Chattanooga Times Free Press

Loeffler outlines millions in assets in financial disclosure­s

- BY TIA MITCHELL

U.S. Sen. Kelly Loeffler made $3.6 million annually at her day job and holds up to $25 million in stocks for parent company Interconti­nental Exchange, according to a financial disclosure filed late Friday.

Her assets include a Buckhead estate called Descante worth up to $12 million and owned by four separate limited liability companies that Loeffler and her husband, Jeff Sprecher, control.

They also own an oceanfront condo in Boca Raton, Florida, a villa in Sea Island, Georgia, a private jet and a portion of the Atlanta Dream WNBA team. However, the bulk of Loeffler and Sprecher’s personal wealth is listed among hundreds of line items that represent tens of millions of dollars in investment­s and bonds.

The financial disclosure — the first time Loeffler has publicly detailed her vast wealth — was accompanie­d by a sharply worded statement in which the senator said any criticism could only be motivated by envy or partisansh­ip.

“The Left, The Swamp, and career politician­s will use my success to attack me — in the same way they’ve attacked our President and his family — because we reject socialism, champion freedom, and unapologet­ically support the free enterprise system that made this country great,” Loeffler said. “The ridiculous accusation­s and desperate lies will be many, but I refuse to apologize for being successful and will do whatever it takes to help Georgia and shake up the status quo in Washington.”

Loffler’s wealth and recent stock transactio­ns have been criticized by both Democrats and Republican rivals who described her as out of touch with most Georgians and focused on her portfolio during the COVID-19 outbreak. U.S. Rep. Doug Collins is challengin­g Loeffler for her Senate seat and has accused her of “profiting off the pandemic.”

Loeffler’s aides tried to head off new attacks with notes made in the disclosure about certain investment­s. For instance, on a line item detailing the couple’s ownership in a firm that researches new cures to viruses, it is pointed out that the stock was purchased in 2015.

The financial disclosure covers Loeffler’s assets, income and liabilitie­s as of Jan. 5, the day before she was sworn into the Senate. She was required to file the document as a new member of Congress but received an extension pushing back the filing deadline to Tuesday.

She beat it by four days. One New York Times reporter described the release as a “Friday night news dump”: a technique used by politician­s to release controvers­ial or jarring informatio­n at the start of the weekend when the public is less likely to be paying attention.

Her aides completed the disclosure form using check-boxes to describe holdings in very broad categories of value. For example, many of her stocks are listed as having a value between $15,001 and $50,000; the airplane she uses to commute to Washington is worth between $5 million and $25 million.

Most, but not everything, is listed within those various ranges. A couple dozen properties and investment­s solely owned by Sprecher are not listed with an upper range, making it impossible to know how valuable they are.

Case in point: The report says he owns “over $1 million” in stock at Interconti­nental Exchange, the company Sprecher founded. Filings from ICE to the Securities and Exchange Commission list his annual compensati­on at $14.5 million.

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