It has been mere weeks since Sen. Markwayne Mullin (R-OK) was found to have violated laws that require him to report his stock trades. Now he's done it again.

Dave Levinthal wrote for NOTUS that this is the second time in as many weeks that Mullin has "disclosed trades showing that he violated a federal conflicts of interest and financial transparency law."

Reporting on Wednesday, Levinthal found that the Mullin documents submitted on Tuesday show that he sold "between $1.4 million and $3.5 million."

The report explained that lawmakers must only disclose a "broad range" of the amount.

"The late disclosures follow an earlier slate of hundreds of thousands of dollars’ worth of tardy stock and municipal security filings — some up to two-and-a-half years past a 45-day deadline enshrined in the Stop Trading on Congressional Knowledge Act," the report said, citing the previous report from NOTUS at the end of July.

In the statement last month, Mullin's spokesperson compared it to filing a two-year-old tax return.

“Much like tax returns, financial disclosures occasionally need to be amended to reflect the most accurate, up-to-date information. That’s what we did here,” the staffer said.

Sen. Josh Hawley (R-MO) has proposed legislation that would bar officials from stock trades altogether, as lawmakers have inside information about the economy, federal contracts, and other things that give them an edge over other investors. The measure was voted out of committee with Hawley being the only GOP "yes" vote. Republicans hammered him over the measure during the tense meeting and President Donald Trump attacked him on Truth Social after the fact.

Read the full report here.