Updated 8:56 p.m. | President Donald Trump filed his annual financial disclosure to a government ethics watchdog on Tuesday, but it’s not yet clear whether he reported reimbursing his attorney for payments made to Stormy Daniels or when the public will see the document.

Walter Shaub Jr., a frequent Trump critic who ran the Office of Government Ethics until last summer, said the disclosure may well document loans to Trump’s lawyer Michael Cohen, who has said he made a $130,000 payment to Daniels, an adult film actress who alleges she had an affair with the president years ago.

Under a 1978 ethics law, the president would need to disclose any liability from the previous calendar year that exceeded $10,000, Shaub said. Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani has said publicly that Trump paid Cohen back in a series of payments, most of which, if not all, occurred in 2017.

Though the annual financial disclosures of most presidents in the past were released within days of the May 15 deadline, it could take weeks before the public gets a glimpse of Trump’s form, Shaub said during a news conference call with reporters Tuesday.

Shaub, who is now the senior director of ethics at the Campaign Legal Center, added he was uncertain whether the form would include the loans from Cohen and reiterated his concerns that ethics in the executive branch are in a “state of crisis.”