Drudge Retort: The Other Side of the News
Thursday, July 02, 2026

Embattled FBI Director Kash Patel is being accused of breaking the law after failing to properly report a six-figure purchase of stock in a crypto company that has received millions of dollars in government contracts through the Justice Department. According to NOTUS, Patel, 46, purchased between $100,001 and $250,000 worth of stock in MicroStrategy, a "bitcoin treasury company," on Nov. 21. He did not disclose the trade with federal regulators until May 26, well past the 45-day deadline required for reporting stock transactions over $1,000 under the Stop Trading on Congressional Knowledge Act.

More

Comments

Admin's note: Participants in this discussion must follow the site's moderation policy. Profanity will be filtered. Abusive conduct is not allowed.

Don't you get it?
The
Law
Does
Not
Apply
To
These
People
Period

#1 | Posted by Doc_Sarvis at 2026-07-02 05:03 AM | Reply | Newsworthy 1

We'll eventually see Bugsy's face staring at us from Post Offices.

#2 | Posted by Zed at 2026-07-02 07:38 AM | Reply

The Iranian hacker group Handala recently breached incompetent D/FBI Kashyap Pramod Vinod Patel's personal e-mail account.

Link: Read them at your leisure


D/CIA Gina Haspel had threatened to resign if Dummkopf Trumpf appointed Vindaloo Patel as CIA Deputy Director during his first Reign of Terror.

#3 | Posted by C0RI0LANUS at 2026-07-02 08:12 AM | Reply

The following HTML tags are allowed in comments: a href, b, i, p, br, ul, ol, li and blockquote. Others will be stripped out. Participants in this discussion must follow the site's moderation policy. Profanity will be filtered. Abusive conduct is not allowed.

Anyone can join this site and make comments. To post this comment, you must sign it with your Drudge Retort username. If you can't remember your username or password, use the lost password form to request it.
Username:
Password:

Home | Breaking News | Comments | User Blogs | Stats | Back Page | RSS Feed | RSS Spec | DMCA Compliance | Privacy

Drudge Retort