For those who can't be arsed to read the whole thing.
1. The NA garnered tons of income and didn't pay proper taxes for over 15 years. Pierce was still alive during at least two of those years. Their accountant discovered they had been collecting hundreds of thousands of dollars in "member dues" but had not been reporting any of it as taxable income since at least 1998, when the dues money collected was listed as "retained earnings" on the tax filings. At that time, they claimed $860,000 in member dues income as non-taxable retained earnings. The accountant estimated the Alliance collected an additional one and a half to two million dollars in member dues and donations over the 17 years since 1998 using the same illegal accounting trick. They hadn't even filed income tax returns in over a decade for any of its business ventures, including Resistance Records.
2. Money laundering. They would earn income from timber sales and then wire the proceeds offshore. Some of the money wired offshore would pay for foreign nationals illegally working in the USA, including one Arthur Kemp who stayed under the pseudonym "Richard Preston". They were trying to get him into the US legally via Work Visa, but that never worked out. The accountant found more off-shore bank wire transfers, including one transfer in 2005 moving $125,000 to someone in Europe from the NA's so-called retained earnings account with Charles Schwab. Another $100,000 wire transfer from the Schwab account was described in the books as a "short term loan."
3. Kevin Strom's predilections for, in his words allegedly, "shockingly young females" is known to even senior members of the NA, including one woman who refuses to trust her two daughters with him. She claims Strom likes to dress his sexual partners up in schoolgirl outfits.
4. Strom faked an editorial newspaper to appear as though some legitimate media source would take his side regarding his conviction for child pornography possession.
5. The NA silenced their accountant via a non-disclosure agreement, or NDA, written by their lawyer. This prevented him from consulting with other accountants or tax preparers. Knowing the NDA didn't apply to criminal activity, he began documenting and saving his findings on flash drives.
6. The accountant claimed the organization embezzled tens of thousands of dollars, allegedly by the former business manager Patrick Martin. The NA's lawyer told him to ignore it. He even told him to refrain from using the word "embezzlement."
7. In the few times the organization did file for income tax returns, mistakes were rampant. The 2013 tax return for National Vanguard Books 2013 was prepared by Thomas Padgett, an infamous neo-Nazi and convicted swindler. He claimed it sold less than $25,000 in books in 2013 and claimed expenses of more than $60,000, thus reporting it took a loss of more than $37,000. Worse was the last page of the filing, where the preparer claimed that National Vanguard Books had a Net Operating Loss (NOL) of more than $480,000 available in 2013.
8. Thomas Padgett of Akron, Ohio, responsible for preparing the income tax returns, had no discernible tax filing skills. His credentials include work as a "personal trainer," a "psychic reader," and a former employee of the Psychic Friends Network. He was also convicted of insurance fraud and sent to prison thirty years ago.
9. After rejecting the NVB tax filing, the IRS opened up an inquiry in to the NA. The National Alliance leaders and employees and others interviewed, both on and off the record, for this report all denied any knowledge of financial irregularities with the organization and placed the blame squarely on others for any problems that may ultimately be found in the pending IRS inquiry.