
Scott DesJarlais
Price Movement Since Trade
How each stock has moved from the trade date to the most recent close.
Suspicious Timing Detected
5 flagsScott DesJarlais sold $1,001-$15,000 in $PEP on 2025-10-28, 23 days before the FSMA Fee Technical Corrections Act (S3252) was introduced, which would increase FDA fees for food facilities.
Scott DesJarlais sold $1,001-$15,000 in $PEP on 2025-10-28, 28 days before the Childhood Diabetes Reduction Act of 2025 (HR6294) was introduced, which mandates health warning labels for sugary drinks.
Scott DesJarlais sold $15,001-$50,000 in $UPS on 2025-10-28, 34 days before the Non-Domiciled CDL Integrity Act (HR5688) was reported out of committee, which restricts commercial driver's licenses.
These flags identify timing coincidences between stock trades and legislative activity. They do not imply wrongdoing. Click any bill number or ticker to see the full analysis.
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Connected Legislative Activity
10 signalsThese bills and contracts share tickers or sectors with this filing's trades.
Miranda’s Law
Miranda's Law (HR7429) is an early-stage bill requiring FMCSA to create a national employer notification service for CDL status changes. The bill is at the referral stage with no funding authorization or committee action. Market impact is minimal — no appropriations, no procurement mandates, and no direct revenue identified for named tickers. Real market data for ORCL, IBM, and SAP shows broad tech sector weakness over the past 7 days (-6.74%, -2.27%, -3.54% respectively), but this is unrelated to this bill.
Support Our Troops Shipping Relief Act of 2025
The Support Our Troops Shipping Relief Act of 2025 is an early-stage Senate bill that reclassifies humanitarian care packages sent to overseas military personnel as domestic mail for USPS purposes. It has zero funding, zero direct impact on any publicly traded company, and remains in committee with only one cosponsor.
Federal Relocation Payment Improvement Act
HR6330 is a procedural administrative reform allowing lump-sum federal relocation payments. It authorizes no new funding and creates no binding obligations on private companies. Real market data in moving/logistics and real estate sectors shows mixed near-term movements unrelated to this bill. No material market impact is expected from this legislation.
To amend the Federal Trade Commission Act to include requirements for recyclable, compostable, and reusable claims for packaging for a consumer product, and for other purposes.
The PACK Act (HR6832) introduces new regulatory burdens for consumer packaged goods manufacturers by establishing strict requirements for recyclable, compostable, and reusable claims on product packaging. This bill, currently in the early stages of the legislative process, creates compliance costs for companies like Procter & Gamble, Coca-Cola, and PepsiCo. Recent market data shows mixed performance for these companies, with some experiencing gains and others declines over the past 7 and 30 days.
Non-Domiciled CDL Integrity Act
The Non-Domiciled CDL Integrity Act (HR5688), awaiting floor action in the House, will restrict CDL issuance for non-domiciled individuals, exacerbating the existing driver shortage. This regulation will increase labor costs for trucking firms like JBHT, ODFL, and XPO, and raise supply chain expenses for retailers like WMT. Recent market data shows JBHT up 16.18% in 30 days, ODFL up 8%, XPO up 12.56%, and WMT up 4.01%, but the bill represents a structural cost headwind that is not yet priced in.
To authorize the extension of nondiscriminatory treatment (normal trade relations treatment) to products of certain countries.
HR5917 is an early-stage procedural bill authorizing the President to extend normal trade relations to most countries by waiving the Jackson-Vanik amendment. It authorizes no funding and changes no current tariff levels. Real market data shows $WMT at $130.81 near its 52-week high, with a 30-day gain of 5.25%, and $AAPL up 8.8% in 30 days—indicating that favorable trade expectations are already priced in. The bill faces a long legislative path with no near-term market impact.
No Robot Bosses Act
The No Robot Bosses Act (HR6371) is a procedural early-stage bill with zero near-term market impact. It imposes compliance costs on HR technology vendors but has no funding authorization and has stalled since referral to three committees in December 2025. No actionable trading signal for retail investors at this time.
FSMA Fee Technical Corrections Act
The FSMA Fee Technical Corrections Act is a procedural bill that adjusts FDA reinspection and recall fees to a $15,000 inflation-adjusted base for large food manufacturers starting FY2026. The bill is early-stage (referred to committee) with no market-moving impact. Real market data shows no correlation with this bill—the sector's 30-day declines (GIS -5.83%, CAG -9.35%, CPB -7.45%, HSY -11.38%) reflect broader consumer staples weakness, not legislative action.
Childhood Diabetes Reduction Act of 2025
The Childhood Diabetes Reduction Act (HR6294) mandates front-of-package health warning labels on sugar-sweetened beverages and ultra-processed foods, with labeling requirements on 5% of principal display area. Based on proven international precedent, this will cause 8-15% volume declines for targeted beverages and 4-8% for ultra-processed foods. The bill sits in early committee stage with a single Democratic sponsor and two cosponsors, presenting minimal near-term passage risk but creating a material regulatory overhang for $KO, $PEP, $MDLZ, and $KHC.
Schedules That Work Act
HR 6786 (Schedules That Work Act) is stuck in early committee stage with no movement in 132 days. It would raise labor costs for hourly shift workers at retailers, restaurants, and logistics operators, but passage probability is low in this Congress. MCD is already down 5.45% in 30 days on existing margin pressures; this bill adds a legislative tail risk but is not driving current price action.
Data sourced from the U.S. House of Representatives Office of the Clerk Financial Disclosure system. Stock prices from Financial Modeling Prep. Suspicious timing flags identify coincidences between stock trades and legislative activity and do not imply any wrongdoing or illegal activity. This is not financial advice.