¶ Jessica Killin financial services and fintech network
This source cluster combines a draft Substack article with supporting raw captures from ethics disclosures, campaign materials, FEC data, company filings, and company or investor sites. Taken together, the materials support a narrower claim than corruption or quid pro quo: they show that Jessica Killin's household finances, campaign donor-employer mix, spouse's professional roles, and public policy environment overlap with firms and sectors directly affected by financial, fintech, stablecoin, and digital-asset regulation.
The cluster includes one narrative draft plus official and near-primary supporting captures. The strongest records are now the OGE filings, the House candidate financial disclosure filed on 2025-11-10, FEC candidate and committee pages, directly retrieved docquery filing images, the Circle S-1, the Customers 8-K and proxy materials, and company announcements tied to Raj Date, Circle, and Customers Bancorp. Campaign and investor-site pages mainly help identify how actors describe themselves and the sectors they operate in. The biographical and career-tracking captures now span 2007 through late 2025, giving the repo a cleaner path from Killin's Latham and USAA work through Donna Shalala and Carolyn Maloney chief-of-staff roles to her Colorado congressional campaign.
- Killin's resume and campaign materials place her in USAA government relations, Latham & Watkins, congressional staff roles, and White House service before her congressional run.
- The HillVets and New York Times biographical captures independently reinforce parts of that background, especially Killin's USAA and congressional-staff profile and her relationship to Raj Date.
- A 2007 Politico "Suite Talk" item helps anchor the earlier career sequence by placing Killin's move from Latham & Watkins into USAA federal government relations.
- A 2020 Miami Herald article and a 2021 Politico New York Playbook item independently place Killin in successive chief-of-staff roles for Donna Shalala and Carolyn Maloney, giving the repo a cleaner bridge between her earlier financial-services work and her later White House role.
- The OGE disclosure materials and the later House candidate financial disclosure together point to household holdings and spouse compensation tied to Fenway Summer, FS Vector, Customers, Circle, Coinbase, DriveWealth, Crossbeam, and other financial-services or fintech firms.
- Raj Date's Fenway Summer and FS Vector biographies describe him as a former CFPB leader, fintech investor, regulatory advisor, and Circle board figure.
- The new Fenway Summer Investment Management Form ADV does not directly cover FS Vector, but it does add formal adviser-structure evidence around the Date/Fenway side of the same network and helps distinguish Fenway fund management from FS Vector's advisory and lobbying-adjacent role.
- The Customers Bancorp 8-K says Date left the Customers and Customers Bank boards in March 2025 to devote more time to Fenway Summer and Circle, where he had become lead independent director and compensation-committee chair.
- The House candidate financial disclosure filed on
2025-11-10 covers 2024-01-01 through 2025-10-12 and materially strengthens the campaign-period layer by directly listing Circle stock, Circle options and RSUs, Customers Bancorp stock, Fenway Summer and FS Vector-linked interests, a Coinbase wallet holding Bitcoin, spouse salary and bonus from Fenway Summer, and spouse board fees from Circle and Customers.
- A direct House Clerk annual-index check for
2025 and 2026 did not surface any later Killin filing beyond that candidate report and its extension request as of 2026-04-11, which narrows but does not close the post-2025-10-12 disclosure gap.
- Circle's 2025 S-1 and the Customers 8-K align on Date's senior governance role during Circle's IPO process, reinforcing that Circle sits at the intersection of household financial exposure, board governance, and live stablecoin regulation in this cluster.
- The cluster's firm and disclosure material provides the repository's strongest non-legislative view of network overlap across bank-side and issuer-side actors: Customers appears as a bank exposed to digital-asset supervision, while Circle appears as an issuer-side stablecoin actor positioning itself for chartered compliance under GENIUS.
- The 2022 Business Wire release and 2024 Reuters item together place Customers in a digital-asset and tokenized-payments context, then later in a Federal Reserve enforcement action tied to risk-management and AML deficiencies.
- The April 2025 Customers proxy adds a cleaner governance layer by confirming Date's resignation effective
2025-03-31, reporting 2024 director compensation, and describing director and officer questionnaires plus audit-committee administration of related-party transaction review.
- The five newly added Customers annual reports are not K-1s or other pass-through tax documents. They instead add official company reporting on CBIT's deposit-liability structure, the November 2024 shift to cubiX, Raj Date's director-signatory timing through February 2025, and the bank's own statement in 2026 that GENIUS could increase competition for deposits.
- The five OpenSecrets FS Vector datasets are yearly retained-client exports, not contribution files or rulemaking dockets. They show FS Vector in a recurring lobbying- or political-process-adjacent client role for bank, fintech, and crypto-adjacent organizations such as Bank Policy Institute, Chamber of Digital Commerce, Alliance for Innovative Regulation, Anchorage Digital, Ava Labs, Aptos Labs, and Chime Financial.
- A Senate lobbying-disclosure filing now gives the repo one direct FS Vector process-facing artifact: in Q1 2025 the firm reported work for Ava Labs on fintech and blockchain policy and regulatory issues, and a Senate search-results page also shows repeated FS Vector filings for Bank Policy Institute across multiple years.
- Circle's investor-relations pages explicitly connect its trust-charter push to USDC infrastructure and expected GENIUS Act requirements.
- Circle is now supported by stronger primary process evidence than most other firms in this slice: a 2021 Senate Banking hearing page and testimony show direct committee participation through Dante Disparte, and an OCC-hosted 2025 trust-bank application plus an ICBA opposition filing show a live charter docket around the company.
- The FEC page and the Schedule A CSV together support the article's campaign-finance totals, confirm that Killin for Colorado became active in July 2025, and give row-level donor and conduit data that can be used to test donor-employer concentration claims more carefully.
- The tracked OpenFEC aggregate refresh now confirms that Killin's public top-line committee totals advanced to
APRIL QUARTERLY 2026 and remained unchanged in the 2026-04-20 check: $2,323,366.60 in receipts, $814,875.71 in disbursements, $1,508,490.89 cash on hand, and $0.00 debts.
- A donor-level rollup of the non-memo individual Schedule A subset leaves
630 unique donors giving $1,273,988, with the top 50 donors accounting for $353,200 (27.72%) of donor dollars. Because 87 donors are tied at the $7,000 cutoff, that top-50 slice is best read as a deterministic sample of the ceiling-donor tier rather than a sharp substantive boundary.
- The donor geography is also more legible in the unique-donor rollup than in the raw row counts: Colorado supplies the largest donor share by headcount (
23.17%) but only 12.05% of donor dollars, while non-Colorado donors account for 87.95% of donor dollars. By donor dollars, the strongest states are New York (17.17%), DC (14.60%), California (13.34%), Colorado (12.05%), Maryland (9.88%), and Virginia (8.69%).
- A conservative donor filter applied to the Schedule A CSV leaves a narrower BigLaw signal than a casual read of the file would suggest: after excluding non-individual conduit or passthrough rows, the current repo supports a ranked top-10 employer-cluster view led by Latham & Watkins, Jenner & Block, Kirkland & Ellis, and White & Case, with the remaining firms entering on thinner one-donor evidence documented separately in BigLaw in the Jessica Killin financial-regulatory slice.
- The top-10 BigLaw clustering result adds campaign-finance network context to this slice, but it does not establish comment-letter participation, legal representation, or other direct regulatory action by those firms.
- The FEC candidate overview adds a cleaner official candidate-level anchor above the committee page, confirming the candidate ID and principal-campaign-committee relationship.
- The principal-committee overview gives a cleaner official spending anchor for the earlier Year-End 2025 layer. The newer OpenFEC aggregate package now supersedes that top-line cutoff with April Quarterly 2026 totals through
2026-03-31.
- The FEC joint-fundraising capture adds a narrower but useful campaign-infrastructure fact: by late 2025 the active KILLIN IT VICTORY FUND joint fundraising committee linked KILLIN FOR COLORADO with the Colorado Democratic Party, but the overview page visible in this corpus shows zero receipts, zero disbursements, and zero cash on hand for its first covered period.
- New OpenFEC captures now strengthen the campaign-record layer beneath those overview pages: the principal committee has two directly preserved reports in the current cycle window, file numbers
1921354 and 1943333, while the joint fundraising committee has a preserved Year-End 2025 filing, file number 1943351.
- The merged OpenFEC Schedule B export gives the repo row-level spending detail for KILLIN FOR COLORADO rather than only top-line committee totals. The current capture retains 283 itemized disbursement rows spanning 2025-04-08 through 2025-12-31 and preserves filing numbers, image numbers, transaction IDs, and
docquery image URLs. The repo now also includes directly retrieved docquery PDFs for the candidate statement of candidacy, multiple principal-committee organization filings, the October Quarterly report, the Year-End 2025 principal-committee report, and the JFC organization and Year-End 2025 filings.
- A December 2025 Colorado Politics article adds a cleaner late-campaign political-strength marker by documenting endorsements from Colorado's full Democratic congressional delegation and restating the campaign's unusually strong early fundraising position.
- A bounded donor-employer slice now preserves
15 non-memo individual receipt rows from 8 donors reporting QED INVESTORS, CANAPI, ENOVA INTERNATIONAL, or RIPPLE INC as employer between 2025-07-08 and 2025-12-01.
- The broader donor-level employer rollup shows that
NOT EMPLOYED, SELF EMPLOYED, and RETIRED account for $444,856 (34.92%) across 211 unique donors, while a bounded named finance-and-fintech employer cluster accounts for $152,100 (11.94%) across 33 donors and a bounded named BigLaw and legal-employer cluster accounts for $73,650 (5.78%) across 15 donors.
- The top-50 donor slice is heavy on ceiling donors from New York, California, DC, and Colorado and includes named employers such as
TEMPO ASSIST, JENNER & BLOCK LLP, FS VECTOR LLC, CIRCLE INTERNET FINANCIAL, FENWAY SUMMER VENTURES, COLLEGE AVE STUDENT LOANS, and LATHAM & WATKINS LLP, which sharpens the donor-network picture without turning self-reported employer strings into institutional-action claims.
- QED, Canapi, and Enova company or investor pages independently support the narrower claim that those retained employer strings belong to fintech or financial-services actors rather than generic employers.
- Follow the Crypto plus the matching
RIPPLE INC donor rows identify Chris Larsen as the clearest direct crypto-finance donor in the current Killin campaign slice.
- Bounded OpenFEC Schedule E, communication-cost, and electioneering aggregate checks for Killin returned zero rows for cycle
2026 in the 2026-04-20 refresh. That is a useful negative result for the current repo, but not universal proof that no outside-spending path exists through every possible committee or naming variant.
- Senate lobbying-disclosure records now add a stronger process layer around adjacent policy actors: Blockchain Association's Q4
2025 filing and Avoq's Q4 2025 filing for Coinbase both explicitly reference digital-asset or CLARITY-related work in the same general policy window.
- The Stand With Crypto district page is useful mainly as a negative data point: it shows no recorded crypto-policy stance from Killin in that tracker, even while Jeff Crank is marked as strongly supportive of CLARITY and GENIUS.
- Easterseals DC MD VA pages place both Jessica Killin and Raj Date in the same nonprofit orbit in 2026, with Killin listed on the board and Date listed as a vice-chair for the Advocacy Awards event alongside Amias Gerety of QED Investors.
¶ Direct professional and household ties
- Jessica Killin and Raj Date are directly tied in the repository through biographical coverage and household-disclosure material.
- Killin's own direct professional sequence runs through Latham & Watkins, USAA, congressional chief-of-staff roles, and White House service before her congressional campaign.
- Date's direct professional sequence runs through CFPB leadership into Fenway Summer and FS Vector, then into board or governance roles at Customers Bancorp and Circle.
¶ Campaign and donor-network context
- Killin is directly tied to
Killin for Colorado through official FEC candidate and committee pages, and later to Killin It Victory Fund through the joint-fundraising-committee overview.
- The Schedule A CSV adds donor and employer context to the campaign, but that evidence class remains weaker than direct employment, board, or filing records.
- At the donor level, the strongest geography signal is a split between Colorado donor count and out-of-state donor dollars:
CO provides 23.17% of unique donors but only 12.05% of donor dollars, while non-CO donors provide 87.95% of donor dollars.
- The top donor states by dollars are
NY, DC, CA, CO, MD, and VA, while the donor-employer rollup is led by NOT EMPLOYED, SELF EMPLOYED, and RETIRED rather than a single institutional employer.
- The bounded donor-employer slice materially strengthens direct campaign-side ties to QED Investors, Canapi Ventures, Enova International, and Ripple / Chris Larsen because it preserves named non-memo individual receipt rows rather than only narrative summary prose.
- The bounded employer clusters also show that a named finance-and-fintech slice is materially present but not dominant:
11.94% of donor dollars versus 5.78% for named BigLaw and legal employers.
- Chris Larsen is the clearest direct crypto-finance donor in the current corpus because the repo preserves a dated contribution record to Killin for Colorado.
¶ Regulatory and legislative relevance
- Among the firms directly linked to Raj Date and the Killin household slice, Circle has the clearest direct stablecoin-rulemaking relevance because the repo preserves committee testimony, charter-docket materials, trust-charter positioning, and a company comment-letter page tied to GENIUS implementation.
- Customers Bancorp is relevant because the repo now has company, reporting, and annual-report sources placing it in digital-asset banking, CBIT-based payments, the later shift to cubiX, and later Federal Reserve scrutiny, even though the repo still does not show it directly participating in GENIUS comment processes.
- FS Vector now has stronger direct policy-process relevance than before because the repo preserves a stablecoin-payments advisory page explicitly referencing GENIUS and CLARITY, a trade-association alliance page about regulatory modernization, a direct Senate lobbying-disclosure filing for Ava Labs, and a multi-year retained-client record from OpenSecrets. That still falls short of a direct docket filing or a named comment letter by FS Vector itself, but it is stronger than pure sector-overlap evidence.
- Fenway Summer remains relevant as a Raj-Date-linked investment and advisory node, but the current repo is still stronger on role and sector overlap than on direct committee, comment-letter, or charter-process participation by the firm itself.
- BigLaw employer clustering and the Stand With Crypto race page still add context, but they remain weaker than the direct household, board, disclosure, filing, and company-governance ties above.
- QED, Canapi, Enova, and Chris Larsen now clear the threshold for bounded durable entity pages because the repo preserves direct campaign relationship evidence for each of them, but they remain donor/employer or sector-overlap nodes rather than direct rulemaking actors in this slice.
- The nonprofit overlap around Easterseals is a real cross-source connection, but in this slice it should be treated as medium-strength network overlap rather than as evidence of direct policy collaboration.
Circle: still the strongest current bridge because the repo supports Raj Date board governance, Killin household exposure, Senate Banking testimony, charter-docket materials, chartering steps, and a direct GENIUS implementation comment-letter page.
FS Vector: upgraded beyond a pure policy-facing second-ring node into a stronger advisory and political-process bridge actor because the repo now supports direct stablecoin-payment advisory claims, a fintech regulatory-modernization alliance with AFC, a direct Senate lobbying-disclosure filing for Ava Labs, and a multi-year retained-client disclosure record through OpenSecrets.
Customers Bancorp: upgraded as a bank-side regulatory node because the repo shows a direct Raj Date board relationship, official annual-report treatment of CBIT and cubiX, and later Federal Reserve scrutiny plus GENIUS-related competition exposure.
Fenway Summer: still matters as a Raj-Date-linked investment and advisory firm and as a household-disclosure node, but the repo does not yet preserve a direct rulemaking, comment-letter, or charter-process artifact for the firm itself.
Chris Larsen: now clears the durable-page threshold because the repo preserves both the Follow the Crypto contribution record and matching normalized RIPPLE INC donor rows on 2025-07-14.
QED Investors: now clears the durable-page threshold because the repo preserves three direct Killin donor names reporting QED INVESTORS as employer plus a separate Easterseals overlap around Amias Gerety and J. Miles Reidy.
Canapi Ventures: now clears the durable-page threshold because the repo preserves direct Killin donor rows from Walker Forehand and Eugene Ludwig reporting CANAPI as employer alongside Canapi's own B2B fintech fund description.
Enova International: now clears the durable-page threshold because the repo preserves repeated Killin donor rows from Steve Cunningham and Kirk Chartier reporting ENOVA INTERNATIONAL as employer alongside Enova's own financial-technology company description.
¶ Still-deferred candidates
Stand With Crypto: still matters only as a race-tracker negative data point in the Killin slice and does not yet have a stronger direct relationship layer.
Amias Gerety: now appears inside the QED materialization path, but still does not have enough independent recurrence for a separate person page in this pass.
Blockchain Association: policy relevance is real in the broader crypto corpus, but the direct Raj/Killin relationship layer remains too thin in this slice.
- 2022: Customers appoints Raj Date to its board and describes its blockchain-based instant-payments business.
- 2023-10: Killin files the OGE 278e after her White House appointment.
- 2024-01: the 278-T and certificate of divestiture reflect onboarding-related sales and divestiture steps tied to White House service.
- 2024-08-08: Reuters reports the Federal Reserve action against Customers Bancorp.
- 2024-11: Customers launches the non-blockchain cubiX platform and begins transitioning former CBIT customers into it.
- 2025-02-28: Raj Date signs the Customers 2024 annual report as a director.
- 2025-03-28: Customers files the 8-K on Date's resignation.
- 2025: OpenSecrets still shows a mixed fintech and crypto-adjacent client roster retaining FS Vector, including Aptos Labs, Ava Labs, and Chime Financial.
- 2025-Q1: a Senate lobbying-disclosure filing shows FS Vector working for Ava Labs on fintech and blockchain policy and regulatory issues.
- 2025-04-01 to 2025-08-12: Circle's IPO process becomes visible in the current repository through the Customers 8-K and Circle's S-1.
- 2025-06-30 and 2025-07-30: an OCC-hosted Circle trust-bank application and an ICBA opposition filing show a live charter-process docket around Circle.
- 2025-06-30 and 2025-12-02: Circle announces its trust-charter application and later conditional approval.
- 2025-07 to 2025-12: Killin for Colorado's FEC page shows the committee's first covered reporting period.
- 2025-07-08 to 2025-12-31: the filtered Schedule A dataset records the current repo's retained BigLaw-linked donor-employer window.
- 2025-07-08 to 2025-12-01: the bounded donor-employer slice preserves direct Killin campaign rows tied to QED Investors, Enova International, Ripple Inc, and Canapi.
- 2025-07-14: Follow the Crypto records a Chris Larsen contribution to Killin for Colorado.
- 2025-12: Circle publicly says it submitted a GENIUS implementation comment letter.
- 2025-12-19: Colorado Politics reports that Killin had secured endorsements from Colorado's full Democratic congressional delegation.
- 2026-03-01: FS Vector publishes a stablecoin-payments guide that explicitly references GENIUS and CLARITY.
- 2026: Easterseals DC MD VA pages show Killin and Date appearing in the same nonprofit event and governance ecosystem.
- Household disclosure, campaign finance, and sector-specific policy fights are tightly intertwined in this cluster.
- Regulatory expertise appears repeatedly as a bridge between government service, advisory work, venture investing, and corporate governance.
- The same cluster also shows why stablecoin and fintech policy fights are not abstract: firm-level governance, household disclosures, campaign finance, and implementation politics overlap in one network.
- The current evidence supports overlap and political salience, but not hidden coordination or illegality.
- The newer Raj Date background material reinforces that the cluster's regulatory expertise is not incidental; it stretches back to CFPB startup leadership and later private-sector regulatory commentary.
¶ Evidence limits and open questions
- Several supporting files are self-descriptions by campaigns, firms, or investors; they are useful for stated roles and sector positioning, but not neutral.
- The current repository now establishes campaign-period household exposure through
2025-10-12, and a direct annual-index check shows no later public House filing in the 2026 annual index as of 2026-04-11, but it still does not establish what changed after that date or what remained current later in the campaign.
- The Schedule A CSV contains both individual contribution rows and conduit rows, so donor-pattern analysis can be overstated if the file is summarized without deduplicating or accounting for ActBlue routing.
- The filtered Schedule A view can support statements about true donors and their self-reported employers, but it still cannot support claims that a law firm as an institution donated, coordinated, or took a policy position. The same caution applies to named finance and fintech employers in the donor rollup.
- The top-50 donor slice is analytically useful for naming the ceiling-donor tier, but it is not a natural break in the data because
87 unique donors are tied at $7,000.
- Self-reported occupation and employer fields can contain filing-level anomalies. One visible example in the top-50 slice is
HOROWITZ, BRADLEY, whose retained row reports occupation BRADLEY and employer CIRCLE.
- The BigLaw donor-employer chronology is parallel context for this network page, not evidence that campaign-finance timing drove or tracked any specific GENIUS implementation decision.
- Strong Raj Date or Jessica Killin ties do not automatically imply direct stake in every adjacent policy actor. In this slice, Circle and Customers are the clearest institutions with both a direct relationship and a policy-regulatory stake, while QED, Canapi, Enova, Chris Larsen, and Easterseals remain narrower donor, sector, or nonprofit-overlap nodes.
- The new Customers annual-report batch strengthens Customers' operational, governance-timing, and bank-side competition evidence, but it does not establish pass-through ownership, beneficiary status, or policy-process participation by Date, Killin, or Fenway Summer.
- FS Vector is now stronger than a pure overlap node, and the retained-client datasets plus one Senate lobbying-disclosure filing give it a clearer lobbying-disclosure footprint, but the repo still does not preserve direct agency filings, comment letters, or hearing appearances by FS Vector itself.
- The FEC candidate and JFC pages plus the new OpenFEC datasets materially strengthen campaign structure, filing traceability, and row-level principal-committee spending detail, and the repo now includes a broader direct
docquery filing-image batch across candidate, principal-committee, and JFC filings. Direct candidate and principal-committee outside-spending queries returned zero rows, but the corpus still lacks any materially relevant independent-expenditure detail needed for stronger network claims.
- The raw corpus now contains both failed-capture notes and later successful manual captures for some Business Wire and Reuters links; those now need metadata normalization rather than speculative rewriting.
- Several newer biographical and campaign-strength captures are still article-level corroboration rather than official filings or disclosures, so they help with chronology and role confirmation more than with stronger policy or influence claims.
raw/articles/2026-04-04T164632-0600 "Jessica Killin’s Financial Services and Fintech Network" - Substack.md
raw/articles/2026-04-05T020550-0600 Jessica Killin, Rajeev Date (Published 2018).md
raw/articles/2026-04-05T020638-0600 Jessica Killin.md
raw/articles/2026-04-05T120708-0600 Suite Talk Power up.md
raw/articles/2026-04-05T121027-0600 Donna Shalala sets up blind trust, sells stock related to CARES Act oversight.md
raw/articles/2026-04-05T121308-0600 Leaders clash on vaccine strategy — Legislature to start session — Court rules homeless men can stay at Lucerne — Some hospitals are still suing patients.md
raw/articles/2026-04-05T120735-0600 Crank challenger Jessica Killin racks up endorsements from all of Colorado’s congressional Democrats.md
raw/articles/2026-04-04T183631-0600 appointee-jessica-killin-biden-s-basement.md
raw/articles/2026-04-04T183634-0600 jessica-killin-for-congress.md
raw/articles/2026-04-04T183635-0600 priorities-jessica-killin-for-congress.md
raw/articles/2026-04-04T183637-0600 killin-for-colorado-committee-overview-fec-lock.md
raw/articles/2026-04-05T120954-0600 jessica-killin-candidate-overview-fec.md
raw/articles/2026-04-05T120954-0600 killin-it-victory-fund-committee-overview-fec.md
raw/datasets/killin-for-colorado-schedule-a-derived-summary-2026.md
raw/datasets/killin-for-colorado-schedule-b-openfec-2026.md
raw/datasets/killin-for-colorado-reports-openfec-2026.md
raw/datasets/killin-it-victory-fund-reports-openfec-2026.md
raw/articles/2026-04-04T183639-0600 home-fenway-summer.md
raw/articles/2026-04-04T183639-0600 raj-date-fs-vector-team.md
raw/articles/2026-04-04T183639-0600 cubi-20250328.md
raw/articles/2026-04-04T183641-0600 circle-internet-group-inc-circle-applies-for-national-trust-charter.md
raw/articles/2026-04-04T183641-0600 circle-internet-group-inc-circle-receives-conditional-approval-from-occ-for-national-trust-charter.md
raw/articles/2026-04-04T183642-0600 home-qed-investors.md
raw/articles/2026-04-05T141500-0600 a-practical-guide-to-stablecoin-payments-fs-vector.md
raw/articles/2026-04-05T141530-0600 american-fintech-council-joins-forces-with-fs-vector-to-promote-responsible-innovation-and-regulatory-modernization.md
raw/articles/2026-04-05T163300-0600 fs-vector-ava-labs-ld2-q1-2025.md
raw/articles/2026-04-05T163330-0600 fs-vector-bank-policy-institute-lda-search-results.md
raw/datasets/Groups That Have Retained FS Vector in 2021.md
raw/datasets/Groups That Have Retained FS Vector in 2022.md
raw/datasets/Groups That Have Retained FS Vector in 2023.md
raw/datasets/Groups That Have Retained FS Vector in 2024.md
raw/datasets/Groups That Have Retained FS Vector in 2025.md
raw/papers/174384.md
raw/articles/2026-04-05T163100-0600 senate-banking-stablecoins-hearing-december-2021.md
raw/papers/2026-04-05T163130-0600 dante-disparte-stablecoins-senate-banking-testimony-december-2021.md
raw/papers/2026-04-05T163200-0600 circle-occ-national-trust-bank-application-june-2025.md
raw/papers/2026-04-05T163230-0600 icba-opposition-to-circle-national-trust-bank-application-july-2025.md
raw/articles/2026-04-04T184113-0600 Former Consumer Financial Protection Bureau Regulator Joins Board at Customers Bancorp.md
raw/articles/2026-04-04T184229-0600 Customers Bancorp hit with Fed action for risk-management deficiencies.md
raw/articles/2026-04-05T141600-0600 customers-bancorp-provides-digital-asset-banking-update.md
raw/papers/959d31be-640a-4811-a860-85d34b1003e8.md
raw/papers/e66eabd9-baba-4327-b68c-81f99906e97c.md
raw/papers/0513d861-6166-4444-b86f-4b2d381327f8.md
raw/papers/278951d6-0781-45c2-9686-6a4408a8b054.md
raw/papers/0e614966-44e9-48f5-903c-f7de5a131dc4.md
raw/papers/2026-04-04T183632-0600 jessica-killin-oge-278e.md
raw/papers/2026-04-04T183632-0600 jessica-killin-oge-278t.md
raw/papers/2026-04-04T183633-0600 jessica-killin-oge-cd.md
raw/papers/2026-04-04T183634-0600 jessica-killin-resume.md
- "Jessica Killin’s Financial Services and Fintech Network" - Substack
- Jessica Killin, Rajeev Date (Published 2018)
- Jessica Killin
- Suite Talk: Power up
- Donna Shalala sets up blind trust, sells stock related to CARES Act oversight
- Leaders clash on vaccine strategy — Legislature to start session — Court rules homeless men can stay at Lucerne — Some hospitals are still suing patients
- Crank challenger Jessica Killin racks up endorsements from all of Colorado’s congressional Democrats
- Appointee - Jessica Killin - Biden's Basement
- Jessica Killin for Congress
- Priorities — Jessica Killin for Congress
- KILLIN FOR COLORADO - committee overview | FEC Lock
- KILLIN, JESSICA WILLOW - Candidate overview | FEC
- KILLIN IT VICTORY FUND - committee overview | FEC
- Killin for Colorado Schedule B disbursements, OpenFEC 2026 cycle
- Killin for Colorado reports, OpenFEC 2026 cycle
- Killin It Victory Fund reports, OpenFEC 2026 cycle
- Home - Fenway Summer
- Raj Date | FS Vector Team
- cubi-20250328
- Circle Internet Group, Inc. - Circle Applies for National Trust Charter
- Circle Internet Group, Inc. - Circle Receives Conditional Approval from OCC for National Trust Charter
- Home | QED Investors
- Canapi Ventures
- Enova International - Work Someplace Awesome.
- A Practical Guide to Stablecoin Payments | FS Vector
- American Fintech Council joins forces with FS Vector to promote responsible innovation and regulatory modernization
- FS Vector LD-2 disclosure for Ava Labs, Q1 2025
- FS Vector and Bank Policy Institute LDA search results
- Stablecoins: How Do They Work, How Are They Used, and What Are Their Risks?
- Written Statement of Dante Alighieri Disparte Before the United States Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs
- First National Digital Currency Bank, N.A. charter application
- ICBA letter in opposition to First National Digital Currency Bank, N.A. charter application
- Fintech and Crypto Assets | Jenner & Block LLP | Law Firm
- Financial Technology “FinTech” | Services | Kirkland & Ellis LLP
- Latham Earns Top Fintech Rankings Globally Menu Search Latham & Watkins LLP LinkedIn Twitter/X Facebook YouTube Instagram LinkedIn Twitter/X Facebook YouTube Instagram
- Chris Larsen | Follow the Crypto
- CO 5th District Congressional Race | Stand With Crypto
- Killin for Colorado QED / Canapi / Enova / Ripple employer slice, 2026 cycle
- Board of Directors | Easterseals Disability & Community Services
- Easterseals DC MD VA - GuideStar Profile
- Committees | Advocacy Awards | Easterseals Disability & Community Services
- Former Consumer Financial Protection Bureau Regulator Joins Board at Customers Bancorp
- Customers Bancorp hit with Fed action for risk-management deficiencies
- Customers Bancorp provides digital asset banking update
- Jessica-Killin-oge-278e.pdf
- Jessica-Killin-oge-278t.pdf
- Jessica-Killin-oge-cd.pdf
- Jessica-Killin-resume.pdf
- Jessica Killin House candidate financial disclosure, 2025
- Killin for Colorado Year-End 2025 docquery filing image
- Killin It Victory Fund Year-End 2025 docquery filing image
- Jessica Killin House disclosure annual-index check, 2025-2026
- S-1
- Jessica Killin OpenFEC Schedule E check, 2026
- Jessica Killin docquery filing-image batch, 2025-2026
- Jessica Killin OpenFEC as-of check, 2026-04-14
- 2026 federal candidate OpenFEC refresh
- Customers Bancorp DEF 14A, April 16, 2025
- Blockchain Association LD-2 disclosure, Q4 2025
- Avoq LD-2 disclosure for Coinbase, Q4 2025