Jasmine Crockett built her career attacking corporate America.
The Texas Democrat positioned herself as a champion of the working class.
But Jasmine Crockett had one dark secret revealed that blew up in her face.
Radical leftist forgot to disclose 25 major stock holdings to Congress
Jasmine Crockett made a name for herself attacking Republicans during heated Congressional hearings.
The Texas Democrat built her brand as a crusading civil rights attorney fighting for the little guy against corporate America.
Turns out Crockett was secretly invested in the exact same corporations she rails against in public.
Records obtained by the Washington Free Beacon through a public records request revealed Crockett owned stocks in at least 25 companies she never disclosed during her 2022 Congressional run.¹
The undisclosed holdings included shares in pharmaceutical giants Johnson & Johnson and AstraZeneca, fossil fuel behemoth ExxonMobil, and marijuana firms like Aurora Cannabis.¹
Crockett admitted owning these stocks in her final Texas state legislature financial disclosure covering 2021.
But when she filed her first Congressional financial disclosure also covering 2021, those same 25 stocks mysteriously vanished.¹
Federal law requires candidates and Members of Congress to file detailed financial disclosures.
Lying on those forms can result in civil fines or criminal prosecution.¹
Crockett also failed to disclose debts totaling at least $110,000 that she reported owing to Texas authorities.¹
Her Congressional office refused to comment on the discrepancies.¹
Crockett defended murder suspect in weed deal while running marijuana business
While Crockett was trying to cash in on the marijuana business, she was defending an accused murderer back in Texas.
In 2018, Crockett represented Tyvon Montrel Gullatt, charged with killing someone during a marijuana deal gone bad.
Gullatt was found guilty and sentenced to life in prison.¹
That same year, records show Crockett was a 20 percent owner of Black Diamond Investments, a firm seeking licenses to operate marijuana dispensaries in Ohio.²
The firm submitted a 148-page application identifying Crockett as chief operations officer with detailed plans for her day-to-day duties running the dispensary.²
Crockett was listed as the only contact for Black Diamond during the entire application process.²
At the time, medical marijuana was legal in Ohio but faced far tighter restrictions in Texas where Black Diamond was based.
The firm never got approved.
But Crockett kept pushing marijuana decriminalization bills both in the Texas statehouse and later in Congress.
She co-sponsored legislation in August to decriminalize marijuana at the national level.¹
Crockett even maintained her ownership stake in Black Diamond Investments according to her latest Congressional financial disclosure.¹
Climate warrior secretly profited from the fossil fuels she claims are destroying America
Crockett loves lecturing Americans about climate change being an “existential crisis.”
She built her brand claiming fossil fuels hit communities of color hardest.
The whole time, Crockett quietly owned stock in ExxonMobil, one of the world’s largest oil companies.¹
Several liberal governments have sued ExxonMobil claiming the company caused climate change.
Crockett also owned shares in American Airlines, General Motors, and Ford.¹
Every single one of these companies depends on the fossil fuels Crockett claims to oppose.
The hypocrisy extends to her pharmaceutical investments.
Crockett was a vocal advocate for COVID-19 vaccine mandates in 2021 as a Texas state representative.
She attacked “right-wing nuts” who opposed forcing Americans to take the jab.¹
Those mandates generated billions in profits for Johnson & Johnson and AstraZeneca.
Two companies Crockett owned stock in but conveniently forgot to tell Congress about.¹
Ethics watchdog says conflict of interest concerns are “legitimate”
Caitlin Sutherland runs Americans for Public Trust, an ethics watchdog organization.
She told the Free Beacon that Crockett’s undisclosed portfolio and debts raise major conflict of interest concerns.¹
“Personal financial disclosure rules are in place to make sure Members of Congress do not engage in conflicts of interest while working for the American people,” Sutherland explained.¹
Several companies in Crockett’s secret portfolio stood to benefit from her actions in both the Texas legislature and Congress.
The pharmaceutical and marijuana industries in particular would profit from legislation she pushed.
“The concerns surrounding the extreme discrepancies between Representative Crockett’s state and federal financial disclosures are certainly legitimate,” Sutherland stated.¹
“If she is found to have improperly reported her assets and liabilities, further inquiry and possible penalties would be warranted,” she added.¹
Crockett reported owning fewer than 100 shares in each of the 25 undisclosed stocks.¹
Members of the House are only required to publicly disclose stock holdings exceeding $1,000.
That legal loophole let Crockett hide her investments from public scrutiny.
It’s unclear if Crockett still owns shares in these companies or if she still owes the debts she reported to Texas but hid from Congress.
Crockett built her political brand attacking corporate America and championing radical leftist causes.
Behind the scenes, she was getting rich off the exact industries she claimed to oppose.
Pharmaceutical companies making billions from vaccine mandates she pushed.
Fossil fuel giants she says are destroying the planet.
Marijuana firms she helped through legislation while defending a convicted murderer in a weed deal.
Democrats screaming about ethics and transparency suddenly go silent when one of their own gets caught with their hand in the cookie jar.
¹ Andrew Kerr, “Inside Jasmine Crockett’s Secret Stock Portfolio and Failed Attempts To Become a Marijuana Magnate,” Washington Free Beacon, October 27, 2025.
² Ibid.

