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NRA Shell Companies Funneled Up to $35 Million to GOP Candidates, Lawsuit Says

The lawsuit claims the NRA used the shell companies to make illegal campaign donations to at least 7 candidates for federal office.
Former President Donald Trump speaks to supporters during a rally at the Iowa State Fairgrounds on October 09, 2021 in Des Moines, Iowa. (Scott Olson/Getty Images)​
Former President Donald Trump speaks to supporters during a rally at the Iowa State Fairgrounds on October 09, 2021 in Des Moines, Iowa. (Scott Olson/Getty Images)

The National Rifle Association used shell companies to make as much as $35 million in illegal donations to Republican candidates in 2018, a lawsuit filed this week on behalf of a gun control group claims. 

The nonpartisan Campaign Legal Center and Giffords, the gun safety advocacy group started by former Rep. Gabrielle Giffords and her husband Sen. Mark Kelly, filed the federal lawsuit Tuesday in D.C. The complaint says that two NRA affiliates, the NRA-Political Victory Fund and NRA-Institute for Legislative Action, “engaged in an ongoing scheme to evade campaign finance regulations by using a series of shell corporations to illegally but surreptitiously coordinate advertising with at least seven candidates for federal office.”

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The allegations center around two groups: a political consultancy firm operating as both Onboard and Starboard, and a vendor, National Media and affiliates American Media and Advertising Group and Red Eagle Media. Giffords says the NRA used the groups to coordinate campaign advertising between the organization and the candidates.

“These schemes allow the NRA to evade federal contribution limits and shield millions of dollars of public spending from public scrutiny in violation of [the Federal Election Campaign Act],” the lawsuit says. 

The connections between the NRA and the groups were first reported by the Trace and Mother Jones in 2018 and 2019

The campaigns and candidates mentioned in the lawsuit include former President Donald Trump’s presidential campaign, which the CLC alleges received $25 million as part of the scheme. In addition to the NRA-PVF and NRA-ILA, the lawsuit also names Sen. Josh Hawley and former Montana Senate candidate Matt Rosendale as defendants, and says Sens. Thom Tillis, Tom Cotton, Ron Johnson, and former Sen. Cory Gardner also received the donations.

The NRA denied the lawsuit’s claims. “Another premeditated abuse of the public by our adversaries—who will stop at nothing in their pursuit of their anti-freedom agenda,” the gun group told the Washington Post.

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“Suffice to say, the NRA has full confidence in its political activities and remains eager to set the record straight.”

Kyle Plotkin, a political adviser for Hawley, told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch that the complaint was “a frivolous lawsuit by a special interest anti-gun group who wants to take away the rights of law-abiding gun owners.”

Giffords is the gun-safety advocacy group that came out of Americans for Responsible Solutions, the political action committee started by former congresswoman Giffords and Sen. Kelly. It was formed after she was shot and nearly killed in an assassination attempt in 2011

From 2014 to 2018, Giffords spent millions in support of Democratic candidates running against the Republicans named, including Hillary Clinton and former Sens. Russ Feingold, Claire McCaskill, and Mark Udall, the lawsuit says. The only Republican named in the lawsuit who lost his race was Rosendale, who was defeated by Sen. Jon Tester in 2018. Last year, Rosendale won election to the House. 

The CLC and Giffords sued the Federal Election Commission in 2019 after it failed to act on complaints the group had filed. In September, the same D.C. court ruled that the FEC had to take action on the complaint within 30 days, and when the deadline expired without action, the court ruled that Giffords could sue the NRA directly in order to “remedy the violations” it sought in the FEC complaints. 

“The FEC had the chance to do its job by taking action against the NRA for this massive coordination scheme, but as usual, the FEC failed to enforce the law,” CLC Action senior legal counsel Molly Danahy said in a statement. “Therefore, we are compelled to take legal action to crack down on secret spending.”

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