At least 60 members of 118th Congress have violated a federal insider trading and conflicts-of-interest law, a Raw Story analysis of congressional financial disclosures reveals. Most of these violations involve failures to properly disclose stock trades as required by the Stop Trading on Congressional Knowledge (STOCK) Act of 2012. Some involve not abiding by the transparency and personal financial disclosure requirements first outlined in the STOCK Act's post-Watergate predecessor, the Ethics in Government Act of 1978.

ALSO READ: 8 ways convicted felon Donald Trump doesn't become president The most significant violator clocked in as much as six-and-a-half years late when reporting up to $8.5 million in stock transactions — Rep. Rick Allen (R-GA) .

Another lawmaker was just a couple days late but still logged up to $165,000 in late stock disclosures — Rep. John Curtis (R-UT) . Between them are numerous other Republicans and Democrats alike who have consistently failed to abide by the STOCK Act.

The Obama-era law intends to stop insider trading, curb conflicts-of-interest and enhance transparency by requiring key government officials, including members of Congress, to publicly report within 45 days most purchases, sales and exchanges of stocks, bonds, commodity futures, securities and cryptocurrencies. The excuses from the 2023-2024 violators are numerous: “I mistakenly left it in draft” — Rep. Dan Bishop (R-NC) “A clerical error” — Sen.

Tom Carper (D-DE) “Ad.