The Climate Change Agenda Has Come Crashing Down
How CNN Reacted to the Arrest of a Wisconsin Judge Accused of Trying...
The Fight Is Never Going to Stop
Trump Administration Walks Back Policy Revoking Anti-Israel Students' Visas
Pam Bondi Divulges the Disturbing Details on Two Judges Arrested for Protecting Illegal...
ABC Has a Hegseth Scandal With No Wrongdoing
Trump Just Took an Important Step to 'Make Elections Secure Again'
WEF Forced to Investigate Whistleblower Claims Against Founder Klaus Schwab
Democrat Chicago Mayor Uses Trump Tariffs As Opportunity to Raise Taxes
Democratic Rep. Who Went on Unhinged Rant on House Floor in 2020 Is...
Trump Reveals If He'd Try to Run for a Third Term As President
‘Things Are Moving Quickly’ in Maine State Rep’s Censure Appeal
Schumer Is Getting Bad News From All Over, Even the Media
This Video From Team AOC Leads to Even More Speculation
Tipsheet

Federal Just Dropped the Hammer on George Santos

AP Photo/Stephanie Scarbrough

Former New York Republican Rep. George Santos was sentenced to more than seven years in prison on Friday for wire fraud and identity theft.

The controversial 36-year-old former lawmaker was ousted from Congress in 2023 after he was indicted for the crimes. He pleaded guilty to federal fraud and identity theft charges in August as part of a plea deal. He confessed to defrauding donors and stealing the identities of several people to fund his campaign, NBC News reported.

Advertisement

US District Judge Joanna Seybert ordered Santos to pay over $373,000 in restitution to his victims.

Prosecutors had urged Seybert to throw the book at Santos, the disgraced former Republican congressman, to "reflect the seriousness of Santos’s unparalleled crimes."

"From his creation of a wholly fictitious biography to his callous theft of money from elderly and impaired donors, Santos’s unrestrained greed and voracious appetite for fame enabled him to exploit the very system by which we select our representatives," prosecutors said in a sentencing memorandum, in which they asked Seybert to sentence him to 87 months in prison.

Prosecutors claimed Santos is “a pathological liar” who does not regret his actions. They cited his weekly podcasts, titled “Pants on Fire with George Santos,” as “a perfect crystallization of his lack of genuine contrition and his tone-dead efforts to continue turning lies into dollars.”

Advertisement

In one episode, Santos was asked whether he planned to ask President Donald Trump to pardon him. “You bet your sweet a** I would,” he replied. However, he indicated in an interview that he has not yet reached out to the president. "If he feels like I'm worthy of a commutation or of clemency or whatever the case is, he can make that decision," he noted, according to NBC News.

Santos came under fire after it was revealed that he defrauded campaign donors by using the funds for personal expenses like luxury clothing and credit card payments. He falsely obtained unemployment benefits while he was employed and lied to Congress about his finances.

The former lawmaker concocted a scheme in which he inflated campaign fundraising numbers with fake loans and contributions. These included a fabricated $500,000 loan even though he only had less than $8,000 in his account. This was aimed at getting support from the Republican Party.

Advertisement

Santos also admitted to stealing donors’ identities to make unauthorized credit card purchases totaling over $44,000. He acknowledged falsifying Federal Election Commission reports and embezzling campaign funds.

Santos was the sixth member of Congress to be ousted for his misconduct.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement