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The House Ethics Committee has concluded that a Democratic congresswoman is responsible for multiple infractions involving over $5 million in taxpayer funds. These funds were allegedly misappropriated, resulting in significant violations of House rules and ethical standards.
At the center of this controversy is Representative Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick from Florida. She faces serious accusations of channeling millions obtained by her family’s healthcare company during the COVID-19 pandemic into her political campaign. These allegations have emboldened some Republicans to advocate for her expulsion from Congress.
In a session that lasted over seven hours on Thursday evening, the ethics panel, consisting equally of Democrats and Republicans, identified 25 separate ethics breaches committed by Cherfilus-McCormick. The committee announced on Friday that it would recommend an appropriate disciplinary action in the upcoming weeks.
Accusations against the congresswoman include collaborating with a group of associates to divert funds from a family healthcare company, which she operated with her brother, Edwin Cherfilus. These funds were allegedly funneled into her campaign through the use of ‘straw donations.’
In November, Cherfilus-McCormick was formally indicted by a federal grand jury in Miami. This legal action marks a critical development in a scandal that could have profound implications for her political career and the integrity of congressional operations.
Cherfilus-McCormick was indicted by a federal grand jury in Miami in November.
The indictment from Cherfilus–McCormick’s case said she purchased a 3.14–carat ‘Fancy Vivid Yellow Diamond’ ring from a New York jeweler for $109,000, per CBS12. The congresswoman’s official house portrait appears to show a similar piece of jewelry adorning her finger.
Cherfilus-McCormick faces up to 53 years in prison if convicted.
Representative Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick, was pictured with a large diamond ring on her hand in her official Congressional portrait
Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick, a Florida Democrat. sits alongside her lawyer during a hearing of the House Ethics Committee on Capitol Hill on March 26, 2026 in Washington, DC
Democrat Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick, second right, is flanked by her husband Corlie McCormick, right, and her two children, as she speaks to the press and supporters at an election night party following a special election, Tuesday, Jan. 11, 2022, in Fort Lauderdale, Florida
In a Wednesday evening statement, issued hours ahead of the panel trial, Cherfilus-McCormick noted that she was ‘deeply disappointed the Committee chose to move forward with this trial while denying my legal team reasonable time to prepare.’
Fellow Democrats have been caught in an uncomfortable bind, trying to uphold their anti-corruption message while one of their own faces serious charges.
‘If they give us conclusions that this actually happened, and there’s no question of doubt as to the fact that laws were broken, then our colleague will have to face the consequences of that — it’s plain and simple,’ Massachusetts Democrat Stephen Lynch told Politico.
Meanwhile, Republicans may see a political opening, as her removal could temporarily widen their razor-thin majority.
Republican Congressman Greg Steube, a fellow member of the Florida delegation noted this week that ‘the committee will make a determination, and once that is made public, what the committee votes on, I will move the floor to expell.’
Steube also stated that ‘you’re in a situation where you have a sitting member of Congress, who’s allegedly stolen over $5 million in taxpayer funds. She should immediately resign instead of going through this process, but she’s going to force us to do this.’
Even if the committee recommends expulsion, it won’t be easy. A two-thirds vote of the full House is required to expel a member.
That would mean that approximately 80 members of her own party would have to turn against her.
‘They want it to move quickly is my guess, and they want to get to a floor vote on expulsion asap,’ noted former Ethics Committee member Susan Wild, a Pennsylvania Democrat who is no longer in Congress.
Between the rare public hearing, criminal allegations, and control of Congress hanging in the balance as the resignation or expulsion of a Democrat could widen the narrow GOP majority, this ethics battle is a noteworthy one, but not totally unprecedented.
The last member to be expelled from the chamber was ex-Congressman George Santos, who was sentenced to nearly seven years in prison for misleading donors and spending campaign money fraudulently. The 2023 vote against Santos was 311-114.
Santos had his sentence commuted by Trump after serving around three months in prison.