This story was published in partnership with The Trace, a nonprofit news organization covering guns in America.
In early January, Wayne LaPierre, the longtime head of the National Rifle Association, and Donald Trump were one floor apart in the civil branch of the New York State Supreme Court, each on trial for a range of financial misdeeds. There was an uncanny symmetry to the occasion. LaPierre had, for more than thirty years, positioned himself as the leader of a warrior tribe in a fight against imminent cultural extinction. He invoked violent imagery, inflamed partisan tensions, stoked outrage, and exploited fear and paranoia. He channelled those emotions in the service of profit and power, tapping into the countryâs darkest impulses at the expense of civil society. Before Trump, he was the warmup act that primed the audience. âDo you trust this government to protect you?â he once asked in a speech, and then answered, âWe are on our own.â
This notion of rugged individual responsibility ran counter to the case laid out by the office of the New York attorney general, which accused LaPierre of rampant self-dealing and a deliberate disregard for oversight. Lavish travel expensesâluxury hotels, private jetsâwent through the N.R.A.âs public-relations firm, which then billed the organization with nondescript invoices, preventing scrutiny. LaPierre repeatedly vacationed with his family on a yacht, in the Bahamas, that belonged to an N.R.A. vender. He and his wife, Susan, went to Greece and India on the same venderâs dime. In court, a photograph of LaPierre smiling in front of the Taj Mahal was projected for the jury, which learned that he had not disclosed these excursions in a corporate questionnaire that asked about accepting gifts that posed a potential conflict of interest. The jury then viewed the venderâs contract extensions, signed by LaPierre, for more and more money. The problematic arrangements piled up. Custom suits, millions spent on private jets, exorbitant costs associated with Susanâs hair and makeup.
LaPierre defended himself by portraying the N.R.A. as a heavily scripted productionâa kind of long-running political drama in which he was paid to arouse passions and build a devoted, dues-paying audience. He was, as Kent Correll, his lawyer, said, âthe face and voice of the organizationââthe star, the leading man. He had given the role everything he had, but he had only been playing a character. The trial had required him to tell the truth, leaving him unmasked. On February 23rd, the jury found LaPierre liable for improperly enriching himself and those close to him, and required him to pay more than $4.3 million back to the N.R.A. By then, he had already stepped down from the organization, citing a diagnosis of chronic Lyme disease. The act was over.
LaPierre was not a seething populist or a born fighter. In college, Correll said, LaPierre had been âfascinatedâ with politics and political science. âHe thought he was going to become a professor,â the attorney explained during his opening statement. âHe was a scholar; he was bookish; he was shy; he was a devout Catholic.â LaPierreâs career, it seems, was a matter of happenstance. He volunteered for the Presidential campaign of George McGovern, a progressive Democrat, in 1972, then took a job in Virginia with a Democratic state delegate who was interested in gun rights. By the late seventies, he was working for the N.R.A. as a regional lobbyist. He rose through the organization. In 1991, the position of executive vice-presidentâthe top jobâcame open. âThey asked if he would take the job,â his attorney said. âHe did not want it.â LaPierre preferred lobbying and policymaking, activities better suited to a cerebral man who was uncomfortable in the spotlight. But there was no one else, so he âstepped intoâ a public life.
LaPierre the man and LaPierre the character were distinct. âPeople said, âWell, youâve got to go on TV and talk.â â Correll told the court. âAnd this is something he had never done before, so he had to be trained by people who knew how to do that.â LaPierre did not naturally possess the qualities Americans usually associate with leadership: charisma, fortitude, decisiveness. So the N.R.A.âs public-relations firm, Ackerman McQueen, rebuilt him in the image of John Wayneâa man of individual responsibility striding through the tall corn and taking matters into his own hands. âThe only thing that stops a bad guy with a gun is a good guy with a gun,â he famously said, after the mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School.
The N.R.A.âs millions of members saw LaPierre as one of their own, and trusted him to be their fearless champion. In speeches, advertisements, editorials, and fund-raising e-mails, he attacked the âpolitical élites, media élites, Hollywood élites, the powerful, the privileged, the pampered.â âThey think theyâre better than us,â he once said. âThey think theyâre somehow more intellectually evolved than we are.â He spoke in apocalyptic terms about âterrorists and home invaders and drug cartels and carjackers and knockout-gamers and rapers, haters, campus killers, airport killers, shopping-mall killers, road-rage killers, and killers who scheme to destroy our country with massive storms of violence.â America was perpetually on its deathbed. âIn virtually every way, for the things we care about most, we feel profound loss,â he said. âWeâre sad, not because we fear something is going wrong, but because we know something already has gone wrong.â
Somewhat improbably, LaPierre was good for politics. Elected officials endowed him with tremendous power. For Republicans, his organizationâs money and endorsements signalled they were on the right side of the culture war. For Democrats, he was a convenient foil when the legislative process failed, one mass shooting after another. LaPierre provided the public with a cathartic outlet, serving as either a hero or a villain. But anyone paying close attention to him could see that he was not the person he purported to beânot authentically truculent, like Trump, or a natural on the stage, like the N.R.A.âs former president, Charlton Heston, who was an actual actor. Behind the scenes, professionals penned his speeches and fund-raising e-mails. When LaPierre spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on custom suits and accessories at the Zegna boutique, in Beverly Hills, it was because Ackerman McQueen forced him to âget wardrobe at this store,â LaPierre testified. When he flew on private jets, it was because N.R.A. security told him to do so. When he shot an elephant on cameraâmultiple times at close rangeâit wasnât because he wanted to; it was because it was his job. He wasnât a gun guyâhe could barely handle a firearm.
The LaPierre production was a never-ending affair, requiring constant maintenance. On a series of African hunting trips, for instance, handlers and staff managed almost every aspect of his performance so that, later, the material could be hammered into narratives of masculine heroism for an N.R.A.-sponsored television show. On a 2003 trip to Botswana, footage shows him sitting on the edge of his bed in a spacious tent, chin resting on his hand, staring out at a view of tall trees. Heâs dressed in khaki-and-green safari gear. A rifle and a box of ammunition sit on an adjacent bed.
âThis is a nice shot of Wayne just kind of thinking to himself,â the cameraman says.
He instructs LaPierre to put on his boots, and cues his wife, Susan, who strides through the entrance of the tent, wearing an immaculate white shirt, her blond hair appearing freshly blown out. Sheâs holding a safari hat and has binoculars hanging around her neck. LaPierre remarks that he wants to âget back into those kuduââa species of antelopeâas Susan reminds him to pack sunscreen and bug spray. LaPierre grabs his rifle, and the two head into the wilderness. But then Susan is sent back inside for another shot. Sheâs directed to pick up LaPierreâs hat on the way out.
Susan calls to LaPierre, âDo you want your hat, honey?â
The footage is a testament to the N.R.A.âs meticulous construction of an alternate realityâa vision calculated to align with a sentimental, conservative world view. Gender hierarchy is unshakable. LaPierre is the taciturn man. He is in charge. He thinks deep thoughts. His wife, the helpmeet, reminds him not to forget the sunscreen.
On another trip to Botswana, in 2009, a cameraman films LaPierre setting out to hunt buffalo. He appears out of character, an actor who has not had enough time to prepare for his role. He is passive, uncertain, and compliant, looking out through his glasses on the arid, windswept plains. Two companionsâChris Cox, then the N.R.A.âs top lobbyist, and a hunting guideâinstruct him on what to do. In one scene, LaPierre rests on the ground as the guide sets up a tripod. âWayne,â the guide says, to no response. âWayne!â LaPierre scrambles to his feet and balances his rifle on the tripod. âYou see the bull second from the right?â the guide asks. âJust shoot him in the chest. Shoot him straight in the chest.â LaPierre fires and the herd takes off. The guide starts moving, and LaPierre, bewildered, follows him. He turns to the cameraman and asks, âDid I miss?â Cox reassures him with a pat on the back.
The animal comes into focus. Itâs down. LaPierre rests his rifle on the tripod. âJust remember,â the guide says, âdonât shoot too high.â LaPierre fires, the buffaloâs body jumps, and then he shoots it again.
âAll right,â LaPierre says. âYou better believe it.â He shakes hands with the guide and asks, âIs he down for good?â
The cameraman intrudes: âJust do that handshake again, would you?â
LaPierre does the handshake again. âIt always feels good when theyâre down, Iâll tell ya that,â he says. âThatâs a good feeling to have him down, Iâll tell ya that.â
During the trial, LaPierreâs testimony about the purpose of the trips provided the most revealing moment of the proceedings. âI needed to build a rep and be seen as a hunter,â he said. âI needed to develop the street cred if I was going to do the job.â He went on, âI would never take a shot without it being on camera.â