George Santos: Brazil reactivates fraud case
against fabulist congressman-elect
Republican is accused of using stolen checkbook and
fake name at shop outside Rio de Janeiro in 2008
George Santos seemed to come clean about the alleged
crime in 2011, allegedly writing on a Brazil social media site: ‘I know I
screwed up, but I want to pay.’
George Santos faces a maximum of five years
imprisonment and a fine if convicted in Brazil.
Victoria
Bekiempis
Tue 3 Jan
2023 15.07 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2023/jan/03/george-santos-brazil-reactivates-fraud-case
As the
fabulist New York Republican representative-elect George Santos prepares to be
sworn in on Tuesday, Brazilian prosecutors say they are reopening a criminal
fraud case against him.
Santos, who
faces federal and state investigations involving possible criminal activity
related to his two congressional campaigns, is accused of using a stolen
checkbook and fake name at a clothing shop outside Rio de Janeiro in 2008, the
New York Times reported on Monday citing court documents.
The case
languished for more than a decade, however, as Brazilian authorities did not
know where Santos was.
Santos
reportedly told police in 2010 that he and his mother stole the checkbook from
a man that she had once worked for, and then used it to make illicit purchases,
per the Times.
He seemed
to come clean about the purported fraud to the store’s proprietor the next year
on a Brazilian social media website, allegedly writing: “I know I screwed up,
but I want to pay.”
While a
judge in Brazil greenlit a charge against Santos in 2011, he had already gone
to the US. Because Brazilian authorities needed to officially notify him to the
charges before the case could proceed, the case ground to a halt. Brazilian
prosecutors will now file a petition in court asking that Santos respond to the
charges, after which Brazil’s justice ministry will send it to the US justice
department.
If
convicted, the maximum penalty is five years imprisonment as well as a fine,
the New York Times said.
Santos has
insisted on his innocence. “I am not a criminal here – not here or in Brazil or
any jurisdiction in the world,” he told the New York Post after the story was
first revealed. “Absolutely not. That didn’t happen.”
Santos has
admitted to lying about integral parts of his biography, such as claims that he
worked for Goldman Sachs and Citigroup, as well as completing college. “My sins
here are embellishing my résumé. I’m sorry,” Santos said.
He also
tried to dispel criticism that he misrepresented having Jewish heritage. On
Santos’s campaign website, he claimed that his mother was Jewish and that his
grandparents fled the Nazi regime in the second world war.
Santos is
now claiming that he is “clearly Catholic”, but that his grandmother recounted
being Jewish and later becoming Catholic. “I never claimed to be Jewish,” he
told the newspaper. “Because I learned my maternal family had a Jewish
background I said I was ‘Jew-ish’.”
Santos has
since faced calls to step down by some members of his own party. The Texas
Republican representative Kevin Brady, formerly the ranking member of the House
ways and means committee, said on Fox News that Santos “is certainly going to
have to consider resigning”, while the outgoing Arkansas governor, Asa
Hutchinson, recently said that Santos’s falsehoods were “unacceptable” and
needed to be investigated by the ethics committee.

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