Beautiful Virgin Islands

Tuesday, Jun 03, 2025

Former U.S. Congressman George Santos sentenced to eighty-seven months for wide-ranging fraud

Ex-lawmaker receives more than seven years in prison after diverting campaign funds, lying about his background and illegally claiming unemployment benefits
George Santos, the thirty-six-year-old Republican who briefly represented Long Island in the House of Representatives, was sentenced in a Brooklyn federal court to eighty-seven months in prison for a series of fraud and deception offences that prosecutors said eroded public trust in elected officials.

Investigations showed that Santos had falsely claimed to be a New York University graduate, a volleyball star, a Wall Street veteran, the descendant of Holocaust survivors and the son of a woman who escaped the World Trade Center attacks. Prosecutors said those fabrications formed part of a wider pattern of deceit.

A jury in the Eastern District of New York convicted Santos of defrauding campaign donors by using their contributions for personal expenses such as luxury goods, Botox treatments and a subscription to the adult-content platform OnlyFans. He was also found guilty of illegally receiving unemployment benefits while employed and of submitting falsified federal documents.

Judge Joanna Seybert told the former lawmaker that words have consequences and noted that he had been elected largely on statements that proved false. The court ordered Santos to repay about three hundred seventy-five thousand dollars to victims.

Santos was expelled from the House of Representatives in December two thousand twenty-four after an ethics-committee report detailed his misconduct; more than one hundred Republicans joined Democrats in the vote. Despite his outspoken support for former president Donald Trump, he did not receive a pardon.

While awaiting trial Santos launched a podcast titled “Pants on Fire,” sold personalised videos on Cameo and promoted his forthcoming sentencing as a marketing opportunity. His lawyers sought a shorter term, arguing that he accepted responsibility and would repay the money, but prosecutors said a lengthy sentence was necessary to reflect the seriousness of the crimes and deter future misconduct.

After pleading guilty, Santos continued to describe the case as politically motivated. In a newspaper interview he acknowledged wrongdoing yet insisted he would not seek clemency. Outside the courthouse, a former acquaintance who had previously lent him money said he doubted Santos’s sincerity.

Santos must report to federal authorities by twenty-five July to begin serving his sentence.
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