- Lobbying
- Lobbying by CHAINALYSIS
Lobbying Relationship
Lobbyists
Lobbyists named here were listed on a filing related to this lobbying engagement. They may not be working on it now. Occasionally, a single lobbyist whose name is spelled two different ways on filings may be represented twice here.
Lobbyist | Covered positions? |
---|---|
Amelia Jenkins | Dep Staff Dir/Sen Policy Advisor-House Comm Nat'l Resources; Prin Dep Asst Sec-Congressional Aff. Dept of Energy; Staff Dir- Subcomittee on Water & Power; Sr Leg Staff-House Comm on Resources; Leg. Dir-Cong George Miller; Leg. Aide-Cong Peter De Fazi |
Jordan Bernstein | Chief of Staff and Legis. Dir. for Cong Emerson Chief of Staff and Legis. Dir. for Cong Emerson |
Russell Thomasson | Chief of Staff, Legislative Dir and Legislative Asst to Senator John Cornyn; Legislative Assistant to U.S. Senator Bob Smith |
Sarah Young Glackin | Professional Staff Member for the House Appropriations Committee, Subcommittees on Defense, Interior, Military Quality of Life and Military Construction and VA |
Sarah Young Glackin | Professional Staff Member for the House Appropriations Committee, Subcommittees on Defense, Interior, Military Quality of Life and Military Construction and VA |
Sarah Young Glackin | n/a |
Disclosures Filed
Once a lobbying engagement begins, the lobbyist or firm is required to file updates four times a year. Those updates sometimes change which lobbyists are involved or add new issues being discussed. When lobbyists stop working for a client, the firm is also supposed to file a report disclosing the end of the relationship.
Q1 Report
Q4 Report
Lobbying Issues
Agencies Lobbied
U.S. House of Representatives
Type of Issue
Law Enforcement
Homeland Security
Lobbying Issues
Agencies Lobbied
U.S. House of Representatives
Type of Issue
Q3 Report
Lobbying Issues
Agencies Lobbied
U.S. House of Representatives
Type of Issue
Law Enforcement
Homeland Security
Lobbying Issues
Agencies Lobbied
U.S. House of Representatives
Type of Issue
Q2 Report
Lobbying Issues
Agencies Lobbied
U.S. House of Representatives
Type of Issue
Law Enforcement
Homeland Security
Lobbying Issues
Agencies Lobbied
U.S. House of Representatives
Type of Issue
Q1 Report
Lobbying Issues
Agencies Lobbied
U.S. House of Representatives
Type of Issue
Law Enforcement
Homeland Security
Lobbying Issues
Agencies Lobbied
U.S. House of Representatives
Type of Issue
Q4 Report
Lobbying Issues
Agencies Lobbied
U.S. House of Representatives
Type of Issue
Law Enforcement
Homeland Security
Lobbying Issues
Agencies Lobbied
U.S. House of Representatives
Type of Issue
Q3 Report
Lobbying Issues
Agencies Lobbied
U.S. House of Representatives
Type of Issue
Law Enforcement
Homeland Security
Lobbying Issues
Agencies Lobbied
U.S. House of Representatives
Type of Issue
Q2 Report
Lobbying Issues
Agencies Lobbied
U.S. House of Representatives
Type of Issue
Law Enforcement
Homeland Security
Lobbying Issues
Agencies Lobbied
U.S. House of Representatives
Type of Issue
Q1 Report
Lobbying Issues
Agencies Lobbied
U.S. House of Representatives
Type of Issue
Law Enforcement
Homeland Security
Lobbying Issues
Agencies Lobbied
U.S. House of Representatives
Type of Issue
Registration
Issue(s) they said they’d lobby about: to increase funding for appropriations in both Houses of Congress. This requires engagement with multiple subcommittees for national security, law enforcement (including FBI, DOJ, and ATF), financial regulators (including SEC, CTFC, and Treasury), Department of Homeland Security, and state/local government. Success is measured by additional funding to agencies that will enable increased utilization of the Chainalysis platform to ensure secure cryptocurrency and detect malicious activity. As opportunities arise, we also stand ready to pursue opportunities outside of these agencies..
Registration
Issue(s) they said they’d lobby about: to increase funding for appropriations in both Houses of Congress. This requires engagement with multiple subcommittees for national security, law enforcement (including FBI, DOJ, and ATF), financial regulators (including SEC, CTFC, and Treasury), Department of Homeland Security, and state/local government. Success is measured by additional funding to agencies that will enable increased utilization of the Chainalysis platform to ensure secure cryptocurrency and detect malicious activity. As opportunities arise, we also stand ready to pursue opportunities outside of these agencies..
Source: Clerk of the U.S. House of Representatives and Secretary of the Senate