the NRA’s former heavy hitting donor David Dell’Aquila , a tech company head, proposed a class action lawsuit alleging financial improprieties. Journey’s lawyer Jermaine Watson told the judge his client still believes the NRA is important to the country but “definitely” has concerns its current leadership is “totally destroying an organization that has withstood the test of time for 150 years.” Opening statements will resume at 1:30 p.m. Central Time. [photo by SAUL LOEB/AFP/Getty Images] The post N.Y. Attorney General’s Office Slams NRA Bankruptcy as a ‘Masterclass in Bad Faith’ as Gun Group’s Trial Begins first appeared on Law & Crime .
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The law students aren’t considered the quickest off the mark for getting involved in applications and internships early on in their degree, but it’s a close one! More and more law firms are offering placements and taster days during the first year of university so it is tempting to think that you need to get involved in deciding your career choice right from day one.
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