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At the hearing, Santos apologized for his actions, but the judge appeared unconvinced when it came time to hand down his sentence.
NEW YORK — The disgraced ex-U.S. Representative, George Santos, was sentenced on Friday to more than seven years in prison. He broke down in tears upon receiving his sentence for the offenses that resulted in his removal from Congress.
Santos, who confessed to federal wire fraud and aggravated identity theft last summer, pleaded for leniency. Speaking through tears in a federal courtroom close to his former congressional district, he expressed that he felt “humbled” and “chastened” and acknowledged that he had violated his constituents’ trust.
“I offer my deepest apologies,” he said, adding: “I cannot rewrite the past, but I can control the road ahead.”
U.S. District Court Judge Joanna Seybert evidently wasn’t convinced.
“Where is your remorse? Where do I see it?” she asked as she sentenced him to 87 months behind bars. “It’s always someone else’s fault.”
The New York Republican, who must report to prison July 25, didn’t respond to reporters’ questions outside the courthouse.
Hours later, though, he took to social media angling for a White House reprieve, despite saying in recent days he wouldn’t seek clemency.
“I believe that 7 years is an exaggerated sentence swayed by political motives, and I urge President Trump to offer me a chance to demonstrate that I am more than the mistakes I’ve made,” he posted on the social media platform X late Friday.
Santos, 36, served in Congress less than a year before becoming just the sixth member of the House to be ousted by colleagues.
He admitted to deceiving donors and stealing the identities of nearly a dozen people, including his family members, to fund his winning campaign. His plea deal included agreeing to pay roughly $580,000 in penalties.
“From the moment he declared his candidacy for Congress, Santos leveraged his campaign for his own enrichment and financial benefit,” U.S. Attorney John Durham, whose office prosecuted the case, said outside court.
Santos’ victims included a woman with brain damage and two octogenarian men, prosecutor Ryan Harris told the judge.
Defense lawyer Andrew Mancilla had asked the judge for a sentence of two years, portraying Santos as a troubled figure who grew up in a “broken house” and was subjected to bullying throughout his life.
As a result, “he built the man he wanted to be, not who he was,” Mancilla said. “He did that because he believed that the world would not accept him for who he was.”
“Deep down, he is warm, kind, caring and thoughtful,” Mancilla said.
But, the lawyer said, now “everyone hates George Santos.”
Santos was elected in 2022, flipping a wealthy district representing parts of Queens and Long Island for the GOP.
Soon after, it was revealed that the political unknown had fabricated much of his life story, painting himself as a successful business owner who worked at prestigious Wall Street firms and held a valuable real estate portfolio.
In reality, Santos was struggling financially and even faced eviction.
He falsely claimed to have been a volleyball star at a college he never even attended. He had referred to himself during the campaign as “a proud American Jew,” but later acknowledged that he was Catholic and insisted he’d only said he was “Jew-ish” after learning that his maternal family had a Jewish background.
Reporters uncovered that Santos had been accused in Brazil of using stolen checks to buy clothing, and that he had once been charged in Pennsylvania with using bad checks to buy puppies from dog breeders.
The revelations led to congressional and criminal inquiries into how he had funded his campaign.
“He told lie after lie until it caught up with him — until we caught up with him and exposed him for what he truly was: an opportunist and a fraud,” Nassau County District Attorney Anne Donnelly, a Republican, said outside court Friday. Her office also investigated Santos.
Before winning office, Santos collected unemployment benefits from New York state while actually working for a Florida company. Once in Congress, he cosponsored legislation intended to root out unemployment fraud.
As his sentencing approached, Santos was reflective and apologetic in social media posts, but at other times seemed to relish his notoriety.
He launched a podcast called “Pants on Fire with George Santos,” and earned hundreds of thousands of dollars selling cheerful, personalized video messages on Cameo. He leaned into his longtime support of Trump, praising the new administration.
The week of his sentencing, Santos told The Associated Press by text he was “ready to face the music.” On X, he made one final plug for his Cameo account.
“Think ahead and of any celebration or event coming up later this year. Book them today,” Santos wrote, ending the post with a series of heart emojis.
Associated Press writers Jennifer Peltz and Jake Offenhartz in New York contributed to this story.
Follow Philip Marcelo at twitter.com/philmarcelo.
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