(Albert Mack for Nevada) — Two new formal ethics complaints have been filed with the Nevada Secretary of State against Assemblywoman Heidi Kasama, bringing the total to four separate complaints tied to her financial disclosures, and pointing to what appears to be a pattern of concealment and serial nondisclosure.
The complaints allege violations of NRS 281.571(7), which requires candidates to fully disclose any business entity in which they, or members of their household, serve as a manager, officer, or owner.
According to the filings:
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Kasama was listed as Manager of Kasco Investments, LLC across multiple years, yet allegedly failed to disclose that involvement on financial disclosures filed in 2023, 2024, and 2026.
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Kasama was also listed as Manager of Kojima Nevada, LLC in 2025, but did not disclose that role on her 2026 financial disclosure.
These complaints are not isolated. They follow two prior ethics complaints involving similar allegations of undisclosed business interests, bringing the total to four and reinforcing concerns about a systematic failure to disclose financial ties.
“This is no longer a question of oversight, it’s a pattern,” said a spokesperson for the Mack campaign. “Four separate complaints, multiple entities, and repeated omissions across multiple years point to serial nondisclosure that undermines the transparency voters expect.”
Supporting documentation included in the complaints shows official Nevada business filings listing Kasama as a manager of these entities during the same time periods in which the disclosures were submitted.
Nevada’s disclosure laws exist for a reason: to ensure the public can see potential conflicts and financial interests of those seeking office.
“Transparency isn’t selective, and it isn’t optional,” the spokesperson added. “When the same issue surfaces again and again, voters are right to ask whether this is a deliberate pattern of concealment.”
Kasama has also loaned $500,000 of her own money into her campaign, but has yet to answer a critical question: where did that money come from? In light of multiple ethics complaints involving undisclosed LLCs, voters deserve to know whether those same entities helped fund her campaign.
“If Kasama failed to disclose these business interests, and then used money tied to those same entities to finance her campaign, that’s not just a disclosure issue, it’s a serious breach of public trust,” the spokesperson said. “Nevada voters have a right to know exactly who and what is behind that $500,000.”
The Nevada Secretary of State’s office will review all four complaints and determine whether further investigation or enforcement action is warranted.
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