What has happened?
Start by looking at the site of the first additional stop codon, 733 (shown by the black arrow). You'll notice that the isolate sequence is shifted one to the right compared to the defined allele sequences. If you look further upstream, at site 731, you can see it is the addition of a extra G base that has caused this. We would call this a frameshift caused by a single base insertion.
What does this mean for a bacterium?
In a bacterium, the protein machinery would stop at the first stop codon it came across. This would be the additional stop codon we identified at site 733. As this is a most of the way through the sequence, there is a chance the protein produced could be partially functional. You would have to do in vivo testing to confirm this.
What would a curator do?
A curator would make a new allele sequence to the length of the sequence. They would note it has a frameshift and internal stop codon.