Regarding the state dissolving a church organization...
As posted in another thread, here is what is happening in Japan, filing a court order to dissolve the Unification Church...
https://www.eurasiareview.com/06092023-japan-seeks-court-order-to-dissolve-unification-church/
Could it happen here to other religious organizations?
This is an interesting read...
(selection from pages 1549 and 1550 of "Michigan Law Review")
"Nearly all states have statutory provisions for dissolution procedures, either voluntary or involuntary, for ecclesiastical corporations. The provisions display great variety, running the gamut from those that seem to be almost an afterthought to those that are highly sophisticated and patterned after similar sections in many business corporation acts. There are four principal procedures for dissolving an ecclesiastical corporation: (1) involuntary dissolution initiated by officers or members of the corporation, (2) involuntary dissolution initiated by the state attorney general or other public official, (3) voluntary dissolution upon vote of the membership of the corporation itself, and (4) dissolution by church officials upon extinction of the local corporate unit. Five states also allow dissolution when a creditor of a congregation has reduced a claim to judgment and the claim remains unsatisfied..."
"Involuntary dissolution initiated by the state attorney general or other public official is a widely used method. Generally, the grounds for allowing dissolution on this basis are fraud in the procuring of the corporate franchise, abuse of the use of the corporate privilege, failure to file an annual report with the secretary of state or other designated public official, termination of the period of duration specified in the articles of incorporation, and general abuse of state law or violation of the public interest. As an outgrowth of his powers to oversee charities - a carry-over from the common law - the attorney general of the state is usually given the power to institute dissolution proceedings. Some states give this power to the prosecuting attorneys of the county in which the property of the corporation is located or to the state official charged with overseeing corporations within the state."
https://repository.law.umich.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=4476&context=mlr
And also here...
"The corporation law of many states provides that church corporations may be dissolved involuntarily by the attorney general upon the occurrence of one or more of several grounds, including failure to pay fees prescribed by law, failure to file an annual report, fraudulent solicitation of funds, and exceeding the authority conferred by state corporation law."
https://www.churchlawandtax.com/pastor-church-law/organization-and-administration/dissolution/#:~:text=The%20corporation%20law%20of%20many,of%20funds%2C%20and%20exceeding%20the