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New developments keep emerging about Loeffler’s scandal one month after news first broke about her “unseemly” stock trading
ATLANTA — One month since news first broke about unelected “political mega-donor” Senator Kelly Loeffler’s coronavirus stock trading, new developments continue to emerge about her growing scandal. And even after a full month of news surrounding her stock trades, Loeffler still refuses to answer basic questions about “how her portfolio is managed” or submit to a Senate Ethics Committee investigation as she desperately tries to deflect blame.
To keep up with all the breaking news around Loeffler’s scandal, here’s a reminder of everything that’s been revealed in the last month about her “unseemly” transactions:
January 24th: Loeffler’s Senate HELP Committee hosts a private all-Senate briefing on the coronavirus threat — the same day as her first reported joint stock sale.
SELL – January 31st: Loeffler’s husband dumps nearly $100,000 worth of retail stocks — one of their first major sell-offs in the retail industry ahead of a nationwide downturn.
BUY – February 14th: Loeffler buys $168,000 of stock in Citrix Systems, Inc., a teleworking software company, along with another $168,000 in Oracle, which will go on to work with the federal government to combat the coronavirus outbreak.
SELL – February 26th: Loeffler’s husband and New York Stock Exchange Chairman Jeffrey Sprecher sells off $3.5 million worth of stock in their company ICE, just over 30 days after Loeffler’s private Senate briefing — the amount of notice ICE requires executives to give before buying or selling shares.
BUY – February 28th: Loeffler’s husband buys over $100,000 worth of stock in DuPont, “a company that makes COVID-19 protective garments.” Over the next few weeks, her husband will buy another $100,000 worth of DuPont stock while Loeffler still downplays the coronavirus threat.
BUY – March 6th: Loeffler and her husband buy $46,000 worth of stock in a travel booking company the day she traveled with President Donald Trump to the CDC.
BUY AND SELL – March 10th: Loeffler claims “the economy is strong” and “jobs are growing” even after she and her husband dumped stocks — and the very same day her husband makes another $12,000 purchase of DuPont stock and they begin selling off stock in a travel booking company she bought only days before.
SELL – March 11th: Loeffler and Sprecher sell off another $15.3 million worth of ICE shares and unload the rest of their stock in a travel booking company — just as Trump announces air travel restrictions right after the markets close.
March 20th: As the Daily Beast breaks the news of Loeffler’s stock sell-off scandal, one Republican candidate openly calls for her resignation and calls her “unfit to represent Georgia” as Republican House Speaker David Ralston expresses worries about “down-ticket damage.”
March 21st: The New York Times editorial board calls for the Senate to launch a full ethics investigation “and, if warranted…criminal prosecution” against Loeffler, and the Savannah Morning News decries her “potential illicit profiteering” and says the “Justice Department and…Securities and Exchange Commission should get involved.”
March 23rd: The SEC issues “a sharp warning” against using “nonpublic information” to trade on the coronavirus outbreak while refusing to comment on whether Loeffler and Sprecher are under investigation — the same day that Mitch McConnell’s super PAC, which had previously spent to boost Loeffler, leaves Georgia off its list of ad buys.
March 27th: Even more members of Loeffler’s own party distance themselves from her, with one prominent conservative calling the accusations against her “very relevant.” Outside Republican groups that previously backed Loeffler, meanwhile, “are now turning their attention elsewhere at a pivotal moment in her campaign.”
March 29th: A new report reveals the DOJ and the SEC have launched a probe into lawmakers’ stock transactions during the coronavirus outbreak, coming nearly a week after the SEC issued a warning against insider trading during the pandemic and refused to state whether Loeffler and her husband were under investigation.
March 31st: New disclosures reveal even more stock sell-offs by Loeffler and her husband while she continued to downplay the threat of coronavirus — and show investments made “in a company that makes COVID-19 protective garments.”
April 2nd: As news breaks about Loeffler’s travel booking company sell-offs, Fox News host Tucker Carlson joins a bipartisan chorus calling for her resignation.
April 6th: Loeffler claims she “can’t say anything that [she] would have done differently” about her stock trades — only days before she completely reverses course and remakes her portfolio in an attempt at damage control.
April 8th: After originally claiming she wouldn’t have done anything differently, Loeffler tries to distract from her scandal by shifting her assets into mutual funds, but still refuses to place them into a blind trust or call for a Senate Ethics Committee investigation.
April 15th: The fallout from Loeffler’s scandal intensifies as a top pro-Trump super PAC endorses her opponent Congressman Doug Collins after its chairman slams “Loeffler’s corruption” in an Augusta Chronicle op-ed — joining Congressman Drew Ferguson in “breaking ranks” to support Collins over a damaged Loeffler.
April 17th: Loeffler continues her pattern of blaming anything and everything but herself for her growing scandal by repeatedly blaming “socialism” and financial transparency laws — among other things — for her stock trades that have drawn bipartisan criticism.
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