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'''George Anthony Devolder Santos''' (born July 22, 1988) is a former United States Representative from New York who served 84 days of an 87-month federal prison sentence before President Donald Trump commuted his sentence in October 2025.<ref name="doj-sentence">U.S. Department of Justice, "Ex-Congressman George Santos Sentenced to 87 Months in Prison for Wire Fraud and Aggravated Identity Theft," April 25, 2025, https://www.justice.gov/usao-edny/pr/ex-congressman-george-santos-sentenced-87-months-prison-wire-fraud-and-aggravated.</ref> Santos was elected to Congress in November 2022 representing New York's 3rd congressional district, but his tenure was defined by scandal after revelations that he had fabricated virtually every aspect of his personal biography, including false claims about his education, employment history, religious heritage, and family background. He became the sixth member in United States history to be expelled from the House of Representatives—and the first to be expelled without first being convicted of a crime—when the House voted 311 to 114 to remove him in December 2023.<ref name="npr-plea">NPR, "Former Rep. George Santos pleads guilty to wire fraud, identity theft," August 20, 2024, https://www.npr.org/2024/08/20/nx-s1-5081330/former-rep-george-santos-pleads-guilty-to-wire-fraud-identity-theft.</ref> In August 2024, Santos pleaded guilty to wire fraud and aggravated identity theft, admitting to a pattern of deception that included fabricating campaign donors, stealing the identities of his own contributors to make unauthorized credit card charges, and fraudulently collecting COVID-19 unemployment benefits while employed.<ref name="doj-plea">U.S. Department of Justice, "Former Congressman George Santos Pleads Guilty to Wire Fraud and Aggravated Identity Theft," August 19, 2024, https://www.justice.gov/usao-edny/pr/former-congressman-george-santos-pleads-guilty-wire-fraud-and-aggravated-identity.</ref> On October 17, 2025, President Trump commuted Santos's sentence, releasing him immediately and eliminating his obligation to pay nearly $374,000 in restitution to his victims.<ref name="abc-commuted">ABC News, "George Santos released from prison after sentence commuted by Trump," October 18, 2025, https://abcnews.go.com/US/george-santos-prison-sentence-commuted-released-immediately-trump/story.</ref>
'''George Anthony Devolder Santos''' (born July 22, 1988) is a former United States Representative from New York who served just 84 days of an 87-month federal prison sentence before President Donald Trump commuted his sentence in October 2025.<ref name="doj-sentence">U.S. Department of Justice, "Ex-Congressman George Santos Sentenced to 87 Months in Prison for Wire Fraud and Aggravated Identity Theft," April 25, 2025, https://www.justice.gov/usao-edny/pr/ex-congressman-george-santos-sentenced-87-months-prison-wire-fraud-and-aggravated.</ref> Santos was elected to Congress in November 2022 representing New York's 3rd congressional district, but his time there was consumed by scandal. After his election, revelations emerged that he'd fabricated virtually every aspect of his personal biography: his education, employment history, religious heritage, family background—all lies. He became the sixth member in United States history to be expelled from the House of Representatives. More notably, he was the first to face expulsion without having been convicted of a crime when the House voted 311 to 114 to remove him in December 2023.<ref name="npr-plea">NPR, "Former Rep. George Santos pleads guilty to wire fraud, identity theft," August 20, 2024, https://www.npr.org/2024/08/20/nx-s1-5081330/former-rep-george-santos-pleads-guilty-wire-fraud-identity-theft.</ref> In August 2024, Santos pleaded guilty to wire fraud and aggravated identity theft. His admissions painted a picture of systematic deception: he fabricated campaign donors, stole identities from his own contributors to make unauthorized credit card charges, and fraudulently collected COVID-19 unemployment benefits while actually employed.<ref name="doj-plea">U.S. Department of Justice, "Former Congressman George Santos Pleads Guilty to Wire Fraud and Aggravated Identity Theft," August 19, 2024, https://www.justice.gov/usao-edny/pr/former-congressman-george-santos-pleads-guilty-wire-fraud-and-aggravated-identity.</ref> On October 17, 2025, President Trump commuted Santos's sentence. He was released immediately, and the commutation also wiped away his obligation to pay nearly $374,000 in restitution to his victims.<ref name="abc-commuted">ABC News, "George Santos released from prison after sentence commuted by Trump," October 18, 2025, https://abcnews.go.com/US/george-santos-prison-sentence-commuted-released-immediately-trump/story.</ref>


== Summary ==
== Summary ==


George Santos's brief political career represents one of the most brazen cases of personal fabrication in American political history. Over the course of his 2022 campaign and 11-month congressional tenure, Santos was revealed to have invented false claims about having worked at Goldman Sachs and Citigroup, attending Baruch College and NYU, founding an animal charity, having Jewish heritage and grandparents who survived the Holocaust, and losing employees in the Pulse nightclub massacre—among numerous other falsehoods. His exposure as a serial fabricator began shortly after his election when The New York Times published an investigation raising questions about his background in December 2022.<ref name="nyt-investigation">The New York Times, "George Santos's Early Fabrications Foretold His Unraveling," December 19, 2022, https://www.nytimes.com/2022/12/19/nyregion/george-santos-background.html.</ref>
George Santos's political career was remarkably short and extraordinarily brazen in its deception. Over his 2022 campaign and 11-month time in Congress, Santos invented claim after claim about his background: work at Goldman Sachs and Citigroup, degrees from Baruch College and NYU, founding an animal charity, Jewish heritage and Holocaust-survivor grandparents, losing employees in the Pulse nightclub massacre. The list went on. His fabrications began unraveling almost immediately. The New York Times published an investigation just days after his election in December 2022, raising hard questions about his background.<ref name="nyt-investigation">The New York Times, "George Santos's Early Fabrications Foretold His Unraveling," December 19, 2022, https://www.nytimes.com/2022/12/19/nyregion/george-santos-background.html.</ref>


While the biographical fabrications were not themselves crimes, Santos's financial misconduct was. Federal prosecutors charged him with a 23-count superseding indictment that alleged he had systematically defrauded campaign donors, made false statements to the Federal Election Commission, committed identity theft against his own supporters, and fraudulently obtained COVID-19 unemployment benefits. The charges painted a picture of a candidate who would say and do anything to achieve political success, using deception not only to win votes but to enrich himself at the expense of the people who supported him.<ref name="newsweek-timeline">Newsweek, "George Santos Sentencing: Full Timeline of His Crimes and Deceit," April 25, 2025, https://www.newsweek.com/george-santos-sentencing-full-timeline-his-crimes-deceit-2064198.</ref>
The biographical lies weren't themselves illegal. His financial crimes were. Federal prosecutors hit him with a 23-count superseding indictment alleging systematic fraud of campaign donors, false statements to the Federal Election Commission, identity theft against his own supporters, and fraudulent collection of COVID-19 unemployment benefits. These weren't victimless deceptions. Santos had stolen from people who believed in him.<ref name="newsweek-timeline">Newsweek, "George Santos Sentencing: Full Timeline of His Crimes and Deceit," April 25, 2025, https://www.newsweek.com/george-santos-sentencing-full-timeline-his-crimes-deceit-2064198.</ref>


Santos's guilty plea in August 2024 and subsequent 87-month sentence marked one of the longest prison terms imposed on a former member of Congress for corruption-related offenses. His case became even more notable when President Trump commuted his sentence after just 84 days, eliminating not only his remaining prison time but also his obligation to pay restitution to the victims of his fraud. The commutation sparked criticism from those who saw it as another example of Trump using clemency to benefit political allies, while supporters argued that Santos's sentence had been disproportionate.<ref name="npr-commuted">NPR, "President Trump commutes the prison sentence of George Santos," October 17, 2025, https://www.npr.org/2025/10/17/nx-s1-5578304/trump-george-santos-prison-sentence-commuted.</ref>
His guilty plea came in August 2024. The sentence that followed—87 months in federal prison—ranked among the longest imposed on a former member of Congress for corruption. But then came October 2025, when Trump commuted his sentence after just 84 days. The commutation didn't only free him from prison. It also eliminated his obligation to pay restitution to fraud victims. The move sparked fierce criticism from those viewing it as Trump rewarding a political ally, though supporters argued Santos's original sentence had been too harsh.<ref name="npr-commuted">NPR, "President Trump commutes the prison sentence of George Santos," October 17, 2025, https://www.npr.org/2025/10/17/nx-s1-5578304/trump-george-santos-prison-sentence-commuted.</ref>


== Background ==
== Background ==
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=== Early Life ===
=== Early Life ===


George Anthony Devolder Santos was born on July 22, 1988, in Queens, New York, to Brazilian immigrant parents. His mother, Fátima Aziza Caruso Horta Devolder, had immigrated to Florida in 1985 and later moved to New York, where she worked as a housekeeper, cook, and nanny. His father, Gercino Júnior dos Santos, was a house painter. The family lived in various Queens neighborhoods including Sunnyside and Jackson Heights. Santos has described his childhood as financially difficult, claiming the family lived in a "rat-infested basement apartment."<ref name="queens-chronicle">Queens Chronicle, "No lie: George Santos lived in Sunnyside as a child," January 5, 2023, https://www.qchron.com/qboro/i_have_often_walked/no-lie-george-santos-lived-in-sunnyside-as-a-child/.</ref>
George Anthony Devolder Santos was born on July 22, 1988, in Queens, New York. His parents had immigrated from Brazil. His mother, Fátima Aziza Caruso Horta Devolder, came to Florida in 1985 before moving to New York, where she worked as a housekeeper, cook, and nanny. His father, Gercino Júnior dos Santos, was a house painter. The family moved around Queens—Sunnyside, Jackson Heights—living paycheck to paycheck. Santos later claimed they'd lived in a "rat-infested basement apartment."<ref name="queens-chronicle">Queens Chronicle, "No lie: George Santos lived in Sunnyside as a child," January 5, 2023, https://www.qchron.com/qboro/i_have_often_walked/no-lie-george-santos-lived-in-sunnyside-as-a-child/.</ref>


Santos attended public schools in Queens, including P.S. 122 in Astoria and I.S. 125 in Woodside. Contrary to his later claims of attending Baruch College and New York University, Santos holds only a GED certificate. His parents' marriage ended around 1998, when his father returned to Brazil and remarried.<ref name="ballotpedia">Ballotpedia, "George Santos," https://ballotpedia.org/George_Santos.</ref>
He went to Queens public schools: P.S. 122 in Astoria, I.S. 125 in Woodside. But Santos would later claim he'd attended Baruch College and NYU. False. His actual education stopped at a GED. Around 1998, his father returned to Brazil and remarried, leaving his mother to raise George alone.<ref name="ballotpedia">Ballotpedia, "George Santos," https://ballotpedia.org/George_Santos.</ref>


=== Time in Brazil ===
=== Time in Brazil ===


Around 2008, Santos moved to Niterói in Brazil's Rio de Janeiro metropolitan area, where his mother was then living. He remained there until approximately 2011. During this period, Santos was known to acquaintances as Anthony Devolder and was involved in local LGBT activism. Contemporaries from this era have stated that Santos performed as a drag queen under the name "Kitara Ravache" at Brazilian drag shows, a fact Santos initially denied but later acknowledged.<ref name="reuters-drag">Reuters, "Santos admits to dressing in drag after denying he performed as a drag queen," January 18, 2023, https://www.reuters.com/world/us/santos-admits-dressing-drag-after-denying-he-performed-drag-queen-2023-01-18/.</ref>
In 2008, Santos moved to Niterói in Brazil's Rio de Janeiro area where his mother was living. He stayed roughly until 2011. During those years in Brazil, people knew him as Anthony Devolder. He was involved in the local LGBT community. People who knew him then say he performed as a drag queen under the stage name "Kitara Ravache" at drag shows. Santos initially denied this but eventually acknowledged it.<ref name="reuters-drag">Reuters, "Santos admits to dressing in drag after denying he performed as a drag queen," January 18, 2023, https://www.reuters.com/world/us/santos-admits-dressing-drag-after-denying-he-performed-drag-queen-2023-01-18/.</ref>


=== Fabricated Biography ===
=== Fabricated Biography ===


Santos's path to Congress was paved with lies. During his campaigns and tenure, he made numerous false claims that were subsequently debunked, including:
Lies paved the entire road to Congress. During his campaigns and time in office, Santos made false claim after false claim. All of them later fell apart.


* '''Education''': Santos claimed to have graduated from Baruch College and to have attended NYU. In reality, he holds only a GED and never attended either institution.
* '''Education''': He claimed degrees from Baruch College and attendance at NYU. Actually, he has only a GED. Never attended either school.


* '''Employment''': Santos claimed to have worked at Goldman Sachs and Citigroup. Neither company has any record of his employment.
* '''Employment''': He said he worked at Goldman Sachs and Citigroup. Neither company has any employment record of him.


* '''Jewish Heritage''': Santos claimed to be "Jew-ish" and that his grandparents were Ukrainian Jewish refugees who fled the Holocaust. Genealogical records show his maternal grandparents were born in Brazil before World War II, and there is no evidence of Jewish or Ukrainian heritage.
* '''Jewish Heritage''': He claimed to be "Jew-ish" with Ukrainian Jewish grandparents who'd escaped the Holocaust. Genealogical records show his maternal grandparents were born in Brazil before World War II. No evidence of Jewish or Ukrainian heritage exists.


* '''9/11 Connection''': Santos claimed his mother was in the South Tower of the World Trade Center during the September 11 attacks and later died from related illness. His mother was in Brazil on 9/11.
* '''9/11 Connection''': He claimed his mother was in the South Tower during the September 11 attacks and later died from related illness. His mother was in Brazil on 9/11.


* '''Animal Charity''': Santos claimed to have founded an animal charity called Friends of Pets United that rescued over 2,500 animals. No such organization has ever been registered.
* '''Animal Charity''': He said he'd founded an animal rescue charity called Friends of Pets United that saved over 2,500 animals. No such registered organization exists.


* '''Pulse Nightclub''': Santos claimed to have lost four employees in the 2016 Pulse nightclub shooting in Orlando. No evidence supports this claim.
* '''Pulse Nightclub''': He claimed to have lost four employees in the 2016 Pulse nightclub shooting in Orlando. Nothing supports this.


* '''Property Ownership''': Santos claimed to own multiple properties in New York. Property records show he owned no real estate at the time.<ref name="cnn-lies">CNN, "Here are the many lies George Santos told about his background," January 12, 2023, https://www.cnn.com/2022/12/27/politics/george-santos-resume-fabrications-republican-congressman-elect/.</ref>
* '''Property Ownership''': He claimed to own multiple New York properties. Property records show he owned no real estate at the time.<ref name="cnn-lies">CNN, "Here are the many lies George Santos told about his background," January 12, 2023, https://www.cnn.com/2022/12/27/politics/george-santos-resume-fabrications-republican-congressman-elect/.</ref>


== Congressional Career ==
== Congressional Career ==
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=== 2020 Campaign ===
=== 2020 Campaign ===


Santos first ran for Congress in 2020, challenging incumbent Democrat Tom Suozzi in New York's 3rd congressional district. He lost that race by approximately 12 percentage points. Even during this first campaign, Santos had begun fabricating aspects of his biography, though these claims received little scrutiny at the time.<ref name="ballotpedia" />
Santos first ran for Congress in 2020 against incumbent Democrat Tom Suozzi in New York's 3rd congressional district. He lost by roughly 12 percentage points. Even then, Santos was fabricating parts of his background. But nobody paid much attention yet.<ref name="ballotpedia" />


=== 2022 Election ===
=== 2022 Election ===


In the 2022 midterm elections, Santos ran again for the same seat after redistricting and Suozzi's decision to run for governor. Santos defeated Democrat Robert Zimmerman by approximately 8 percentage points, winning the race on November 8, 2022. His victory was part of a strong Republican performance in New York that helped the party secure a narrow House majority.<ref name="nyt-investigation" />
He tried again in 2022 after redistricting and Suozzi's decision to run for governor. This time, Santos defeated Democrat Robert Zimmerman by about 8 percentage points on November 8, 2022. His victory rode a strong Republican wave in New York that helped the party take the House.<ref name="nyt-investigation" />


=== Exposure and Scandal ===
=== Exposure and Scandal ===


On December 19, 2022—before Santos was sworn in—The New York Times published an investigation revealing that many of his biographical claims could not be verified. This sparked a cascade of reporting by other outlets that ultimately exposed the full scope of his fabrications. Despite calls for his resignation from both Democrats and some Republicans, Santos refused to step down.<ref name="nyt-investigation" />
The New York Times struck three days before he was sworn in. On December 19, 2022, they published an investigation showing that many of Santos's claims couldn't be verified. Other outlets piled on, exposing the full scope of his deceptions. Both Democrats and some Republicans called for his resignation. Santos refused to leave.<ref name="nyt-investigation" />


=== Congressional Tenure ===
=== Congressional Tenure ===


Santos was sworn in as a member of the 118th Congress on January 3, 2023. His tenure was marked by continued controversy and multiple expulsion attempts. Speaker Kevin McCarthy initially assigned Santos to two committees—Small Business and Science, Space and Technology—but Santos was later removed from committee assignments while facing federal charges.
He was sworn in on January 3, 2023, as part of the 118th Congress. Controversy followed him constantly. Multiple expulsion attempts came early. Speaker Kevin McCarthy assigned him to the Small Business Committee and the Science, Space and Technology Committee, but he was stripped of those assignments once federal charges arrived.


Santos introduced several pieces of legislation during his tenure, though none became law. He voted with the Republican majority on most partisan issues and notably cast a crucial vote to elect Kevin McCarthy as Speaker during the extended January 2023 Speaker election.<ref name="house-record">Office of the Clerk, U.S. House of Representatives, "George Santos Congressional Record," https://clerk.house.gov/members/S001222.</ref>
Santos introduced legislation during his time in office. None of it became law. He voted with the Republican majority on most issues and cast a crucial vote for Kevin McCarthy during the prolonged January 2023 Speaker election.<ref name="house-record">Office of the Clerk, U.S. House of Representatives, "George Santos Congressional Record," https://clerk.house.gov/members/S001222.</ref>


=== Expulsion ===
=== Expulsion ===


On December 1, 2023, the House of Representatives voted 311 to 114 to expel Santos, making him only the sixth member in history to be expelled and the first to be expelled without having been convicted of a crime. The expulsion followed a damning House Ethics Committee report that concluded Santos had violated federal law and House rules. The vote included 105 Republicans joining all Democrats in favor of expulsion.<ref name="ethics-report">U.S. House Ethics Committee, "Report on George Santos," November 2023, https://ethics.house.gov/santos-report.</ref>
December 1, 2023 was the end. The House voted 311 to 114 to expel him. Only six members have ever been expelled in American history. Santos was the first without a prior conviction. The vote included 105 Republicans joining all Democrats. A damning House Ethics Committee report had concluded that Santos violated federal law and House rules.<ref name="ethics-report">U.S. House Ethics Committee, "Report on George Santos," November 2023, https://ethics.house.gov/santos-report.</ref>


== Federal Criminal Case ==
== Federal Criminal Case ==
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=== Initial Indictment ===
=== Initial Indictment ===


On May 10, 2023, federal prosecutors in the Eastern District of New York unsealed a 13-count indictment charging Santos with wire fraud, money laundering, theft of public funds, and making false statements to the House of Representatives. The indictment alleged that Santos had defrauded campaign donors, made unauthorized charges on their credit cards, and fraudulently collected COVID-19 unemployment benefits while employed.<ref name="doj-indictment">U.S. Department of Justice, "Congressman George Santos Charged with Fraud, Money Laundering, Theft of Public Funds, and False Statements," May 10, 2023, https://www.justice.gov/usao-edny/pr/congressman-george-santos-charged-fraud-money-laundering-theft-public-funds-and-false.</ref>
Federal prosecutors in the Eastern District of New York unsealed charges on May 10, 2023. They charged him with 13 counts: wire fraud, money laundering, theft of public funds, and making false statements to the House. According to the indictment, Santos had defrauded campaign donors, made unauthorized charges on their credit cards, and fraudulently collected COVID-19 unemployment benefits while working.<ref name="doj-indictment">U.S. Department of Justice, "Congressman George Santos Charged with Fraud, Money Laundering, Theft of Public Funds, and False Statements," May 10, 2023, https://www.justice.gov/usao-edny/pr/congressman-george-santos-charged-fraud-money-laundering-theft-public-funds-and-false.</ref>


=== Superseding Indictment ===
=== Superseding Indictment ===


In October 2023, prosecutors filed a superseding indictment expanding the charges to 23 counts. The new charges included additional wire fraud counts and charges related to falsifying records submitted to the Federal Election Commission. The superseding indictment also included more detail about Santos's alleged scheme to fabricate donors on FEC filings to make his campaign appear more successful than it actually was.<ref name="doj-superseding">U.S. Department of Justice, "Superseding Indictment Filed Against Congressman George Santos," October 2023, https://www.justice.gov/usao-edny/pr/superseding-indictment-filed-against-congressman-george-santos.</ref>
October 2023 brought a bigger blow: prosecutors filed a superseding indictment. Now 23 counts. Additional wire fraud charges and charges for falsifying Federal Election Commission records. The new indictment showed in detail how Santos had fabricated donors to make his campaign look more successful than it was, giving the false impression he'd hit the $250,000 fundraising threshold needed for the National Republican Congressional Committee's "Young Guns" program.<ref name="doj-superseding">U.S. Department of Justice, "Superseding Indictment Filed Against Congressman George Santos," October 2023, https://www.justice.gov/usao-edny/pr/superseding-indictment-filed-against-congressman-george-santos.</ref>


=== The Fraudulent Schemes ===
=== The Fraudulent Schemes ===


According to prosecutors, Santos engaged in multiple fraudulent schemes:
Prosecutors described multiple overlapping schemes:


'''FEC Filing Fraud''': Santos and his campaign treasurer, Nancy Marks, fabricated dozens of political contributions on FEC filings. They listed contributions from people who had not actually donated to the campaign, creating the false appearance that Santos had met the $250,000 fundraising threshold required to join the National Republican Congressional Committee's "Young Guns" program, which provided campaign support and resources.
'''FEC Filing Fraud''': Santos and his campaign treasurer, Nancy Marks, fabricated dozens of contributions on FEC filings. They listed donations from people who'd never given money, creating a false appearance of reaching the $250,000 threshold needed to join the National Republican Congressional Committee's "Young Guns" program for campaign support.


'''Credit Card Fraud''': Santos used donor credit card information without authorization to make charges for his personal benefit. He obtained this information through campaign donation forms and then used it to make purchases that donors had not authorized.
'''Credit Card Fraud''': Using donor credit card information without permission, Santos made personal charges. He'd obtained these details through campaign donation forms, then used them for unauthorized purchases.


'''COVID-19 Unemployment Fraud''': Santos applied for and received pandemic unemployment benefits during 2020, claiming to be unemployed when he was actually working and earning income. He collected approximately $24,000 in fraudulent benefits.
'''COVID-19 Unemployment Fraud''': Santos applied for and received pandemic unemployment benefits in 2020, claiming joblessness while actually working and earning income. He collected roughly $24,000 fraudulently.


'''Personal Enrichment''': Prosecutors alleged that Santos used campaign funds for personal expenses, including luxury goods, and deceived donors about how their contributions would be spent.<ref name="doj-plea" />
'''Personal Enrichment''': Prosecutors alleged Santos used campaign funds for personal expenses including luxury goods and deceived donors about how their contributions would be used.<ref name="doj-plea" />


=== Guilty Plea ===
=== Guilty Plea ===


On August 19, 2024, Santos pleaded guilty to wire fraud and aggravated identity theft. As part of the plea agreement, he admitted to the conduct underlying all 23 counts of the superseding indictment, including the FEC fraud, credit card fraud, and unemployment benefits fraud. In his allocution, Santos acknowledged that ambition had clouded his judgment and that he had made serious errors.<ref name="npr-plea" />
August 19, 2024. Santos pleaded guilty to wire fraud and aggravated identity theft. His plea agreement covered conduct underlying all 23 counts, including the FEC fraud, credit card fraud, and unemployment fraud. During his allocution, Santos acknowledged that ambition had clouded his judgment and he'd made serious errors.<ref name="npr-plea" />


Santos told the court: "I allowed ambition to get ahead of me, clouding my judgment. I stand here today not just to face judgment, but to acknowledge my serious errors that were made when I chose to pursue my political ambitions in an impermissible, illegal way."<ref name="abc-plea">ABC News, "'Right thing to do': George Santos addresses pleading guilty to federal charges," August 19, 2024, https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/george-santos-pleads-guilty-wire-fraud-aggravated-identity/story.</ref>
He told the court: "I allowed ambition to get ahead of me, clouding my judgment. I stand here today not just to face judgment, but to acknowledge my serious errors that were made when I chose to pursue my political ambitions in an impermissible, illegal way."<ref name="abc-plea">ABC News, "'Right thing to do': George Santos addresses pleading guilty to federal charges," August 19, 2024, https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/george-santos-pleads-guilty-wire-fraud-aggravated-identity/story.</ref>


=== Sentencing ===
=== Sentencing ===


On April 25, 2025, U.S. District Judge Joanna Seybert sentenced Santos to 87 months in federal prison—over seven years—for wire fraud and aggravated identity theft. The sentence exceeded what prosecutors had requested and reflected the judge's view that Santos's conduct represented a serious abuse of the public trust.
April 25, 2025. U.S. District Judge Joanna Seybert handed down 87 months in prison. Over seven years. The sentence exceeded what prosecutors had recommended, reflecting her view that Santos had seriously abused public trust.


At sentencing, Santos wept as he addressed the court, apologizing to his victims and expressing remorse for his actions. Judge Seybert ordered Santos to pay $373,749.97 in restitution to his victims and $205,002.97 in forfeiture. She also imposed a two-year term of supervised release to follow his prison sentence.<ref name="doj-sentence" />
Santos wept at sentencing. He apologized to his victims and expressed remorse. Judge Seybert ordered him to pay $373,749.97 in restitution to victims and $205,002.97 in forfeiture. She also imposed two years of supervised release after his prison time.<ref name="doj-sentence" />


Santos was ordered to surrender to the Bureau of Prisons by July 25, 2025.
He had to surrender to the Bureau of Prisons by July 25, 2025.


== Prison Experience ==
== Prison Experience ==
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=== Surrender and Facility Assignment ===
=== Surrender and Facility Assignment ===


Santos reported to [[FCI_Fairton_(minimum-security_camp)|Federal Correctional Institution Fairton in New Jersey]] on July 25, 2025, to begin serving his 87-month sentence. The facility in Fairton, New Jersey housed, at the time, approximately 1,100 male inmates.<ref name="bop-fairton">Federal Bureau of Prisons, "FCI Fairton," https://www.bop.gov/locations/institutions/fai/.</ref>
Santos reported to [[FCI_Fairton_(minimum-security_camp)|Federal Correctional Institution Fairton in New Jersey]] on July 25, 2025. FCI Fairton housed roughly 1,100 male inmates at the time.<ref name="bop-fairton">Federal Bureau of Prisons, "FCI Fairton," https://www.bop.gov/locations/institutions/fai/.</ref>


Federal prison consultant [[Sam Mangel]] shared what life at the Fairton camp would be like for the congressman:  
Federal prison consultant [[Sam Mangel]] described what life at the Fairton camp would look like for the congressman:


<youtube>4_KZ4xSvcBk</youtube>
<youtube>4_KZ4xSvcBk</youtube>
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=== Solitary Confinement ===
=== Solitary Confinement ===


Shortly after his arrival, Santos was placed in the Special Housing Unit (SHU)—administrative segregation—after prison officials received reports of a death threat against him. Santos claimed to have spent 41 days in solitary confinement in conditions he described as inhumane.
Not long after arriving, prison officials placed Santos in the Special Housing Unit (SHU) for administrative segregation. They'd received reports of a death threat against him. Santos claimed he spent 41 days in solitary under conditions he called inhumane.


In interviews after his release, Santos described his time in the SHU in stark terms: "The Box I'm in is 15x17 ft., extremely dirty with no ventilation, with musty, dirty air, and my only source of drinking water comes from the top of my toilet. The shower only runs ice-cold water, and showers are only extended 3 times a week, with soap that does not lather or foam on recycled underwear from other inmates. There is no dignity, no humanity in this place."<ref name="tmz-interview">TMZ, "George Santos Reflects on 41 Days in Solitary, Says Trump Never Mentioned Commutation," October 20, 2025, https://www.tmz.com/2025/10/20/george-santos-post-prison-interview/.</ref>
After his release, Santos described the SHU bluntly: "The Box I'm in is 15x17 ft., extremely dirty with no ventilation, with musty, dirty air, and my only source of drinking water comes from the top of my toilet. The shower only runs ice-cold water, and showers are only extended 3 times a week, with soap that does not lather or foam on recycled underwear from other inmates. There is no dignity, no humanity in this place."<ref name="tmz-interview">TMZ, "George Santos Reflects on 41 Days in Solitary, Says Trump Never Mentioned Commutation," October 20, 2025, https://www.tmz.com/2025/10/20/george-santos-post-prison-interview/.</ref>


=== Mental Health Struggles ===
=== Mental Health Struggles ===


Santos has spoken publicly about the mental health challenges he faced during incarceration. He revealed that he wrote three suicide notes during his time in prison and contemplated hanging himself in his cell. Santos credited prayer with helping him survive this period.
The experience took a serious toll. Santos has spoken publicly about contemplating suicide during his incarceration. He wrote three suicide notes while inside and thought about hanging himself in his cell. Prayer, he's said, kept him alive.


"I wanted to document my feelings in case I felt short and weak and did it," Santos said in an interview. "Three different times. I wrote three different letters."<ref name="cbs-interview">CBS News, "Santos says time in prison 'wasn't nice,' describes call with Trump in wide-ranging new interview," October 2025, https://www.cbsnews.com/newyork/news/george-santos-interview/.</ref>
"I wanted to document my feelings in case I felt short and weak and did it," he said in an interview. "Three different times. I wrote three different letters."<ref name="cbs-interview">CBS News, "Santos says time in prison 'wasn't nice,' describes call with Trump in wide-ranging new interview," October 2025, https://www.cbsnews.com/newyork/news/george-santos-interview/.</ref>


=== Medical Treatment Concerns ===
=== Medical Treatment Concerns ===


Santos alleged that FCI Fairton abruptly discontinued his ADHD medication upon arrival and substituted antidepressants and anti-anxiety medications without proper evaluation. He claimed this medication change left him feeling "zombified" and unable to function normally. Santos also alleged that the facility had problems with black mold and served expired food.<ref name="nj1015-prison">NJ 101.5, "Inside FCI Fairton: George Santos Shares His Struggle In Solitary Confinement," October 2025, https://nj1015.com/george-santos-prison-conditions/.</ref>
Santos has alleged that FCI Fairton stopped his ADHD medication upon arrival and replaced it with antidepressants and anti-anxiety medications without proper evaluation. This change left him feeling "zombified" and unable to function normally. He also alleged problems with black mold throughout the facility and expired food being served.<ref name="nj1015-prison">NJ 101.5, "Inside FCI Fairton: George Santos Shares His Struggle In Solitary Confinement," October 2025, https://nj1015.com/george-santos-prison-conditions/.</ref>


== Presidential Commutation ==
== Presidential Commutation ==
Line 138: Line 138:
=== Campaign for Clemency ===
=== Campaign for Clemency ===


Efforts to secure clemency for Santos began in August 2025, led by Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia, who had been one of Santos's few congressional allies and whom Santos considers a friend. Greene lobbied President Trump directly on Santos's behalf.
Starting in August 2025, efforts began to get Santos released. Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia led the charge. She'd been one of Santos's few allies in Congress and considers him a friend. Greene went directly to President Trump and pushed hard for clemency.


A senior White House official stated that Trump made the decision to help Santos after receiving overwhelming outreach on his behalf: "Many people wrote to him about it. The reach-outs on this that President Trump got were overwhelming."<ref name="npr-how">NPR, "Trump commuted the prison sentence of George Santos. A look at how it happened," October 20, 2025, https://www.npr.org/2025/10/20/nx-s1-5579580/trump-commuted-the-prison-sentence-of-george-santos-a-look-at-how-it-happened.</ref>
A White House official explained Trump's thinking: "Many people wrote to him about it. The reach-outs on this that President Trump got were overwhelming."<ref name="npr-how">NPR, "Trump commuted the prison sentence of George Santos. A look at how it happened," October 20, 2025, https://www.npr.org/2025/10/20/nx-s1-5579580/trump-commuted-the-prison-sentence-of-george-santos-a-look-at-how-it-happened.</ref>


=== The Commutation ===
=== The Commutation ===


On October 17, 2025, President Trump announced that he had signed a commutation releasing Santos from prison "immediately." The clemency order granted Santos "an immediate commutation of his entire sentence to time served with no further fines, restitution, probation, supervised release, or other conditions."
October 17, 2025. Trump signed a commutation releasing Santos from prison "immediately." The clemency order stated: "an immediate commutation of his entire sentence to time served with no further fines, restitution, probation, supervised release, or other conditions."


Critically, the commutation also eliminated Santos's obligation to pay the $373,749.97 in restitution that had been ordered at his sentencing. This meant that the victims of Santos's fraud would not receive the compensation the court had ordered.<ref name="hill-restitution">The Hill, "Santos's fines, restitution wiped out by Trump clemency order," October 2025, https://thehill.com/regulation/court-battles/5564409-george-santos-trump-clemency-fines-restitution/.</ref>
Here's what mattered most: the commutation wiped away his obligation to pay $373,749.97 in restitution. Santos's victims would see nothing. The court's order to compensate them simply vanished.<ref name="hill-restitution">The Hill, "Santos's fines, restitution wiped out by Trump clemency order," October 2025, https://thehill.com/regulation/court-battles/5564409-george-santos-trump-clemency-fines-restitution/.</ref>


=== Trump's Statement ===
=== Trump's Statement ===


In announcing the commutation, Trump acknowledged Santos's misconduct while defending the decision. Trump wrote that while Santos was a "rogue," he was not as bad as Senator Richard Blumenthal, whom Trump accused of lying about serving in Vietnam. Trump concluded: "This is far worse than what George Santos did, and at least Santos had the Courage, Conviction, and Intelligence to ALWAYS VOTE REPUBLICAN!"<ref name="wapo-commuted">Washington Post, "George Santos released from prison after Trump commutes sentence," October 17, 2025, https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2025/10/17/trump-clemency-george-santos/.</ref>
Trump acknowledged Santos's misconduct while defending his decision. Trump called Santos a "rogue" but compared him favorably to Senator Richard Blumenthal, accusing Blumenthal of lying about Vietnam service. Trump concluded: "This is far worse than what George Santos did, and at least Santos had the Courage, Conviction, and Intelligence to ALWAYS VOTE REPUBLICAN!"<ref name="wapo-commuted">Washington Post, "George Santos released from prison after Trump commutes sentence," October 17, 2025, https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2025/10/17/trump-clemency-george-santos/.</ref>


=== Release ===
=== Release ===


Santos walked out of FCI Fairton on October 18, 2025, after serving 84 days of his 87-month sentence. In interviews following his release, Santos maintained that his prosecution had been politically motivated while also acknowledging that he had made mistakes.
October 18, 2025. Santos walked out after serving 84 days of his 87-month sentence. In interviews afterward, he maintained the prosecution had been politically motivated. But he also admitted mistakes.


"I'm not going to sit here and say I'm getting away with my crimes," Santos said after his release. "I pleaded guilty. I took accountability for what I did wrong. But I also feel like the punishment didn't fit the crime."<ref name="abc-after">ABC News, "Santos says he's not getting away with his crimes after Trump commuted his sentence," October 2025, https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/santos-crimes-after-trump-commuted-sentence/story.</ref>
"I'm not going to sit here and say I'm getting away with my crimes," Santos said. "I pleaded guilty. I took accountability for what I did wrong. But I also feel like the punishment didn't fit the crime."<ref name="abc-after">ABC News, "Santos says he's not getting away with his crimes after Trump commuted his sentence," October 2025, https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/santos-crimes-after-trump-commuted-sentence/story.</ref>


== Post-Release Activities ==
== Post-Release Activities ==
Line 162: Line 162:
=== Public Statements ===
=== Public Statements ===


Following his release, Santos has given multiple interviews discussing his prison experience and future plans. He has maintained that his prosecution was politically motivated while acknowledging responsibility for the crimes to which he pleaded guilty.
Since getting out, Santos has done multiple interviews about prison and his future. He insists his prosecution was politically motivated. Still, he accepts responsibility for his guilty pleas.


Santos has stated that his experience in prison, particularly in solitary confinement, has inspired him to focus on prison reform advocacy. He has said he discussed this interest with President Trump: "It's actually creating recidivism because it's not doing what it's supposed to do. I told this to the president, that I'd love to be involved with prison reform, and not in a partisan way."<ref name="cnn-interview">CNN, "George Santos maintains his prosecution was political, says he's had a 'very large slice of humble pie'," October 19, 2025, https://www.cnn.com/2025/10/19/politics/george-santos-interview-prison-commuted-pardon.</ref>
His time in the SHU especially changed his thinking. He says prison reform has become a passion: "It's actually creating recidivism because it's not doing what it's supposed to do. I told this to the president, that I'd love to be involved with prison reform, and not in a partisan way."<ref name="cnn-interview">CNN, "George Santos maintains his prosecution was political, says he's had a 'very large slice of humble pie'," October 19, 2025, https://www.cnn.com/2025/10/19/politics/george-santos-interview-prison-commuted-pardon.</ref>


=== Relationship with Trump ===
=== Relationship with Trump ===


Santos has described receiving a phone call from President Trump following his commutation. However, he has stated that Trump gave him no advance warning that the commutation was coming, learning of his impending release only when prison officials informed him.<ref name="tmz-interview" />
Trump called Santos after the commutation. But Trump gave no advance warning. Santos learned of his impending release only when prison officials told him.<ref name="tmz-interview" />


== Terminology ==
== Terminology ==


* '''Wire Fraud''': A federal crime involving the use of electronic communications to execute a scheme to defraud.
* '''Wire Fraud''': A federal crime involving electronic communications to execute a defrauding scheme.


* '''Aggravated Identity Theft''': Using another person's identity to commit a felony, which carries a mandatory consecutive sentence.
* '''Aggravated Identity Theft''': Using another's identity to commit a felony, which carries a mandatory consecutive sentence.


* '''Commutation''': A reduction in sentence that does not erase the conviction, as distinguished from a pardon which forgives the crime entirely.
* '''Commutation''': A sentence reduction that doesn't erase the conviction, as distinguished from a pardon which forgives the crime itself.


* '''Special Housing Unit (SHU)''': Administrative segregation in federal prison, commonly called "solitary confinement."
* '''Special Housing Unit (SHU)''': Administrative segregation in federal prison, commonly called "solitary confinement."


* '''Restitution''': Court-ordered payment to victims of a crime to compensate for their losses.
* '''Restitution''': Court-ordered payment to crime victims to compensate for their losses.


== See also ==
== See also ==
Line 190: Line 190:
== Frequently Asked Questions ==
== Frequently Asked Questions ==
{{FAQSection/Start}}
{{FAQSection/Start}}
{{FAQ|question=What was George Santos convicted of?|answer=George Santos pleaded guilty to wire fraud and aggravated identity theft in August 2024. He admitted to fabricating campaign donors on FEC filings, making unauthorized charges on donor credit cards, and fraudulently collecting approximately $24,000 in COVID-19 unemployment benefits while employed. He also admitted to deceiving donors about how campaign contributions would be used.}}
{{FAQ|question=What was George Santos convicted of?|answer=Santos pleaded guilty to wire fraud and aggravated identity theft in August 2024. He admitted to fabricating campaign donors on FEC filings, making unauthorized charges on donor credit cards, and fraudulently collecting roughly $24,000 in COVID-19 unemployment benefits while employed. He also admitted deceiving donors about how campaign contributions would be used.}}
{{FAQ|question=How long was George Santos's prison sentence?|answer=Santos was sentenced to 87 months (over 7 years) in federal prison by U.S. District Judge Joanna Seybert on April 25, 2025. However, he served only 84 days before President Trump commuted his sentence in October 2025, resulting in his immediate release.}}
{{FAQ|question=How long was George Santos's prison sentence?|answer=Judge Joanna Seybert sentenced him to 87 months (over 7 years) in federal prison on April 25, 2025. He served only 84 days before President Trump commuted his sentence in October 2025, resulting in immediate release.}}
{{FAQ|question=Did George Santos receive a presidential pardon?|answer=Santos received a commutation, not a pardon. A commutation reduces or eliminates a prison sentence but does not erase the conviction. Santos's commutation released him from prison immediately and eliminated his obligation to pay restitution and fines, but his federal convictions remain on his record.}}
{{FAQ|question=Did George Santos receive a presidential pardon?|answer=He received a commutation, not a pardon. A commutation reduces or eliminates a prison sentence but doesn't erase the conviction. Santos's commutation freed him from prison immediately and eliminated his obligation to pay restitution and fines, but his federal convictions remain on his record.}}
{{FAQ|question=What lies did George Santos tell about his background?|answer=Santos fabricated numerous aspects of his biography, including false claims of working at Goldman Sachs and Citigroup, attending Baruch College and NYU, having Jewish heritage with Holocaust-survivor grandparents, founding an animal charity, and losing employees in the Pulse nightclub shooting. He holds only a GED and never worked at the financial institutions he claimed.}}
{{FAQ|question=What lies did George Santos tell about his background?|answer=Santos fabricated numerous aspects of his biography, including false claims of working at Goldman Sachs and Citigroup, attending Baruch College and NYU, having Jewish heritage with Holocaust-survivor grandparents, founding an animal charity, and losing employees in the Pulse nightclub shooting. His actual education stopped at a GED and he never worked at those financial institutions.}}
{{FAQ|question=Where did George Santos serve his prison sentence?|answer=Santos served his sentence at Federal Correctional Institution (FCI) Fairton in New Jersey, a medium-security federal prison. He was placed in solitary confinement for 41 days after the prison received reports of a death threat against him.}}
{{FAQ|question=Where did George Santos serve his prison sentence?|answer=Santos served time at Federal Correctional Institution (FCI) Fairton in New Jersey, a medium-security federal prison. Prison officials placed him in solitary confinement for 41 days after receiving reports of a death threat against him.}}
{{FAQ|question=Why was George Santos expelled from Congress?|answer=The House of Representatives voted 311-114 to expel Santos on December 1, 2023, following a damning House Ethics Committee report that concluded he had violated federal law and House rules. He became the first member of Congress to be expelled without first being convicted of a crime.}}
{{FAQ|question=Why was George Santos expelled from Congress?|answer=The House voted 311-114 to expel him on December 1, 2023, following a damning House Ethics Committee report that concluded he'd violated federal law and House rules. He was the first member of Congress to face expulsion without having been convicted of a crime first.}}
{{FAQSection/End}}
{{FAQSection/End}}


Line 207: Line 207:


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Latest revision as of 17:55, 23 April 2026

George Anthony Devolder Santos
Born: July 22, 1988
Queens, New York
Charges: Wire fraud (2 counts), Aggravated identity theft, False statements to FEC, COVID unemployment fraud
Sentence: 87 months (commuted to time served after 84 days)
Facility: FCI Fairton
Status: Released (sentence commuted)

George Anthony Devolder Santos (born July 22, 1988) is a former United States Representative from New York who served just 84 days of an 87-month federal prison sentence before President Donald Trump commuted his sentence in October 2025.[1] Santos was elected to Congress in November 2022 representing New York's 3rd congressional district, but his time there was consumed by scandal. After his election, revelations emerged that he'd fabricated virtually every aspect of his personal biography: his education, employment history, religious heritage, family background—all lies. He became the sixth member in United States history to be expelled from the House of Representatives. More notably, he was the first to face expulsion without having been convicted of a crime when the House voted 311 to 114 to remove him in December 2023.[2] In August 2024, Santos pleaded guilty to wire fraud and aggravated identity theft. His admissions painted a picture of systematic deception: he fabricated campaign donors, stole identities from his own contributors to make unauthorized credit card charges, and fraudulently collected COVID-19 unemployment benefits while actually employed.[3] On October 17, 2025, President Trump commuted Santos's sentence. He was released immediately, and the commutation also wiped away his obligation to pay nearly $374,000 in restitution to his victims.[4]

Summary

George Santos's political career was remarkably short and extraordinarily brazen in its deception. Over his 2022 campaign and 11-month time in Congress, Santos invented claim after claim about his background: work at Goldman Sachs and Citigroup, degrees from Baruch College and NYU, founding an animal charity, Jewish heritage and Holocaust-survivor grandparents, losing employees in the Pulse nightclub massacre. The list went on. His fabrications began unraveling almost immediately. The New York Times published an investigation just days after his election in December 2022, raising hard questions about his background.[5]

The biographical lies weren't themselves illegal. His financial crimes were. Federal prosecutors hit him with a 23-count superseding indictment alleging systematic fraud of campaign donors, false statements to the Federal Election Commission, identity theft against his own supporters, and fraudulent collection of COVID-19 unemployment benefits. These weren't victimless deceptions. Santos had stolen from people who believed in him.[6]

His guilty plea came in August 2024. The sentence that followed—87 months in federal prison—ranked among the longest imposed on a former member of Congress for corruption. But then came October 2025, when Trump commuted his sentence after just 84 days. The commutation didn't only free him from prison. It also eliminated his obligation to pay restitution to fraud victims. The move sparked fierce criticism from those viewing it as Trump rewarding a political ally, though supporters argued Santos's original sentence had been too harsh.[7]

Background

Early Life

George Anthony Devolder Santos was born on July 22, 1988, in Queens, New York. His parents had immigrated from Brazil. His mother, Fátima Aziza Caruso Horta Devolder, came to Florida in 1985 before moving to New York, where she worked as a housekeeper, cook, and nanny. His father, Gercino Júnior dos Santos, was a house painter. The family moved around Queens—Sunnyside, Jackson Heights—living paycheck to paycheck. Santos later claimed they'd lived in a "rat-infested basement apartment."[8]

He went to Queens public schools: P.S. 122 in Astoria, I.S. 125 in Woodside. But Santos would later claim he'd attended Baruch College and NYU. False. His actual education stopped at a GED. Around 1998, his father returned to Brazil and remarried, leaving his mother to raise George alone.[9]

Time in Brazil

In 2008, Santos moved to Niterói in Brazil's Rio de Janeiro area where his mother was living. He stayed roughly until 2011. During those years in Brazil, people knew him as Anthony Devolder. He was involved in the local LGBT community. People who knew him then say he performed as a drag queen under the stage name "Kitara Ravache" at drag shows. Santos initially denied this but eventually acknowledged it.[10]

Fabricated Biography

Lies paved the entire road to Congress. During his campaigns and time in office, Santos made false claim after false claim. All of them later fell apart.

  • Education: He claimed degrees from Baruch College and attendance at NYU. Actually, he has only a GED. Never attended either school.
  • Employment: He said he worked at Goldman Sachs and Citigroup. Neither company has any employment record of him.
  • Jewish Heritage: He claimed to be "Jew-ish" with Ukrainian Jewish grandparents who'd escaped the Holocaust. Genealogical records show his maternal grandparents were born in Brazil before World War II. No evidence of Jewish or Ukrainian heritage exists.
  • 9/11 Connection: He claimed his mother was in the South Tower during the September 11 attacks and later died from related illness. His mother was in Brazil on 9/11.
  • Animal Charity: He said he'd founded an animal rescue charity called Friends of Pets United that saved over 2,500 animals. No such registered organization exists.
  • Pulse Nightclub: He claimed to have lost four employees in the 2016 Pulse nightclub shooting in Orlando. Nothing supports this.
  • Property Ownership: He claimed to own multiple New York properties. Property records show he owned no real estate at the time.[11]

Congressional Career

2020 Campaign

Santos first ran for Congress in 2020 against incumbent Democrat Tom Suozzi in New York's 3rd congressional district. He lost by roughly 12 percentage points. Even then, Santos was fabricating parts of his background. But nobody paid much attention yet.[9]

2022 Election

He tried again in 2022 after redistricting and Suozzi's decision to run for governor. This time, Santos defeated Democrat Robert Zimmerman by about 8 percentage points on November 8, 2022. His victory rode a strong Republican wave in New York that helped the party take the House.[5]

Exposure and Scandal

The New York Times struck three days before he was sworn in. On December 19, 2022, they published an investigation showing that many of Santos's claims couldn't be verified. Other outlets piled on, exposing the full scope of his deceptions. Both Democrats and some Republicans called for his resignation. Santos refused to leave.[5]

Congressional Tenure

He was sworn in on January 3, 2023, as part of the 118th Congress. Controversy followed him constantly. Multiple expulsion attempts came early. Speaker Kevin McCarthy assigned him to the Small Business Committee and the Science, Space and Technology Committee, but he was stripped of those assignments once federal charges arrived.

Santos introduced legislation during his time in office. None of it became law. He voted with the Republican majority on most issues and cast a crucial vote for Kevin McCarthy during the prolonged January 2023 Speaker election.[12]

Expulsion

December 1, 2023 was the end. The House voted 311 to 114 to expel him. Only six members have ever been expelled in American history. Santos was the first without a prior conviction. The vote included 105 Republicans joining all Democrats. A damning House Ethics Committee report had concluded that Santos violated federal law and House rules.[13]

Federal Criminal Case

Initial Indictment

Federal prosecutors in the Eastern District of New York unsealed charges on May 10, 2023. They charged him with 13 counts: wire fraud, money laundering, theft of public funds, and making false statements to the House. According to the indictment, Santos had defrauded campaign donors, made unauthorized charges on their credit cards, and fraudulently collected COVID-19 unemployment benefits while working.[14]

Superseding Indictment

October 2023 brought a bigger blow: prosecutors filed a superseding indictment. Now 23 counts. Additional wire fraud charges and charges for falsifying Federal Election Commission records. The new indictment showed in detail how Santos had fabricated donors to make his campaign look more successful than it was, giving the false impression he'd hit the $250,000 fundraising threshold needed for the National Republican Congressional Committee's "Young Guns" program.[15]

The Fraudulent Schemes

Prosecutors described multiple overlapping schemes:

FEC Filing Fraud: Santos and his campaign treasurer, Nancy Marks, fabricated dozens of contributions on FEC filings. They listed donations from people who'd never given money, creating a false appearance of reaching the $250,000 threshold needed to join the National Republican Congressional Committee's "Young Guns" program for campaign support.

Credit Card Fraud: Using donor credit card information without permission, Santos made personal charges. He'd obtained these details through campaign donation forms, then used them for unauthorized purchases.

COVID-19 Unemployment Fraud: Santos applied for and received pandemic unemployment benefits in 2020, claiming joblessness while actually working and earning income. He collected roughly $24,000 fraudulently.

Personal Enrichment: Prosecutors alleged Santos used campaign funds for personal expenses including luxury goods and deceived donors about how their contributions would be used.[3]

Guilty Plea

August 19, 2024. Santos pleaded guilty to wire fraud and aggravated identity theft. His plea agreement covered conduct underlying all 23 counts, including the FEC fraud, credit card fraud, and unemployment fraud. During his allocution, Santos acknowledged that ambition had clouded his judgment and he'd made serious errors.[2]

He told the court: "I allowed ambition to get ahead of me, clouding my judgment. I stand here today not just to face judgment, but to acknowledge my serious errors that were made when I chose to pursue my political ambitions in an impermissible, illegal way."[16]

Sentencing

April 25, 2025. U.S. District Judge Joanna Seybert handed down 87 months in prison. Over seven years. The sentence exceeded what prosecutors had recommended, reflecting her view that Santos had seriously abused public trust.

Santos wept at sentencing. He apologized to his victims and expressed remorse. Judge Seybert ordered him to pay $373,749.97 in restitution to victims and $205,002.97 in forfeiture. She also imposed two years of supervised release after his prison time.[1]

He had to surrender to the Bureau of Prisons by July 25, 2025.

Prison Experience

Surrender and Facility Assignment

Santos reported to Federal Correctional Institution Fairton in New Jersey on July 25, 2025. FCI Fairton housed roughly 1,100 male inmates at the time.[17]

Federal prison consultant Sam Mangel described what life at the Fairton camp would look like for the congressman:

<youtube>4_KZ4xSvcBk</youtube>

Solitary Confinement

Not long after arriving, prison officials placed Santos in the Special Housing Unit (SHU) for administrative segregation. They'd received reports of a death threat against him. Santos claimed he spent 41 days in solitary under conditions he called inhumane.

After his release, Santos described the SHU bluntly: "The Box I'm in is 15x17 ft., extremely dirty with no ventilation, with musty, dirty air, and my only source of drinking water comes from the top of my toilet. The shower only runs ice-cold water, and showers are only extended 3 times a week, with soap that does not lather or foam on recycled underwear from other inmates. There is no dignity, no humanity in this place."[18]

Mental Health Struggles

The experience took a serious toll. Santos has spoken publicly about contemplating suicide during his incarceration. He wrote three suicide notes while inside and thought about hanging himself in his cell. Prayer, he's said, kept him alive.

"I wanted to document my feelings in case I felt short and weak and did it," he said in an interview. "Three different times. I wrote three different letters."[19]

Medical Treatment Concerns

Santos has alleged that FCI Fairton stopped his ADHD medication upon arrival and replaced it with antidepressants and anti-anxiety medications without proper evaluation. This change left him feeling "zombified" and unable to function normally. He also alleged problems with black mold throughout the facility and expired food being served.[20]

Presidential Commutation

Campaign for Clemency

Starting in August 2025, efforts began to get Santos released. Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia led the charge. She'd been one of Santos's few allies in Congress and considers him a friend. Greene went directly to President Trump and pushed hard for clemency.

A White House official explained Trump's thinking: "Many people wrote to him about it. The reach-outs on this that President Trump got were overwhelming."[21]

The Commutation

October 17, 2025. Trump signed a commutation releasing Santos from prison "immediately." The clemency order stated: "an immediate commutation of his entire sentence to time served with no further fines, restitution, probation, supervised release, or other conditions."

Here's what mattered most: the commutation wiped away his obligation to pay $373,749.97 in restitution. Santos's victims would see nothing. The court's order to compensate them simply vanished.[22]

Trump's Statement

Trump acknowledged Santos's misconduct while defending his decision. Trump called Santos a "rogue" but compared him favorably to Senator Richard Blumenthal, accusing Blumenthal of lying about Vietnam service. Trump concluded: "This is far worse than what George Santos did, and at least Santos had the Courage, Conviction, and Intelligence to ALWAYS VOTE REPUBLICAN!"[23]

Release

October 18, 2025. Santos walked out after serving 84 days of his 87-month sentence. In interviews afterward, he maintained the prosecution had been politically motivated. But he also admitted mistakes.

"I'm not going to sit here and say I'm getting away with my crimes," Santos said. "I pleaded guilty. I took accountability for what I did wrong. But I also feel like the punishment didn't fit the crime."[24]

Post-Release Activities

Public Statements

Since getting out, Santos has done multiple interviews about prison and his future. He insists his prosecution was politically motivated. Still, he accepts responsibility for his guilty pleas.

His time in the SHU especially changed his thinking. He says prison reform has become a passion: "It's actually creating recidivism because it's not doing what it's supposed to do. I told this to the president, that I'd love to be involved with prison reform, and not in a partisan way."[25]

Relationship with Trump

Trump called Santos after the commutation. But Trump gave no advance warning. Santos learned of his impending release only when prison officials told him.[18]

Terminology

  • Wire Fraud: A federal crime involving electronic communications to execute a defrauding scheme.
  • Aggravated Identity Theft: Using another's identity to commit a felony, which carries a mandatory consecutive sentence.
  • Commutation: A sentence reduction that doesn't erase the conviction, as distinguished from a pardon which forgives the crime itself.
  • Special Housing Unit (SHU): Administrative segregation in federal prison, commonly called "solitary confinement."
  • Restitution: Court-ordered payment to crime victims to compensate for their losses.

See also

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: What was George Santos convicted of?

Santos pleaded guilty to wire fraud and aggravated identity theft in August 2024. He admitted to fabricating campaign donors on FEC filings, making unauthorized charges on donor credit cards, and fraudulently collecting roughly $24,000 in COVID-19 unemployment benefits while employed. He also admitted deceiving donors about how campaign contributions would be used.


Q: How long was George Santos's prison sentence?

Judge Joanna Seybert sentenced him to 87 months (over 7 years) in federal prison on April 25, 2025. He served only 84 days before President Trump commuted his sentence in October 2025, resulting in immediate release.


Q: Did George Santos receive a presidential pardon?

He received a commutation, not a pardon. A commutation reduces or eliminates a prison sentence but doesn't erase the conviction. Santos's commutation freed him from prison immediately and eliminated his obligation to pay restitution and fines, but his federal convictions remain on his record.


Q: What lies did George Santos tell about his background?

Santos fabricated numerous aspects of his biography, including false claims of working at Goldman Sachs and Citigroup, attending Baruch College and NYU, having Jewish heritage with Holocaust-survivor grandparents, founding an animal charity, and losing employees in the Pulse nightclub shooting. His actual education stopped at a GED and he never worked at those financial institutions.


Q: Where did George Santos serve his prison sentence?

Santos served time at Federal Correctional Institution (FCI) Fairton in New Jersey, a medium-security federal prison. Prison officials placed him in solitary confinement for 41 days after receiving reports of a death threat against him.


Q: Why was George Santos expelled from Congress?

The House voted 311-114 to expel him on December 1, 2023, following a damning House Ethics Committee report that concluded he'd violated federal law and House rules. He was the first member of Congress to face expulsion without having been convicted of a crime first.


References

  1. 1.0 1.1 U.S. Department of Justice, "Ex-Congressman George Santos Sentenced to 87 Months in Prison for Wire Fraud and Aggravated Identity Theft," April 25, 2025, https://www.justice.gov/usao-edny/pr/ex-congressman-george-santos-sentenced-87-months-prison-wire-fraud-and-aggravated.
  2. 2.0 2.1 NPR, "Former Rep. George Santos pleads guilty to wire fraud, identity theft," August 20, 2024, https://www.npr.org/2024/08/20/nx-s1-5081330/former-rep-george-santos-pleads-guilty-wire-fraud-identity-theft.
  3. 3.0 3.1 U.S. Department of Justice, "Former Congressman George Santos Pleads Guilty to Wire Fraud and Aggravated Identity Theft," August 19, 2024, https://www.justice.gov/usao-edny/pr/former-congressman-george-santos-pleads-guilty-wire-fraud-and-aggravated-identity.
  4. ABC News, "George Santos released from prison after sentence commuted by Trump," October 18, 2025, https://abcnews.go.com/US/george-santos-prison-sentence-commuted-released-immediately-trump/story.
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 The New York Times, "George Santos's Early Fabrications Foretold His Unraveling," December 19, 2022, https://www.nytimes.com/2022/12/19/nyregion/george-santos-background.html.
  6. Newsweek, "George Santos Sentencing: Full Timeline of His Crimes and Deceit," April 25, 2025, https://www.newsweek.com/george-santos-sentencing-full-timeline-his-crimes-deceit-2064198.
  7. NPR, "President Trump commutes the prison sentence of George Santos," October 17, 2025, https://www.npr.org/2025/10/17/nx-s1-5578304/trump-george-santos-prison-sentence-commuted.
  8. Queens Chronicle, "No lie: George Santos lived in Sunnyside as a child," January 5, 2023, https://www.qchron.com/qboro/i_have_often_walked/no-lie-george-santos-lived-in-sunnyside-as-a-child/.
  9. 9.0 9.1 Ballotpedia, "George Santos," https://ballotpedia.org/George_Santos.
  10. Reuters, "Santos admits to dressing in drag after denying he performed as a drag queen," January 18, 2023, https://www.reuters.com/world/us/santos-admits-dressing-drag-after-denying-he-performed-drag-queen-2023-01-18/.
  11. CNN, "Here are the many lies George Santos told about his background," January 12, 2023, https://www.cnn.com/2022/12/27/politics/george-santos-resume-fabrications-republican-congressman-elect/.
  12. Office of the Clerk, U.S. House of Representatives, "George Santos Congressional Record," https://clerk.house.gov/members/S001222.
  13. U.S. House Ethics Committee, "Report on George Santos," November 2023, https://ethics.house.gov/santos-report.
  14. U.S. Department of Justice, "Congressman George Santos Charged with Fraud, Money Laundering, Theft of Public Funds, and False Statements," May 10, 2023, https://www.justice.gov/usao-edny/pr/congressman-george-santos-charged-fraud-money-laundering-theft-public-funds-and-false.
  15. U.S. Department of Justice, "Superseding Indictment Filed Against Congressman George Santos," October 2023, https://www.justice.gov/usao-edny/pr/superseding-indictment-filed-against-congressman-george-santos.
  16. ABC News, "'Right thing to do': George Santos addresses pleading guilty to federal charges," August 19, 2024, https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/george-santos-pleads-guilty-wire-fraud-aggravated-identity/story.
  17. Federal Bureau of Prisons, "FCI Fairton," https://www.bop.gov/locations/institutions/fai/.
  18. 18.0 18.1 TMZ, "George Santos Reflects on 41 Days in Solitary, Says Trump Never Mentioned Commutation," October 20, 2025, https://www.tmz.com/2025/10/20/george-santos-post-prison-interview/.
  19. CBS News, "Santos says time in prison 'wasn't nice,' describes call with Trump in wide-ranging new interview," October 2025, https://www.cbsnews.com/newyork/news/george-santos-interview/.
  20. NJ 101.5, "Inside FCI Fairton: George Santos Shares His Struggle In Solitary Confinement," October 2025, https://nj1015.com/george-santos-prison-conditions/.
  21. NPR, "Trump commuted the prison sentence of George Santos. A look at how it happened," October 20, 2025, https://www.npr.org/2025/10/20/nx-s1-5579580/trump-commuted-the-prison-sentence-of-george-santos-a-look-at-how-it-happened.
  22. The Hill, "Santos's fines, restitution wiped out by Trump clemency order," October 2025, https://thehill.com/regulation/court-battles/5564409-george-santos-trump-clemency-fines-restitution/.
  23. Washington Post, "George Santos released from prison after Trump commutes sentence," October 17, 2025, https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2025/10/17/trump-clemency-george-santos/.
  24. ABC News, "Santos says he's not getting away with his crimes after Trump commuted his sentence," October 2025, https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/santos-crimes-after-trump-commuted-sentence/story.
  25. CNN, "George Santos maintains his prosecution was political, says he's had a 'very large slice of humble pie'," October 19, 2025, https://www.cnn.com/2025/10/19/politics/george-santos-interview-prison-commuted-pardon.