Kash Patel Filed Late Ethics Disclosure on Six-Figure Strategy Stock Buy
FBI Director Kash Patel disclosed a six-figure purchase of Strategy stock via a delayed federal ethics filing, submitted months after the trade was executed. The late disclosure has drawn scrutiny given Patel's senior government role.

FBI Director Kash Patel submitted a delayed federal ethics filing disclosing a six-figure purchase of Strategy stock, revealing the transaction months after it was originally executed, according to reports.
The disclosure was filed significantly after the trade took place, raising questions about compliance with federal ethics reporting requirements. Under standard federal rules, senior government officials are generally required to report financial transactions within a set timeframe following execution. Patel's filing fell outside that window, making it a late submission under federal ethics guidelines.
The stock in question belongs to Strategy — the company formerly known as MicroStrategy — which is widely recognized for holding one of the largest corporate Bitcoin reserves in the world. Strategy has become a closely watched asset among cryptocurrency investors and institutional traders due to its direct exposure to Bitcoin price movements.
The dollar value of Patel's purchase reached the six-figure range, though the exact sum was not specified beyond that threshold in the available reporting. As FBI Director, Patel holds one of the most senior law enforcement positions in the United States federal government, making his financial disclosures subject to heightened public and regulatory scrutiny.
Late filings of this nature are not automatically treated as violations, but they are subject to review by the Office of Government Ethics, which oversees financial disclosure compliance for executive branch officials. The circumstances and timing of the filing have drawn media attention given Patel's prominent role.
No official comment from Patel or the FBI has been reported in connection with the delayed disclosure at the time of publication. The report adds to ongoing public interest in how senior federal officials manage and disclose their personal investment activities, particularly in sectors — such as cryptocurrency-linked equities — that intersect with policy and regulatory decisions.

