- GOP Rep.
Madison Cawthorn has become a controversial figure on Capitol Hill. - A Washington Examiner story said he could be violating insider-trading laws.
By law, members of Congress must quickly and publicly report their crypto purchases in certified congressional documents, known as periodic transaction reports.
The purchase appears to have happened in late December, according to Cawthorn's Instagram profile. Cawthorn could've lied about purchasing the crypto, or he could've told the truth but failed to file the required documents.
If he did make the purchase, he could be penalized over explicit House rules on cryptocurrency disclosure.
"All financial disclosure filings must disclose ownership interests of virtual currency" worth more than $1,000, as well as "purchases, sales or exchanges of
Cawthorn's office did not reply to Insider's questions about what happened.
He would have had no more than 30 days to make the disclosure, given that he would clearly have had direct knowledge of the purchase.
Under congressional rules, he could face a minimum fine of $200, but the House Committee on Ethics could grant him a waiver that would absolve him of the fine.
The Committee on House Ethics could also involve itself — and should, one Republican senator said.
"Insider trading by a member of Congress is a serious betrayal of their oath, and Congressman Cawthorn owes North Carolinians an explanation. There needs to be a thorough and bipartisan inquiry into the matter by the House Ethics Committee," Sen. Thom Tillis, a Republican from North Carolina who has endorsed one of Cawthorn's primary challengers, said Wednesday.
On December 30, the value of all let's go brandon coins in circulation eclipsed $570 million. By the end of January, its market cap dropped to $0.
If Cawthorn violated the
The law clarified that it was illegal for members of Congress to engage in insider trading and created disclosure requirements that allow the public to see whether their representatives can personally benefit in the votes they cast or the legislation they introduce.
If lawmakers don't disclose details of their finances, or do so in a timely way, the public is left in the dark about potential conflicts of interest.
Cawthorn's nondisclosure of his stated purchase "raises serious questions of whether Cawthorn violated the law," said Kedric Payne of the nonpartisan Campaign Legal Center, who previously served as the deputy chief counsel of the Office of Congressional Ethics. "The lawmaker should explain the discrepancy because the public has a right to know that their elected officials are not violating the law."
Based on what's already in the public domain, "there is at least a strong case to be made that Rep. Cawthorn violated the STOCK Act's reporting requirements as well as potentially engaging in insider trading," Dylan Hedtler-Gaudette, the government-affairs manager for the nonpartisan watchdog organization Project on Government Oversight, said, adding: "I'm reminded of the expression about something that quacks like a duck probably being a duck."
Numerous Cawthorn controversies
Cawthorn has faced repeated controversy as a lawmaker even as a first-year congressman. On Tuesday, officers cited him for carrying a loaded 9-millimeter handgun inside Charlotte Douglas International Airport.
He was previously cited but not charged in February 2021 for trying to bring a gun onto a plane in his carry-on luggage at Asheville Regional Airport.
Last month, House Minority Leader
Cawthorn's personal finances have also clashed with his policy positions. He has been an outspoken critic of "Big Tech" but made up to $100,200 in capital gains from investments in Amazon, Apple, and Comcast, Insider previously reported.
In February, Cawthorn introduced a resolution to "deregulate cryptocurrencies and incentivize blockchain innovation."