LDS Audit

The Mormon Church’s CORRUPTION for over 20 years! #lds #mormon

Twenty Years of Missing Filings: What the Church's SEC Disclosure Reveals About Institutional Accountability

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints operates one of the world's largest investment portfolios, and for more than two decades, a critical legal requirement went unfulfilled. According to reporting from the Mormon Stories Podcast, the church's investment entity failed to file mandatory SEC disclosure forms (Form 13F) even after senior leadership was explicitly informed of the obligation. This is not a minor clerical oversight. It is a sustained pattern of non-compliance that raises serious questions about how a religious institution with an estimated $100+ billion in assets manages its accountability to both members and regulators.

The question at the heart of this issue is simple: why would an organization consistently fail to file documents it legally must file, and what does that reveal about institutional priorities?

Background: The Investment Portfolio and Filing Requirements

The Church's Ensign Peak Advisors (EPA) serves as the principal investment vehicle for ecclesiastical assets. As a registered investment manager holding substantial equity positions, EPA falls under Securities and Exchange Commission jurisdiction. Like all entities in this category, it must file Form 13F quarterly to disclose its holdings above certain thresholds.

This is not discretionary. It is law.