Patel purchased the shares of MicroStrategy (MSTR) on November 21, yet the transaction remained off the public record until May 26. While the Stop Trading on Congressional Knowledge Act mandates that executive branch officials report trades exceeding $1,000 within 45 days, Patel’s filing arrived months late. In correspondence with the U.S. Office of Government Ethics, the director attributed the oversight to an unspecified "miscommunication." Despite the lapse, no civil penalties were levied against him.
Government watchdogs have seized on the incident as evidence of systemic failures in oversight. Dylan Hedtler-Gaudette of the Project on Government Oversight labeled the delay a clear violation of the law, fueling ongoing advocacy for a blanket ban on individual stock trading by federal employees. Conversely, the Justice Department has maintained that the purchase does not constitute a conflict of interest. Deputy Assistant Attorney General William Taylor confirmed in a May 28 letter that he considers Patel to be in full compliance with all relevant regulations.
The investment remains particularly sensitive due to MicroStrategy’s status as a "Bitcoin Treasury Company," holding over 847,000 BTC. Given that the company maintains significant business ties with the Justice Department and the FBI continues to aggressively pursue cryptocurrency-related fraud, critics argue the optics are problematic. Patel himself has previously used social media to vow a crackdown on digital asset scammers, a stance that now sits uncomfortably alongside his personal financial exposure to the sector.
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