FBI Director Kash Patel is facing renewed ethics scrutiny after federal financial records showed he disclosed a six-figure investment in Strategy, formerly MicroStrategy, months after the deadline required under the Stop Trading on Congressional Knowledge (STOCK) Act.
Patel purchased between $100,001 and $250,000 worth of Strategy shares on November 21, 2025. However, he did not report the transaction to the U.S. Office of Government Ethics until May 26, 2026, more than six months later and well beyond the STOCK Act’s requirement that senior executive branch officials disclose stock transactions exceeding $1,000 within 45 days of the trade.
In a letter accompanying the amended disclosure, Patel said the transaction had been “inadvertently omitted” because of a “miscommunication.” The filing was subsequently amended and accepted by ethics officials, according to NOTUS.
The timing of the disclosure has become the central issue in the case. Patel’s stock purchase occurred on November 21, 2025, meaning the statutory disclosure deadline fell approximately 45 days later. Instead, the investment was not publicly disclosed until May 26, 2026, extending the reporting delay to more than 180 days after the purchase.
On May 28, 2026, Deputy Assistant Attorney General William Taylor informed ethics officials that Patel’s ownership of Strategy stock did not present a conflict of interest with his duties as FBI director. The Justice Department also indicated that Patel’s amended disclosure had been reviewed and approved. As of the latest reports, Patel had not received the standard $200 civil penalty that may apply to first-time STOCK Act filing violations.
Government ethics organizations disagreed with that assessment. Dylan Hedtler-Gaudette of the Project on Government Oversight said the delayed filing amounted to a violation of the STOCK Act, adding to ongoing calls for stricter limits on individual stock trading by senior federal officials.
The disclosure has attracted additional attention because Strategy has become the world’s largest publicly traded corporate holder of Bitcoin, positioning its shares as a widely followed proxy for Bitcoin exposure. The company has accumulated approximately 847,363 BTC since beginning its Bitcoin treasury strategy in 2020, while also maintaining government contracts, including work performed for the U.S. Department of Justice over the years.
The FBI regularly investigates cryptocurrency-related crimes, including investment fraud and digital asset scams, placing financial holdings tied to major Bitcoin-focused companies under greater public scrutiny. Separately, the agency recently warned that crypto investment scammers are increasingly using cash couriers to target victims across the U.S. through schemes highlighted in an advisory published on the FBI’s official website and the Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3). Despite the attention surrounding Kash Patel’s investment, the U.S. Department of Justice concluded that it did not create a conflict with his official responsibilities.

