George Santos, Expelled From House, Now Faces Sentencing

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New York|George Santos, Expelled From House, Now Faces Sentencing

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/25/nyregion/george-santos-sentencing-prison.html

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Federal prosecutors want Mr. Santos, whose pattern of lies and fraud led to his expulsion from Congress, to be sentenced to 87 months in prison.

George Santos, wearing a pair of large square-shaped sunglasses, walks toward federal court with camera crews behind him.
Lawyers for George Santos have asked a federal judge to sentence him to the minimum allowed term of two years.Credit...Dave Sanders for The New York Times

By Grace Ashford and Michael Gold

The reporters have been covering Mr. Santos since 2022, when they broke the news that he had lied about his résumé.

April 25, 2025, 3:00 a.m. ET

George Santos, the former congressman whose proclivity for lying fueled an unforeseen rise and spectacular fall, will be confronted on Friday with the precise fallout of his criminal case.

Mr. Santos will be sentenced on Friday to a prison term of no less than two years after pleading guilty to charges of wire fraud and aggravated identity theft.

Federal prosecutors have asked the judge to impose a sentence of 87 months, which they said was necessary “to protect the public from being defrauded by Santos again.”

The final decision rests with Judge Joanna Seybert, who will weigh the severity of Mr. Santos’s crimes against the authenticity of his remorse. She will also decide whether he will be immediately remanded into custody, or given the opportunity to report to prison at a later date.

Mr. Santos last year pleaded guilty to charges of wire fraud and aggravated identity theft and admitted to a host of other schemes including money-laundering, lying to Congress and fraudulently receiving unemployment benefits.

Lawyers for Mr. Santos have requested that he receive 24 months in prison, the minimum federal sentence for aggravated identity theft. They stressed the nonviolent nature of Mr. Santos’s crime, writing in a letter to the court that “his conduct, though involving dishonesty and abuse of trust, stemmed largely from a misguided desperation related to his political campaign, rather than inherent malice.”


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