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The annual financial disclosure reported no income as of yet from Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr.’s recently reported book deal.

By Ann E. Marimow
Reporting from Washington
Aug. 26, 2025, 2:27 p.m. ET
After years of increased scrutiny of Supreme Court justices’ off-the-bench activities, Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr. reported in his annual financial disclosure report released on Tuesday that he received no gifts and took a single trip to Ohio last year to deliver a commencement address.
As in past years, Justice Alito reported owning stock in more than two dozen individual companies, including Boeing, ConocoPhillips and Molson Coors.
The filing was made public two months after those of his colleagues because Justice Alito requested an extension, as he has done in previous years.
Under federal ethics law, the nine justices and other high-level government officials are required to file annual reports listing their outside income, gifts, investments and sources of any income their spouses receive so that the public can evaluate potential conflicts of interest.
The justices’ financial reports and activities beyond the Supreme Court have been closely examined in recent years after news reports that some justices had failed to disclose lavish travel, high-end gifts and other transactions with potential conflicts of interest.
Justice Alito reported that he continued to hold honorary unpaid positions at the Bolch Judicial Institute of Duke Law School and the Franciscan Monastery of the Holy Land.