Santos Is
Released After Trump Commutes His Sentence
George
Santos’s lawyer said the disgraced former congressman was freed from a New
Jersey prison around 10 p.m. on Friday. He served less than three months on his
fraud conviction.
By
Michael Gold and Grace Ashford
The
reporters have been covering Mr. Santos since 2022, when they broke the news
that he had lied extensively about his résumé.
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/17/us/politics/trump-george-santos-sentence-commute.html
Published
Oct. 17, 2025
Updated
Oct. 18, 2025, 12:02 a.m. ET
Former
Representative George Santos of New York, the disgraced Republican fabulist
whose lies made him an object of national scorn, was released from a federal
prison on Friday night after President Trump commuted his seven-year sentence
for fraud.
His
lawyer, Joseph Murray, said that Mr. Santos was released from the Federal
Correctional Institution Fairton in New Jersey after 10 p.m. on Friday night.
“A great injustice has been corrected,” Mr. Murray said.
In a
social media post, Mr. Trump suggested that politics had been a major factor in
his decision, commending Mr. Santos for sharing his views and contrasting him
with Democrats. Calling the former congressman “somewhat of a ‘rogue,’” Mr.
Trump said that he believed that Mr. Santos’s sentence was excessive given the
nature of his financial crimes.
The
president also suggested he had been moved by Mr. Santos’s accounts of being in
prison, which he had published in a regular column in a local Long Island
newspaper.
“George
has been in solitary confinement for long stretches of time and, by all
accounts, has been horribly mistreated,” Mr. Trump wrote on social media.
“Therefore, I just signed a Commutation, releasing George Santos from prison,
IMMEDIATELY. Good luck George, have a great life!”
Mr.
Santos, 37, reported to prison in July after pleading guilty to wire fraud and
aggravated identity theft. He served fewer than three months of his 87-month
sentence.
He will
also no longer be required to pay more than $370,000 in court-ordered
restitution to his victims, according to a copy of the commutation posted
online by Ed Martin, the U.S. pardon attorney.
The
commutation — which cuts Mr. Santos’s sentence short but does not wipe out his
conviction — is part of a blitz of grants of political clemency that Mr. Trump
has doled out to his political allies or other figures who have been embraced
by his right-wing supporters.
For
months, it looked as if Mr. Santos, who rose to political prominence as an
adherent to Mr. Trump’s MAGA movement, would not be granted similar favor. Even
as the president gave sweeping pardons to those charged in connection with the
2021 attack on the Capitol, Mr. Santos’s appeals to get his sentence reduced
were unsuccessful.
His
commutation is the latest startling twist in an outlandish political odyssey
that saw Mr. Santos move from a little-known conservative from Long Island to
an infamous example of deceit and political fraud.
When he
won his seat in 2022, Mr. Santos was heralded as a sign of a shift in
Republican politics. Young, Brazilian American and openly gay, Mr. Santos
seemed to signal an expansion of the G.O.P.’s tent. His victory, in a
Democratic-leaning district in Long Island, was celebrated for helping
Republicans narrowly win control of the House.
But Mr.
Santos’s congressional career was imperiled almost immediately, after The New
York Times and other outlets exposed that his ascent was built on a spectacular
web of lies.
Mr.
Santos claimed that he was descended from Holocaust refugees. His mother, he
said, had been in the World Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001. He claimed to be a
college volleyball star. And Mr. Santos boasted of extensive Wall Street
experience that allowed him to report loaning his campaign hundreds of
thousands of dollars.
None of
that was true.
As more
of Mr. Santos’s claims were exposed to be false or misleading, his Republican
colleagues grew increasingly uneasy. When he was indicted in 2023, prosecutors
accused him of multiple criminal schemes, ranging from fraudulently claiming
unemployment benefits and lying on official forms to using his political
campaign to enrich himself, swindling money from donors for personal expenses
and using one donor’s credit card to steal $11,000 for his personal use.
After a
congressional ethics investigation found that Mr. Santos improperly spent
campaign funds on Botox, designer fashion, cosmetics and OnlyFans purchases,
more than 100 Republicans joined Democrats to expel him from Congress in
December 2023.
He became
the first person in history to be expelled from the House without being
convicted of a federal crime or supporting the Confederacy.
Less than
a year later, Mr. Santos, who had for more than a year denied all wrongdoing,
pleaded guilty in his criminal case. He acknowledged his involvement in a
variety of other schemes, including lying to Congress, stealing money from
campaign donors and fraudulently collecting unemployment benefits.
At Mr.
Santos’s sentencing, the acting U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of New
York at the time, John J. Durham, described the conviction as a warning. “To
Mr. Santos and other dishonest individuals of that ilk, who lie, steal
identities and commit frauds to get elected to public office,” he said, “public
officials who criminally abuse our electoral process will end up in a federal
prison.”
A
spokesman for the Eastern District declined to comment on Friday night.
Mr.
Santos’s lawyer, Mr. Murray, thanked Mr. Trump in a statement, in which he
called him “the greatest president in U.S. History” and said that he was “so
proud to be an American.”
Mr.
Santos’s commutation may cause a political headache for many of his Republican
colleagues, especially on Long Island, where four congressional seats have been
hotly contested battlegrounds in recent elections.
Representative
Nick LaLota, a Long Island Republican who was among those leading the charge
for Mr. Santos’s expulsion, decried the commutation on Friday evening. In a
social media post where he did not address Mr. Trump, Mr. LaLota wrote that Mr.
Santos “didn’t merely lie — he stole millions, defrauded an election, and his
crimes (for which he pled guilty) warrant more than a three-month sentence.”
Mr.
Santos remains more popular among a cadre of far-right MAGA politicians outside
of New York, a few of whom publicly pushed for his release.
“Thank
you @realDonaldTrump for commuting George’s sentence. It was the right thing to
do,” Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia, the brash Republican and
MAGA adherent, wrote in a social media post late Friday night.
She said
in the post that she had spoken with Mr. Santos. “He is extremely grateful to
be released from prison and he and his family are overjoyed,” she wrote.
Ms.
Greene was one of the first to call for a commutation, sending a letter to the
Justice Department in August. Around that time, Mr. Trump, who had by that
point issued numerous pardons to staunch supporters, did not rule out offering
one to Mr. Santos. But in an interview with Newsmax, Mr. Trump said that he had
not yet been asked.
“He lied
like hell,” Mr. Trump said at the time. “And I didn’t know him, but he was 100
percent for Trump.”
In his
post on Friday announcing Mr. Santos’s commutation, Mr. Trump once again cited
their shared political views, this time as a justification for his release.
He
suggested that Mr. Santos’s transgressions — which include crimes that Mr.
Santos acknowledged in court that he committed — paled in comparison to those
of Senator Richard Blumenthal, a Connecticut Democrat who has admitted that he
misrepresented his military service during the Vietnam War era.
“This is
far worse than what George Santos did, and at least Santos had the Courage,
Conviction, and Intelligence to ALWAYS VOTE REPUBLICAN!” Mr. Trump wrote.
In a
statement to The Times, Mr. Blumenthal dismissed Mr. Trump’s comments. “This
rant is fabricated nonsense,” he said. “There’s no excuse for commuting George
Santos’ sentence.”
But Mr.
Trump indicated that his position had not been swayed only by politics. He was
moved in part by Mr. Santos’s reports that he had been held in solitary
confinement.
Since
entering custody in a federal prison in southern New Jersey, Mr. Santos, rarely
one to shy away from the media spotlight, had been writing a regular column
about his time in prison in The South Shore Press, a newspaper on Long Island.
In
September, Mr. Santos wrote that he had been moved into the “Special Housing
Unit” after his lawyer reported to prison officials that he had received a
death threat against him. (Ms. Greene has also said that she had received a
letter from Mr. Santos saying that he was in solitary confinement.)
In his
accounts, Mr. Santos described isolating conditions, once likening being in
solitary confinement to a “slow-motion form of torture.” He said that prison
officials told him that he would remain in special housing until a full
investigation into the threat against him had been finished. And Mr. Santos,
who campaigned as a law-and-order candidate, repeatedly renewed his calls for
clemency.
On
Monday, the South Shore Press published a direct letter from Mr. Santos to Mr.
Trump. Describing his experience as “unlike anything most Americans could ever
comprehend,” he appealed to the president on a personal basis.
“Mr.
President, I have nowhere else to turn,” Mr. Santos wrote. “You have always
been a man of second chances, a leader who believes in redemption and renewal.
I am asking you now, from the depths of my heart, to extend that same belief to
me.”
Mr.
Santos spent 84 days in federal custody. According to the Bureau of Prisons
website, he had been scheduled to be released in September 2031.
Michael
Gold covers Congress for The Times, with a focus on immigration policy and
congressional oversight.
Grace
Ashford covers New York government and politics for The Times.


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