Squad member Jasmine Crockett made her reputation attacking Republicans for ethics violations.
Now she's got a problem of her own.
And Jasmine Crockett just got hit with one ethics complaint she'll hate after this ugly secret was exposed.
The far-left Texas Congresswoman who loves lecturing others about accountability is facing serious questions about her own financial dealings.
Crockett, who represents Texas's 30th Congressional District, concealed ownership in at least 25 companies when she ran for Congress in 2022 and again after taking office in 2023.¹
Those undisclosed holdings weren't small-time investments either.
Her secret stock portfolio included major pharmaceutical giants like Johnson & Johnson and AstraZeneca, fossil fuel companies like ExxonMobil, technology firms like Amazon and Uber, and marijuana businesses like Aurora Cannabis.¹
The Foundation for Accountability and Civic Trust filed an ethics complaint accusing Crockett of violating the Ethics in Government Act. Under federal law, politicians who knowingly file false financial disclosures can face prison time and civil penalties up to $50,000.¹
Watchdog group says Crockett's stock holdings create serious legal problems
Crockett reported these same stock holdings to Texas when she served in the state legislature in 2021. But when she filed her congressional financial disclosures covering that exact same year, 25 of those 28 stocks mysteriously disappeared from her paperwork.¹
"When Members of Congress fail to accurately and fully disclose their financial interests, it undermines the integrity of our government and erodes the public's trust," FACT executive director Kendra Arnold told the Washington Free Beacon. "The disclosure laws are not optional. They are essential safeguards that ensure lawmakers are not using their positions for personal financial gain."¹
Ethics laws require House members to disclose any stock holdings exceeding $1,000. Crockett reported owning fewer than 100 shares in each stock on her Texas filings.
That might put them under the $1,000 threshold, except for one problem. At least two of her undisclosed stocks traded at more than $1,000 per share throughout 2021.¹
T2 Biosystems and Red Hill Biopharma both traded above $1,000 per share for all of 2021. That means even owning a single share required disclosure under federal law.¹
Some of Crockett's concealed holdings expose something far worse than sloppy paperwork. She's literally voting to put money in her own pocket.
Crockett co-sponsored federal legislation in August 2025 that would decriminalize marijuana nationwide. That bill would directly benefit Aurora Cannabis and other marijuana firms she secretly owns shares in.
She's pushing laws that enrich her personal stock portfolio while hiding those exact investments from voters.¹
That's not a conflict of interest. That's legalized corruption.
Crockett preaches climate emergency while cashing ExxonMobil checks
Wait, it gets better. The Squad member who constantly attacks fossil fuel companies and champions the Green New Deal owned shares in ExxonMobil the entire time. You can't make this up.¹
That's the same ExxonMobil that Democrat-run states have sued for allegedly causing climate change. The same company Crockett's Squad allies want destroyed. And she owned a piece of it while voting on energy policy.¹
Tell your voters about those fossil fuel profits, Congresswoman.
Beyond the stock portfolio scandal, Crockett also concealed more than $110,000 in outstanding debts she owed to Texans Federal Credit Union, Wells Fargo, and an individual named Ben Babcock. None of those debts appeared on her congressional disclosure forms.²
The ethics complaint comes as Crockett's controversies keep piling up.
In March 2025, Republicans introduced a censure resolution after she mocked Texas Governor Greg Abbott's wheelchair use by calling him "Governor Hot Wheels" at a Human Rights Campaign event.³
She co-sponsored legislation that would have stripped Secret Service protection from Donald Trump after his felony conviction. That bill came out less than four months before an assassin shot Trump at a Pennsylvania rally.⁴
In April 2025, she told a Black church congregation that America needs robust immigration because "we done picking cotton."⁵
Now add "hiding stock portfolios to avoid conflict of interest scrutiny" to the list.
The Foundation for Accountability and Civic Trust has a track record of exposing ethics violations by elected officials. The conservative watchdog group filed its complaint with the Office of Congressional Conduct, the independent entity that conducts preliminary investigations into allegations of wrongdoing by members of Congress.⁶
If the Office finds Crockett violated the Ethics in Government Act, it can refer her case to the House Ethics Committee. That committee has the power to levy fines and other penalties against sitting members.¹
Crockett's pattern reveals the entire Democrat con game in one ethics complaint. She built her brand attacking Republicans over alleged corruption while running her own stock portfolio like a personal cash machine.
The marijuana stocks prove she's voting to enrich herself. The ExxonMobil shares prove every word about climate change is a lie. The $110,000 in hidden debts prove someone might own her vote.
And she thought nobody would notice because she reported it all to Texas but just "forgot" to tell Congress about 25 stocks including two that traded over $1,000 per share.
Crockett spent her first two years in Congress building a reputation as a fierce partisan warrior who takes no prisoners. She made headlines attacking Republicans over ethics scandals and demanding investigations into Trump appointees.
Now she's the one facing an ethics investigation. And unlike the political theater she usually engages in, this complaint involves potential criminal violations with prison time on the line.
Now the Office of Congressional Conduct gets to decide whether Crockett "accidentally forgot" about 25 different stock holdings she literally just reported to Texas months earlier.
That defense requires believing she somehow remembered all 25 stocks for her state paperwork but completely blanked on them for her federal forms. Oh, and two of those stocks she "forgot" were trading at more than $1,000 per share, which makes them legally impossible to overlook.
Nobody's buying that story. The evidence is sitting in two different government filings from the same year showing she knew exactly what she owned.
¹ Andrew Kerr, "Jasmine Crockett Hit With Ethics Complaint Over Failure To Disclose Stock Holdings," Washington Free Beacon, November 5, 2025.
² "Jasmine Crockett Undisclosed Stocks Raise Ethics Concerns," The Dallas Express, October 2025.
³ "Carter of Texas) submitted the following resolution; which was referred to the Committee on Ethics," H.Res.258 – 119th Congress, 2025.
⁴ "Republicans criticize Jasmine Crockett for bill that could nix Trump Secret Service detail," Dallas Morning News, July 19, 2024.
⁵ "Rep. Jasmine Crockett suggests the United States needs illegal immigrants because 'we done picking cotton'," Fox News, April 9, 2025.
⁶ "Foundation for Accountability and Civic Trust," InfluenceWatch, February 25, 2025.

