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Gabe Kaminsky, Investigative Reporter


NextImg:Democratic House member flouts stock disclosure law with over year late filing

A Democratic congresswoman with a history of stock trades that have alarmed ethics experts reported a large purchase of shares in a top company more than one year past the federally required deadline, records show.

Rep. Kathy Manning (D-NC) revealed in a periodic transaction report on Thursday that the lawmaker and her spouse snagged $29,122 in shares of Blackstone, an influential private investment banking company, through a joint trust back on June 10, 2022. The buy was only made public after 418 days, falling in stark contrast to the STOCK Act, which requires members of Congress to disclose securities trades of more than $1,000 within 45 days.

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The North Carolina Democrat has said in the past her investments are managed by third-party managers, who have control over the assets and don't leave Manning and her husband, Randall Kaplan, discretion over trade decisions. That said, Manning has been a repeat offender of the stock disclosure law, and in 2022 filed 51 trades worth up to $1.25 million past the deadline, according to documents.

"This is more of laws for thee, but not for me from liberals," Tom Jones, president of the American Accountability Foundation, a conservative watchdog group, told the Washington Examiner. "If these requirements are going to protect against insider trading, the disclosures need to happen quickly and in compliance with the ethics requirements."

The STOCK Act, which was enacted in 2012, aims to fight insider trading and conflicts of interest among lawmakers when it comes to securities. While it aims to bolster transparency in Congress, the act is often disregarded by politicians, which has led to bipartisan watchdogs demanding enforcement.

Fines are typically $200 for skirting the STOCK Act. The Office of Congressional Ethics, a nonpartisan body investigating alleged misconduct, is tasked with referring possible violations to the House Ethics Committee, which is currently chaired by Rep. Michael Guest (R-MI)

In the filing, Manning said the Blackstone shares were then sold on June 15, 2022, for $25,755 — a roughly $3,300 loss. The sale was reported in 2022, though "the purchase was inadvertently omitted due to an administrative error," according to the filing.

"The error was discovered during preparation for the 2022 Annual Report for timely filing on August 2, 2023," the document added.

Rep. Kathy Manning.

It's the latest financial-related slip-up for Manning, who the Washington Examiner reported in October of last year sold up to $30,000 in shares of Amazon and Microsoft before voting in favor of an antitrust bill that would rein in the power of Big Tech companies.

The White House endorsed the measure, which later was folded into the $1.7 trillion omnibus spending bill signed by President Joe Biden in late December 2022.

Manning also bought up to $30,000 in shares of the semiconductor companies Micron and Nvidia in July 2022 before voting in favor of the CHIPS Act, which Biden signed in August of that year and allocated about $280 billion to fund semiconductor research and development in the United States, according to a financial disclosure.

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER

Manning's office did not return a request for comment.

The OCE declined to comment.