Finance News

Trump bought Axon stock before ICE sought $220 million Taser deal


President Donald Trump bought as much as $5 million in shares of Axon Enterprise — maker of Tasers, body cameras and policing software — two weeks before Immigration and Customs Enforcement sought a five-year, $220 million contract that experts told CNBC appeared tailored to the company’s weapons.

On Feb. 10, Trump purchased between $1 million and $5 million worth of Axon stock, according to federal disclosures he filed in May. On Feb. 24, ICE posted a notice seeking roughly 17,800 new Tasers, along with unlimited cartridges and training.

The White House has said Trump’s assets are held in a trust managed by his children and that Trump’s investments are managed by independent third-party firms, not Trump or his family.

“There are no conflicts of interest,” spokesperson Anna Kelly told CNBC, calling the scrutiny a “tired narrative” pushed by Democrats.

Trump’s disclosures with the U.S. Office of Government Ethics, made public May 14, show more than 3,700 transactions, with the total amount for each listed as a range rather than an exact figure.

Under federal law, presidents are exempt from the criminal conflict-of-interest statute that applies to most executive branch officials.

The ICE notice does not name Axon, which makes about 90% of U.S. Tasers according to investment firm Brown Advisory, but it calls for “conductive-energy weapons” with specifications and capabilities that procurement reviewers and three policing experts told CNBC appeared to match only Axon products. The company already supplies the federal government with Tasers.

If finalized, the purchase would more than quadruple ICE’s current Taser arsenal, replacing about 4,300 devices in the field, according to the February notice.

The notice refers to an upgrade to the “T10,” Axon’s “TASER 10” model, to replace ICE’s older “X26P/X2 Tasers,” which are also Axon-made. It also specifies features associated with “TASER 10,” including a 45-foot range and 10 individually targeted probes — all specifications and capabilities that procurement experts say effectively foreclose other bidders.

There’s no evidence Trump was involved in or had knowledge of the procurement process, that contracting officials knew of his stock purchase or that Axon knew that Trump was a shareholder. Trump bought the stock on Feb. 10, but the purchase did not become public until his financial disclosure was released in May. There is no indication Axon had access to non-public information about the president’s personal investments.

The ICE notice was part of the standard federal procurement process. Federal procurement records show no contract has been awarded yet, and because the notice was a “Request For Information” rather than a formal solicitation, there is no public record showing which vendors, if any, responded.

Axon did not respond to requests for comment on whether it discussed the potential Taser purchase with ICE, DHS or White House officials before ICE posted the Feb. 24 notice.

The timing of the notice…



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