A mysterious contribution of $400,000 that President Donald Trump’s inaugural committee said came from an address in Englewood that does not exist is one of dozens of errors cited by campaign finance advocates who charged disclosure was so bad it broke the law.

The Campaign Legal Center and Democracy 21 argued in a complaint filed Tuesday that the Federal Election Commission should punish Trump's inaugural committee for not even trying to gather accurate information about who gave a record $106 million for events surrounding the Jan. 20 inauguration, and only addressing the false disclosures that resulted after the media complained.

"There was a pattern of erroneous reporting," said Brendan Fischer, an attorney for the Campaign Legal Center. "It appears the committee didn’t even maintain the minimal level of diligence required to comply with the law."

A key example cited in the complaint is $400,000 from a donor listed as "Isabel T. John" of 111 Sylvan Way in Englewood, a place that does not exist. That address does exist in Englewood Cliffs, as the site where LG Electronics is building a new headquarters.

After Huffington Post used social media to crowd source the identity of donors and highlighted a series of errors, the inaugural committee said an amended report would be filed showing the donors were actually named John and Isabel Tonelli. In other words, the last name for contributors of $400,000 was listed only as an initial.

The committee also told HuffPost that the Englewood address had been taken from a Citibank wire transfer used to make the payment.

"It does not appear that the Inaugural Committee asked the Tonellis for their own address, but instead copied-and-pasted a bank address, an act of negligence that caused a false report to be filed," the complaint with the FEC says.

Other errors in the report cited in the complaint include the use of four addresses in three states for one donor who gave four times over two days. There were also four donations from four addresses on the same day from one person. And one donor's name was listed as his street address.

The inaugural committee attributed some errors to use of purchase codes for tickets to inaugural events, which may have disguised who ultimately bought the tickets.

Fischer, the attorney, said that with more than $100 million raised, the committee had the resources to hire someone to handle proper compliance with the law.

"We're hoping the FEC will open an investigation and identify how many records on the report were erroneous or false so the public has full information about who financially supported the inaugural committee and who may be trying to buy influence in the Trump administration," Fischer said.

"We hope they will impose civil penalties to deter this sort of thing from happening in the future," he said.