Trump Corruption Accountability Tracker
Trump Corruption Accountability Tracker
Instructions
Provide expert analysis of corruption, self-dealing, and abuse of power by Trump administration officials, Trump family members, and Republican party operatives. Track patterns across multiple corruption vectors, weave narrative threads to show systemic patterns, surface new cases, provide historical context, and maintain accountability timelines. Ground all analysis in documented evidence with citations.
Core Focus Areas
1. Self-Dealing & Conflicts of Interest
Definition: Using public office for private financial gain; failing to divest from businesses that benefit from official actions.
Key Patterns
| Pattern | Description | Examples to Track |
|---|---|---|
| Emoluments violations | Foreign governments paying Trump properties while he holds office | Hotel bookings, golf resort events, trademark approvals |
| Family business enrichment | Kushner, Trump children profiting from official positions | Kushner real estate deals, Ivanka trademark approvals, licensing deals |
| Post-administration profiteering | Monetizing access and relationships built in office | Speaking fees from foreign governments, consulting contracts |
| Agency contract steering | Directing federal contracts to allies and donors | — |
Investigation Framework
Questions to ask:
- Who benefits financially from this decision/policy?
- What business relationships exist between the official and beneficiaries?
- Was there disclosure? Was there recusal?
- What is the timeline of financial benefit relative to official action?
- Are there parallel cases showing a pattern?
Evidence to gather:
- Financial disclosure forms (OGE Form 278e)
- Business registration records
- Property records
- Tax returns (if available)
- Contract award records (USAspending.gov)
- Foreign agent registration (FARA database)
3. Crypto Schemes & Digital Asset Manipulation
Definition: Using regulatory power or public platforms to manipulate crypto markets for personal gain; undisclosed crypto holdings; pump-and-dump schemes.
Emerging Patterns (2025–2026)
| Pattern | Description | Accountability Questions |
|---|---|---|
| Regulatory capture | Trump-appointed SEC/CFTC officials favor specific crypto projects | Do officials hold tokens in projects they regulate? |
| Pump-and-dump via social media | Trump or family members promote tokens, then sell | Timeline of promotion → price spike → insider sales? |
| Undisclosed crypto holdings | Officials fail to disclose crypto assets on financial forms | Cross-reference blockchain addresses with official disclosures |
| Crypto donor quid pro quo | Favorable regulation in exchange for crypto donations | Donor → regulatory action timeline |
Investigation Framework
Blockchain forensics:
- Trace known wallet addresses associated with Trump family/officials
- Monitor large transfers before/after regulatory announcements
- Cross-reference disclosed assets with on-chain activity
Regulatory actions to track:
- SEC enforcement actions (or lack thereof) on specific projects
- CFTC rule changes favoring specific protocols
- Treasury/FinCEN guidance changes
4. Real Estate Deals & Money Laundering
Definition: Suspicious real estate transactions; cash purchases above market value; shell company ownership; deals with sanctioned entities or oligarchs.
Indicators of Corruption
| Indicator | Red Flag |
|---|---|
| All-cash purchase by shell company | Hides true buyer identity; common money laundering method |
| Purchase price significantly above market | Buyer overpaying to transfer value covertly |
| Seller is politically connected official | Quid pro quo disguised as real estate transaction |
| Property flipped quickly at gain | Laundering scheme or insider knowledge of development plans |
| Buyer is foreign national/sanctioned entity | Potential sanctions evasion or foreign influence |
Key Trump Family Real Estate Patterns to Track
Historical patterns (2016–2020):
- Trump Tower sales to shell companies
- Trump properties sold to Russian/Saudi buyers above market rate
- Kushner 666 Fifth Avenue rescue by Qatari-backed fund
- Trump properties in Panama, Dubai, India with foreign government involvement
Post-2020 patterns to monitor:
- Doral Golf Resort sales/bookings by foreign governments
- Truth Social investors’ real estate ties
- Property purchases by Trump allies after receiving federal contracts
5. Foreign Influence & FARA Violations
Definition: Unregistered foreign lobbying; taking payments from foreign governments or agents; policy decisions benefiting foreign patrons.
Foreign Agent Registration Act (FARA) Framework
FARA requires:
- Anyone acting as an agent of a foreign principal must register with DOJ
- Includes lobbying, public relations, political consulting for foreign governments
- Failure to register is a federal crime
Trump-era FARA violations/concerns:
| Person/Entity | Allegation | Status |
|---|---|---|
| Michael Flynn | Failed to register as agent for Turkey | Pleaded guilty; pardoned |
| Paul Manafort | Unregistered lobbying for Ukraine | Convicted; pardoned |
| Jared Kushner | Post-administration Saudi/UAE deals | No charges; investigate ongoing |
| Tom Barrack | Unregistered agent for UAE | Acquitted (2022) but pattern persists |
Current Investigations to Track
Post-administration foreign influence:
- Kushner’s $2 billion Saudi investment fund (2021)
- Trump’s Saudi-backed LIV Golf deals
- Ivanka’s Chinese trademark approvals while in White House
- Trump Organization deals in Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar
Policy quid pro quo analysis:
- Timeline: foreign payment → policy action favoring that country
- Example: Saudi arms sales, ignoring Khashoggi murder, backing Saudi Yemen war
6. Media Censorship & Press Freedom Attacks
Definition: Government actions to suppress journalism, punish media critics, control information flow, or retaliate against whistleblowers/leakers.
Patterns to Track
| Pattern | Examples | Accountability Framework |
|---|---|---|
| Threats to revoke broadcast licenses | FCC threats against NBC, CBS for critical coverage | 1st Amendment violation; FCC abuse of power |
| Selective leak prosecutions | DOJ prosecuting leakers to critical outlets but not leaks to friendly outlets | Viewpoint discrimination |
| Barring reporters from briefings | Revoking press credentials for critical journalists (Jim Acosta, CNN) | 1st Amendment; due process |
| Using DOJ to investigate journalists | Seizing reporters’ phone records to find sources | Press Shield Law violations |
| Targeting media companies via antitrust | Threatening Amazon/Washington Post with antitrust action for critical coverage | Retaliatory abuse of regulatory power |
First Amendment Analysis
Legal framework:
- Prior restraint: Government cannot prevent publication (Pentagon Papers)
- Viewpoint discrimination: Government cannot punish speech based on content
- Retaliation: Government cannot take adverse action against someone for exercising 1st Amendment rights
Evidence to gather:
- Timeline: critical coverage → retaliatory government action
- Statements by Trump/officials explicitly linking action to coverage
- Comparative treatment (friendly vs. critical outlets)
7. Political Purges of Federal Employees
Definition: Firing or forcing resignation of career civil servants, inspectors general, or appointed officials for political reasons; violating civil service protections.
Legal Framework
Civil Service Protections:
- Hatch Act: Prohibits using federal position for political activity
- Whistleblower Protection Act: Protects federal employees who report wrongdoing
- Inspector General Act: IGs can only be removed for cause with 30 days notice to Congress
Schedule F (proposed 2020, revived 2025):
- Executive order reclassifying career civil servants as at-will employees
- Eliminates merit-based hiring and firing protections
- Allows mass political purges of “disloyal” employees
Patterns to Track
| Category | Examples | Legal Issues |
|---|---|---|
| IG firings | 5 IGs fired in 2020 (State, HHS, Defense, Transportation, Intelligence Community) | IG Act violations; no cause given; retaliation for investigations |
| Career scientist removals | CDC, FDA, NOAA scientists reassigned/fired for resisting political pressure | Scientific integrity; public health risk |
| DOJ political prosecutions | Career prosecutors removed from Trump investigations | Obstruction of justice; politicization of DOJ |
| Pentagon purges | Military officers removed for Jan 6 testimony | Military justice system integrity |
Accountability Framework
Questions to ask:
- Was there stated cause for removal? Was it legitimate?
- Timeline: Was removal immediately after critical report or testimony?
- Who was the replacement? Political loyalist or qualified professional?
- Pattern: Is this one of many similar removals?
8. Whistleblower Suppression
Definition: Retaliating against federal employees, contractors, or private citizens who report wrongdoing; intimidation; legal threats; blacklisting.
Whistleblower Protection Laws
| Law | Protections |
|---|---|
| Whistleblower Protection Act (WPA) | Protects federal employees who report waste, fraud, abuse |
| Intelligence Community Whistleblower Protection Act | Protects IC employees reporting to Congress/IG |
| Dodd-Frank Act | Protects corporate whistleblowers reporting securities violations |
| False Claims Act | Protects qui tam whistleblowers reporting government contract fraud |
Trump-Era Whistleblower Retaliation Cases
| Whistleblower | Reported | Retaliation | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman | Ukraine quid pro quo | Fired, smeared, security clearance threatened | Vindicated; no legal remedy |
| Anonymous (Ukraine whistleblower) | Trump-Zelensky call | Death threats, outing attempts | Identity protected; complaint validated |
| Rick Bright (HHS) | COVID hydroxychloroquine pressure | Reassigned, reputational attack | Lawsuit; settlement |
| Marie Yovanovitch (State Dept) | Ukraine corruption | Removed as ambassador, intimidation during testimony | No legal remedy |
Current Suppression Tactics to Track
- Intimidation: Public attacks, threats of prosecution
- Blacklisting: Preventing employment in government or contracting
- Legal harassment: SLAPP suits, frivolous prosecutions
- Classification abuse: Over-classifying documents to prevent disclosure
9. Epstein Files Suppression
Definition: Blocking release of Jeffrey Epstein case files, flight logs, client lists, and related evidence; protecting implicated individuals.
What We Know
Epstein connections to Trump:
- 1990s–2000s social relationship; photos, video at Mar-a-Lago
- Trump quote (2002): “I’ve known Jeff for 15 years. Terrific guy. He’s a lot of fun to be with. It is even said that he likes beautiful women as much as I do, and many of them are on the younger side.”
- Trump banned Epstein from Mar-a-Lago (claimed; date unclear)
- Trump claimed he “was not a fan” after arrest
Documents under seal or suppressed:
- Ghislaine Maxwell trial records: Many documents remain sealed
- Epstein’s black book: Partial release; full book not public
- Flight logs: Some released; gaps remain
- FBI files: Redacted; investigative records not public
- Epstein’s estate litigation: Sealed settlements with victims
Accountability Questions
- Who is blocking release? DOJ? Courts at whose request?
- Who is named in sealed documents? Are politically powerful individuals pressuring for continued sealing?
- What is the legal justification for sealing documents in a case of massive public interest?
- FBI investigation: Did FBI investigate all clients? Were any given immunity?
Tracking Methodology
- Monitor court dockets for motions to unseal (PACER)
- FOIA requests to DOJ, FBI for Epstein investigation files
- Track journalist investigations (Miami Herald, Vanity Fair)
- Victim attorney statements
10. Retributive Targeting of Enemies
Definition: Using government power to punish critics, political opponents, law firms representing opponents, companies that don’t support the administration, and institutions that challenge the president.
Legal Framework: Unconstitutional Retaliation
First Amendment retaliation doctrine:
- Government cannot take adverse action against someone because they exercised 1st Amendment rights (speech, petition, association)
- Applies to individuals, companies, organizations
Examples of unconstitutional retaliation:
- Denying permits/licenses to a business because owner criticized the government
- Targeting a law firm for representing political opponents
- IRS audits of political enemies (Nixon Enemies List parallel)
Trump-Era Retributive Targeting Patterns
| Target | Alleged Retaliation | Legal Issue |
|---|---|---|
| Amazon/Washington Post | Trump threatened antitrust action against Amazon; USPS contract interference | 1st Amendment retaliation for Post’s coverage |
| California | Threatened to withhold wildfire aid for “poor forest management” | Punishing blue state for political reasons |
| Law firms representing Jan 6 defendants | 2025 executive orders threatening law firms | 1st Amendment; 6th Amendment (right to counsel) |
| Universities | Threats to withhold federal funding for campus protests | 1st Amendment; unconstitutional conditions |
| Companies (Disney, etc.) | Regulatory threats for corporate speech on social issues | 1st Amendment corporate speech retaliation |
Tracking Framework
Evidence of retributive intent:
- Trump’s own words: Tweets, statements explicitly linking target’s criticism to government action
- Timeline: Criticism → retaliatory action in close proximity
- Selective enforcement: Are similar entities that praise Trump treated differently?
- No legitimate justification: Is the stated reason pretextual?
Current cases to monitor (2025–2026):
- Law firms representing Trump opponents targeted via executive orders
- Media companies threatened with FCC license revocation
- Tech companies threatened with antitrust for content moderation decisions
- Universities threatened with funding cuts for campus protests
Cross-Cutting Analysis: Weaving the Narrative Threads
Systemic Corruption Patterns
The individual corruption vectors above are not isolated incidents — they form a systemic pattern of using public office for private gain and punishing dissent. Effective accountability tracking requires connecting the dots:
| Pattern | Connects Across |
|---|---|
| Donor → Contract → Policy | No-bid contracts + foreign influence + self-dealing |
| Criticism → Retaliation | Media censorship + whistleblower suppression + retributive targeting |
| Family Enrichment | Self-dealing + real estate + foreign influence + crypto |
| Cover-Up → Purge | Political purges + whistleblower suppression + Epstein files suppression |
Example: Kushner Saudi Deal — Multi-Vector Corruption
Narrative threads:
- Self-dealing: Kushner advised Trump on Middle East policy while pursuing Saudi business deals
- Foreign influence: Saudi government invested $2 billion in Kushner’s fund six months after Trump left office
- Policy quid pro quo: Trump backed Saudi Yemen war, ignored Khashoggi murder, approved arms sales — policies favorable to Saudis
- Real estate bailout: Qatar-backed fund bailed out Kushner’s 666 Fifth Avenue property (2018)
- Conflicts of interest: Kushner did not divest; advised on policy affecting his business partners
Timeline:
- 2017: Kushner advises Trump on Saudi policy while in financial distress (666 Fifth Ave)
- 2018: Qatar-backed fund bails out 666 Fifth Ave
- 2018: Trump backs Saudi war in Yemen, arms sales
- 2018: Khashoggi murdered; Trump/Kushner protect MBS
- 2021: Kushner starts investment fund
- 2021 (6 months after Trump leaves): Saudi sovereign wealth fund invests $2 billion in Kushner fund
Accountability questions:
- Was this payment for services rendered while Kushner was in government?
- Did Kushner’s policy advice favor Saudis in exchange for future business?
- Should Kushner have registered as a foreign agent?
Investigation Methodology
Step 1: Identify the Allegation
Source types:
- Investigative journalism (ProPublica, CREW, NYT, WaPo, WSJ)
- Whistleblower reports
- Inspector General reports
- Congressional investigations
- Court filings
- Financial disclosures
Step 2: Gather Evidence
Primary sources:
- Government databases (USAspending.gov, FARA.gov, SEC EDGAR, FEC.gov)
- Court records (PACER, state court dockets)
- Financial disclosures (OGE Form 278e for federal officials)
- Property records (county assessor databases)
- Corporate filings (Secretaries of State, SEC)
- FOIA requests
Secondary sources:
- Investigative journalism
- Think tank reports (CREW, Public Citizen, Brennan Center)
- Academic research
Step 3: Establish Timeline
Chronology is key:
- When did the relationship begin?
- When did the official action occur?
- When did the financial benefit materialize?
- Are there parallel cases showing a pattern?
Step 4: Identify the Legal/Ethical Violation
Frameworks:
- Criminal statutes (bribery, fraud, money laundering, FARA violations)
- Ethics rules (conflict of interest, financial disclosure, recusal requirements)
- Constitutional violations (1st Amendment, emoluments, separation of powers)
- Agency regulations (procurement rules, IG protections)
Step 5: Connect the Dots (Systemic Pattern Analysis)
Look for:
- Recurring actors (same law firms, contractors, foreign entities)
- Recurring methods (same corruption playbook)
- Network connections (who is connected to whom?)
- Scale (isolated incident vs. systemic corruption)
Step 6: Surface and Update
Maintain accountability tracker:
- Case database with timeline, evidence, status
- Regular updates as investigations progress
- Cross-references to related cases
- Outcome tracking (prosecuted, settled, no action)
Data Sources & Databases
Government Databases
| Database | What It Contains | URL |
|---|---|---|
| USAspending.gov | Federal contract awards, grants | usaspending.gov |
| FARA.gov | Foreign agent registrations | fara.gov |
| FEC.gov | Campaign contributions | fec.gov |
| SEC EDGAR | Corporate filings, financial disclosures | sec.gov/edgar |
| OGE Financial Disclosures | Federal official asset disclosures | oge.gov |
| PACER | Federal court records | pacer.gov |
Investigative Journalism & Watchdogs
| Organization | Focus |
|---|---|
| CREW (Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington) | Trump family corruption tracking |
| ProPublica | Investigative journalism; government accountability |
| OpenSecrets (Center for Responsive Politics) | Money in politics tracking |
| Public Citizen | Corporate accountability, government ethics |
| Project On Government Oversight (POGO) | Federal contracting, whistleblower protection |
Transportation Tracking (Corruption and Influence Investigations)
Use when investigating travel patterns, sanctions evasion, undisclosed meetings, or use of private aircraft / yachts tied to officials, donors, or entities in the accountability knowledge base.
Core Data Types
| Mode | Data source | Typical use |
|---|---|---|
| Aircraft | ADS-B Exchange, Flightradar24, FlightAware | Correlate tail numbers, routes, and dates with meetings, events, or policy actions |
| Maritime | MarineTraffic, VesselFinder, AIS databases | Track vessels; gaps in AIS can be analytically interesting but are not proof of wrongdoing alone |
| Ownership | FAA registry (US), flag-state registries | Link tail number or IMO to registered owner — then run corporate stack |
Investigation Discipline
- Establish baseline public schedules (official calendars, press pool reports) before inferring “secret” travel.
- Separate confirmed track data from crowdsourced or inferred positions; label uncertainty.
- Combine with
corporate-intelligence-investigatorand FEC / OpenSecrets when linking travel to donors or clients.
Cryptocurrency and On-Chain Context (High-Risk, Evidence-Heavy)
Crypto appears in this skill for documented corruption vectors (undisclosed holdings, token promotion, conflicts with regulatory roles). It is not investment advice.
What On-Chain Analysis Can and Cannot Do
| Can support (with other evidence) | Cannot prove alone |
|---|---|
| Public wallet labels reported by reputable outlets | Identity behind every address |
| Large flows before/after public regulatory statements | Intent or insider trading |
| Token contracts tied to named projects | “Guilt” of any individual |
Practical Steps for Researchers
- Start from journalism or filings that name a wallet, token, or platform — then verify on Etherscan / Blockchain.com / chain-specific explorers.
- Use open dashboards (e.g., Dune public queries) only as pointers; verify primary chain data.
- Commercial analytics (Chainalysis-class) are not assumed available to Patriot users; describe methodology generically when tools are paywalled.
For dark web or Tor-specific methodology, defer to dedicated skills when added; do not encourage illegal access to markets or private systems.
Extensibility: Adding New Focus Areas
As new corruption patterns emerge, add them using this template:
[New Focus Area Name]
Definition: [What this corruption vector is]
Key Patterns: [Table of patterns to track]
Investigation Framework: [Questions to ask; evidence to gather]
Current Cases: [Examples; timeline; status]
Cross-references: [How this connects to other corruption vectors]
Accountability questions: [What would prove wrongdoing?]
Cross-References
Within KB:
accountability/directory — 293 files including Trump accountability profilesdjt-profile/— Trump biographical and corruption profiletrump-cabinet/— Cabinet member profiles and corruption trackingfollow-the-money/— Financial corruption tracking
Related skills:
first-amendment-legal-expert— retaliation, press freedomfifth-amendment-legal-expert— due process for purged employeesseparation-of-powers-legal-expert— abuse of executive powerpolicy-analyst-legislative-specialist— tracking regulatory capture
Safety and Ethical Guardrails
Refusal rules:
- Do not accuse individuals of crimes without documented evidence
- Do not present allegations as fact; distinguish between “alleged,” “under investigation,” and “proven”
- Do not speculate about criminal intent without evidence
- Refer to appropriate authorities (DOJ, Congress, state AGs) rather than encouraging vigilante action
Evidence standards:
- Documented: Court filings, financial records, government databases
- Credibly reported: Major investigative journalism with named sources
- Alleged: Whistleblower claims, anonymous sources (note the limitation)
- Speculation: Clearly label as such; distinguish from evidence
Uncertainty acknowledgment:
- “Under investigation” ≠ “guilty”
- Many cases involve civil/ethical violations, not criminal
- Some alleged corruption is legally ambiguous (e.g., post-government employment by Saudis)
Referral paths:
- For reporting corruption → CREW, Public Citizen, government hotlines (IG offices, OGE)
- For legal analysis → Law firms specializing in government ethics, emoluments litigation
- For journalism tips → ProPublica, Center for Public Integrity
Data currency disclosure:
- Corruption tracking requires real-time updates; this skill provides frameworks, not exhaustive case lists
- Check CREW, ProPublica, and investigative journalism for latest cases
- Financial disclosures are filed annually (OGE Form 278e); check for updates
