A firestorm is brewing for far-left Texas Democrat Rep. Jasmine Crockett, and this time, the legal trouble might not be so easy to dodge.
The Federal Election Commission (FEC) has officially launched an investigation into Crockett’s 2024 re-election campaign following allegations of potentially fraudulent donations funneled through the Democrat-aligned fundraising platform ActBlue.

The complaint that triggered the probe came from the conservative Coolidge-Reagan Foundation, a watchdog group that filed the report with the FEC on March 26. Less than a week later, on April 2, Crockett was informed by the agency.
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According to a letter from the FEC’s assistant general counsel for complaints examination, Lisa J. Brown, “The respondents will be notified of this complaint within five business days.” Brown added, “You will be notified as soon as the Federal Election Commission (FEC) takes final action on your client’s complaint. Should you receive any additional information in this matter, please forward it to the Office of the General Counsel.”
The heart of the complaint centers around 73-year-old Randy Best of Plano, Texas, who was listed as having made 53 separate donations amounting to $595 to Crockett’s campaign via ActBlue. But there’s a problem—Best’s wife reportedly denied any knowledge of those donations, suggesting the couple may have been completely unaware of the activity conducted in their names.
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