Jared Kushner didn't report on a government financial disclosure form that he is the part-owner of a real estate start-up that counts Goldman Sachs clients and billionaires Peter Thiel and George Soros among its investors.

The Wall Street Journal first reported the connection, pointing out that the president's son-in-law and White House senior adviser, continued to have a stake in Cadre, which connects investors with real estate projects.

Kushner's Cadre stake was one of many interests that the Journal found unreported in Kushner's disclosure firm, which also included loans totaling at least $1 billion from more than 20 lenders, including Deutsche Bank and the Royal Bank of Scotland.

President Trump's son-in-law also provided personal guarantees on more than $300 million worth of debt.

Kushner's attorney Jamie Gorelick told the Journal that Kushner's stake in Cadre is under the umbrella of another company he owns called BFPS Ventures LLC, which is reported in his financial disclosures.

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The Wall Street Journal found that Jared Kushner (pictured) didn't report on government filings that he was still a partial owner in the real estate start-up Cadre

Cadre's early investors included Peter Thiel (left), President Trump's most prominent Silicon Valley supporters, and George Soros (right), a well-known Democratic donor

Mr. Kushner will recuse himself from matters to which Deutsche Bank or RBS are parties, because he has provided personal guarantees on their loans, said a person familiar with his ethics arrangement.

The documents that are currently public, however, don't mention Cadre by name.

Gorelick also told Journal reporters that Cadre is identified in a revised version of his financial disclosure form and will be made public after it is certified by ethics officials. She said it's 'very normal' for there to be revisions for these kinds of things.

She added that Kushner had discussed his stake in Cadre with officials working for the Office of Government Ethics, though a spokesman for OGE didn't immediately respond to the Journal's request for comment.

Kushner, Gorelick said, 'resigned from Cadre's board, assigned his voting rights and reduced his ownership there.'

Additionally, a person familiar with Kushner's ethics arrangement told the Journal that the aide will recuse himself from matters related to Deutsche Bank or RBS.

President Trump's son-in-law co-founded Cadre in 2014 with his brother Joshua Kushner, the boyfriend of super model Karlie Kloss, and their friend Ryan Williams, who had worked with the brothers at Kushner Cos., the business Jared Kushner ran before his White House gig.

According to its website, Cadre describes itself as a 'technology-enabled investment platform that connects qualified individuals and institutions to fully vetted, compelling real estate investment opportunities.'

Investors, those willing to hand over six-figures or more sizable amounts, are able to put money into specific properties or larger funds.

As users of Cadre have to fit a specific bill, Kushner and company first turned to a Goldman Sachs fund to finance their real estate projects, the Wall Street Journal found.

One of those investors, Thiel, is Silicon Valley's best known Trump supporter, speaking in support of the now-president at last summer Republican National Convention and touting a Trump presidency at the National Press Club in Washington too.

While Thiel's ties to Trump family members isn't surprising, the Journal also found that Cadre had secured a $250 million line of credit from the family office of George Soros, a top Democratic donor often portrayed as a liberal boogeyman in rhetoric coming from Republican candidates, including President Trump.

Reporters for the Journal were later told by a person familiar with the affairs of Soros' family office that the investment was made in early 2015, before Trump announced his desire to run for president.

Some of the money raised by Cadre went to Kushner Cos. real estate projects, according to information sent to investors and given to the Journal, including some projects where Jared Kushner personally has a stake, according to Cadre documents and the top aide's disclosure form.

Williams, who is listed as the co-founder and CEO, on Cadre's website – which doesn't mention either Kushner – told the Journal that the company has been working with regulators to 'reflect Jared's non-operational, non-management relationship with the company, which has been in place since the inauguration.'