Earlier this month, some disturbing news came over the transom: Jared Kushner, late of shockingly not bringing peace to the Middle East, had joined the government’s efforts to respond to the coronavirus after doing his own “research” on the matter. This was a chilling turn of events for a number of reasons, the primary one being that, contrary to popular belief, Kushner is not an expert in public health, or even in how the government functions, the former of which may have informed his opinion, as late as mid-March, that the problem was “more about public psychology than a health reality.”

The other issue was the question of potential conflicts of interest, for which the president’s son-in-law has many. Whether it’s lobbying for tax breaks that would benefit his family fortune, meetings with top CEOs at the White House who later lent money to Kushner Companies, or the curious case of the Qatari bailout of 666 Fifth Avenue, virtually everything Kushner touches from his perch as a senior adviser to the president appears to have some connection to his personal net worth or that of his extended family. And, according to a new report from the Atlantic, COVID-19 is somehow no different.

On March 13, President Donald Trump promised Americans they would soon be able to access a new website that would ask them about their symptoms and direct them to nearby coronavirus testing sites. He said Google was helping. That wasn’t true. But in the following days, Oscar Health—a health-insurance company closely connected to Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner—developed a government website with the features the president had described. A team of Oscar engineers, project managers, and executives spent about five days building a stand-alone website at the government’s request, an Oscar spokesperson told the Atlantic. The company even dispatched two employees from New York to meet in person with federal officials in Washington, D.C., the spokesperson said. Then the website was suddenly and mysteriously scrapped.

As reporter Robinson Meyer writes, the site would not have been super useful if it had launched, given that in the two weeks since Trump announced a network of drive-through testing sites, only a smattering have actually opened. Yet despite the project never seeing the light of day, the very notion of a company financially connected to Kushner—who is currently running a coronavirus “shadow task force”—deeply concerns ethics experts: