WASHINGTON (AP) - Kash Patel, President Donald Trump's pick to lead the FBI, holds more than $1 million of stock in a fashion company founded in China. He established a nonprofit that spent big on promotion but little on its mission. And he advised a roster of foreign clients, including a Czech arms maker that top Republicans have criticized for being too tight with U.S. adversaries.
Kash Patel had a roster of foreign clients. Their interests could clash with FBI he hopes to lead
WASHINGTON (AP) - Kash Patel, President Donald Trump's pick to lead the FBI, holds more than $1 million of stock in a fashion company founded in China. He established a nonprofit that spent big on promotion but little on its mission. And he advised a roster of foreign clients, including a Czech arms maker that top Republicans have criticized for being too tight with U.S. adversaries.
Patel entered Trump's orbit as a congressional staffer of modest means. But the years since have been unquestionably lucrative as Patel parlayed proximity to Trump and a zeal for self-promotion into consulting contracts, corporate board seats and a role as a sought-after MAGA commentator. It all helped swell his net worth to as much as $15 million, according to an Associated Press analysis of his government financial disclosure forms.
As Patel awaits Senate confirmation to become the next FBI director, his private-sector work is drawing renewed scrutiny from ethics experts and Democrats who say the interests of his former clients could conflict with those of the law enforcement agency he’s likely to soon lead.
The scope of Patel’s business dealings with foreign entities is hard to fully discern because he in some instances disclosed only minimal information about the nature of his work. But they’re coming into focus at a time the Trump administration’s Justice Department intends to scale back enforcement of laws governing foreign lobbying. And they’re all the more notable because at least one client, the clothing company Shein, was established in China, a country U.S. authorities have described as a national security threat.