
Rep. Jasmine Crockett (D-TX) appears to be in some legal trouble that could actually stick this time.
The Daily Signal reported on Thursday that the Federal Elections Commission has launched an investigation into Crockett regarding highly suspicious donations made to her 2024 re-election campaign.
According to the outlet, a conservative advocacy group called The Coolidge-Reagan Foundation made the FEC complaint on March 26. FEC assistant general counsel for complaints examination and legal administration then notified Crockett via letter on April 2nd.
“The respondents will be notified of this complaint within five business days,” Brown said in the letter.
“You will be notified as soon as the Federal Election Commission (FEC) takes final action on your client’s complaint,” she added. “Should you receive any additional information in this matter, please forward it to the Office of the General Counsel.”
The complaints reference a 73-year-old Texas resident named Randy Best, who supposedly made 53 separate donations totaling $595 to Crockett’s campaign through ActBlue. However, Sholden Daniels, one of Crockett’s GOP opponents for 2026, promoted a video showing that Best’s wife denied knowing any knowledge about the donations.
This suggests the donations were made without the couple’s knowledge.
— Sholdon Daniels For Congress (@SholdonDaniels) March 12, 2025
More from the Daily Signal:
The bigger picture is that Crockett’s campaign received about $870,000 in total donations through ActBlue. The Coolidge-Reagan Foundation’s FEC complaint says. That includes the $595 recorded from Best, who lives in Plano, Texas.
Rep. Crockett, through her principal campaign committee Respondent Jasmine for US, has received thousands of other donations through ActBlue totaling over $870,000,” the FEC complaint says. “It is unclear how many of these are similarly fraudulent transactions, made in the name of unsuspecting innocent people who did not actually provide the funds.”
ActBlue fundraising has faced questions by congressional Republicans and GOP state attorneys general. In a story cited in the FEC complaint, The Daily Signal previously reported several elderly Americans said they were not aware of ActBlue donations in their name.
The next step is for the respondent—Crockett—to have 15 days to respond to the allegations. The FEC historically grants extensions of 30 and 60 days, Backer said.
The Gateway Pundit has extensively reported on ActBlue’s suspicious fundraising activities for months. In one example, The O’Keefe Media Group in August released video of Texas donors shocked by unauthorized donations to the Democrat fundraising giant, raising further questions about the organization’s operations.
The donors had no clue that hundreds of donations totaling thousands of dollars were made in their names and made clear that it was impossible these donations were made willingly.
“I’m not rich. I don’t give that kind of money,” said Janice Bosco of Horseshoe Bay, TX, after discovering that ActBlue recorded 648 donations totaling around $16,000 in her name.
In an explosive interview with Benny Johnson back in March, Rep. James Comer (R-KY) revealed that he has teamed up with the FBI to invesitgate ActBlue for being part of what could be the biggest money-laundering scandal in American political history.
As TGP reported, Comer laid out a damning case against the far-left fundraising juggernaut, accusing it of funneling billions in suspicious cash—potentially from foreign adversaries—into Democrat coffers under the guise of “grassroots” donations.
“We’re investigating ActBlue the same way we investigated the Bidens,” Comer said. “We’re starting with the suspicious activity reports—bank violations that flag financial crimes. And let me tell you, the evidence is overwhelming.”
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