ICYMI: Shalala violates federal law
The Miami Herald reports that Donna Shalala violated federal law when she failed to disclose stock sales while serving in Congress.
Her office only gave a rough outline of the sales AFTER receiving criticisms.
Elitist Donna Shalala thinks she’s above the law.
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Donna Shalala failed to disclose stock sales in 2019 in violation of federal law
Miami Herald
Alex Daughtry
April 21, 2020
Miami Democratic Rep. Donna Shalala, the lone House Democrat on the committee set up to oversee $500 billion in taxpayer money being used for coronavirus-related payouts to large businesses, violated federal law when she failed to disclose stock sales while serving in Congress.
Shalala told the Miami Herald on Monday she sold a variety of stocks throughout 2019 to eliminate any potential conflicts of interest after she was elected to Congress in November 2018. But the transactions were not publicly reported as required by the STOCK Act, a 2012 law that prohibits members of Congress and their employees from using private information gleaned from their official positions for personal benefit and requires them to report stock sales and purchases within 45 days.
Shalala’s office said the congresswoman and her financial adviser made a mistake.
Shalala, the former head of the Department of Health and Human Services under President Bill Clinton, is in the process of setting up a blind trust for her assets, and transactions made within a blind trust without a lawmaker’s knowledge are not required to be disclosed. But the blind trust isn’t finalized, meaning any transactions would need to be made public.
“She had a misunderstanding about the periodic transaction report process and her need to report the sale of these stocks while preparing a blind trust,” Shalala spokesperson Carlos Condarco said. “As a new member with a broker and attorney who were not familiar with the congressional disclosure rules, there was a misunderstanding.”
Shalala acknowledged the transactions after she was selected by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi to represent House Democrats on a bipartisan panel that will monitor $500 billion in payouts to large businesses affected by the coronavirus. On her 2018 financial disclosure, the most recent that is publicly available, Shalala said she owned a number of stocks in companies that could be eligible to seek federal bailouts, a potential conflict of interest.
Shalala’s appointment to the five-person commission put her in the role of helping to supervise efforts by the U.S. Treasury Department and the Federal Reserve to stabilize the economy by lending hundreds of billions of dollars to struggling businesses, hospitals, municipalities and states. It will hold hearings and issue monthly reports to Congress.
“Treasury got a huge pot of money to bail out large industries, specifically airlines,” Shalala said, of her role on the committee. “What we’re really after is mischief. We’re after fraud.”
After Shalala was criticized for her stock holdings, her office said she’d sold off most of her portfolio of individual stocks in 2019. But the transactions were never disclosed publicly until her office told the Miami Herald.
The congressional disclosure laws have received increased attention in recent weeks after Republican Sen. Richard Burr of North Carolina sold millions in stocks before markets tanked due to the coronavirus — but after he received classified briefings on the virus. Burr is now under investigation by the Department of Justice for insider trading.
There isn’t any evidence that Shalala bought or sold stocks based on inside information. But Craig Holman, a government ethics expert and lobbyist with the left-leaning think-tank Public Citizen, said her lack of disclosure means the public wasn’t able to hold her accountable for her financial dealings as an elected official.
“The reporting requirement is exceedingly important. It’s perhaps the most important element of the entire STOCK Act,” Holman said. “The reporting requirement gives the public and press a real-time view of stock trading activity by members of Congress. That type of disclosure would allow us to uncover what would appear to be insider trading for Burr and [Georgia Republican Sen. Kelly] Loeffler.”
A spokesperson from Shalala’s office said they’ll get her 2019 financial disclosure filed “as soon as we can.” It had been due in mid-May, but lawmakers received a 90-day extension for their 2019 reports until mid-August due to the coronavirus.
Shalala’s office also said the House Ethics Committee instructed them to include any 2019 transactions in her upcoming financial disclosure.
It’s unclear if Shalala will receive any punishment for violating the law.
The Federal Labor Relations Authority, an independent government agency, states that transactions that aren’t reported within 45 days are subject to a $200 fine. Holman said that a criminal investigation in Shalala’s case is unlikely, and that any formal reprimand would come from the Ethics Committee.
“The penalty depends on the egregiousness of the transaction,” Holman said. “If there appears to have been some insider trading going on, as with Richard Burr, it can be elevated to a criminal act and investigated by the DOJ. In most cases, and I suspect in Donna Shalala’s case, I don’t see the stock trades benefiting her. In that case it would be up to the Ethics Committee to reprimand her and impose some sort of fine.”
Holman said the STOCK Act, which was weakened by Congress in 2013 a year after it became law, has received renewed attention from members of Congress in light of Burr, Loeffler and Shalala’s financial transactions. He said there’s an effort to include legislation in an upcoming coronavirus relief bill that would effectively ban lawmakers from buying and selling most types of individual stocks while in office and legislation that would restore a searchable, downloadable STOCK Act disclosure system.
Shalala’s office was not able to immediately provide comprehensive documentation of her stock sales in 2019, noting that her financial adviser is currently hospitalized. They said she sold stock in Boeing in March 2018, a transaction that showed up in her most recent disclosure, and sold stocks between November 2018 and November 2019 in companies that could apply for bailout money, including Alaska Airlines, Chevron, Conoco and AMC Networks along with two firms advising the U.S. Treasury Department and Federal Reserve on the disbursement of loans and funds: Moelis and BlackRock.
But Holman said it isn’t good enough for Shalala to outline the sales only after receiving criticism for her assets. She should have reported the transactions within 45 days, he said. “For Shalala to ignore the reporting requirement, it just rebuffs the entire STOCK Act,” Holman said. “Having an annual disclosure simply isn’t good enough because we can’t connect the dots of her private holdings with any official actions.”