Santos’s
Release Frustrates His Former Colleagues and Constituents
George
Santos, the disgraced former Republican congressman, was freed from prison on
Friday after President Trump commuted his sentence. On Long Island, in his
former district, some people called the decision an outrage.
Maia
Coleman
By Maia
Coleman
Oct. 18,
2025
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/18/nyregion/george-santos-released-reaction.html
In the
hours after President Trump’s announcement that he had commuted the prison
sentence of George Santos, the disgraced former Republican congressman, New
York politicians and some voters greeted the news with a mix of anger and
frustration.
“George
Santos is a convicted con artist,” Representative Nicole Malliotakis, a New
York Republican, said in a statement on Saturday. “That will forever be his
legacy, and I disagree with the commutation.”
Robert
Zimmerman, a Democrat who lost to Mr. Santos in a 2022 congressional race, said
in a post on social media that “this decision demonstrates the lawlessness of
the Trump administration.”
“Donald
Trump is trying to put his political enemies in jail while he frees George
Santos for the unconscionable crimes he committed,” he added.
Mr.
Santos, 37, had been serving a seven-year sentence at a federal prison in New
Jersey after pleading guilty to wire fraud and aggravated identity theft. He
was released on Friday night, after Mr. Trump announced in a social media post
that he had cut the sentence short, citing their shared politics and his belief
that the sentence had been excessive.
Mr.
Santos’s release, which came amid a wave of clemency that the president has
granted to his political allies and other right-wing figures, was the latest
chapter in an improbable political career.
The
former congressman from Long Island, once seen as a fresh face in Republican
politics, suffered a swift fall from grace, after reporting from The New York
Times and other outlets exposed that he had fabricated much of his résumé and
background.
He was
elected to the House. But as more revelations about Mr. Santos’s lies on the
campaign trail came to light, his Republican colleagues in New York grew
increasingly uneasy. In January 2023, dozens of the state’s Republican
officials, including four newly elected congressmen, called on Mr. Santos to
resign, breaking sharply with Republican congressional leaders, who declined to
remove him.
Mr.
Santos was indicted in 2023 on charges that included wire fraud and money
laundering. That winter, he became the sixth sitting member of the House to be
expelled and the first to be removed without being convicted of a federal crime
or supporting the Confederacy.
Some of
Mr. Santos’s former Democratic constituents on Long Island called the
commutation a slap in the face.
“The
bottom line is that the Republican Party has really disrespected this district
for years now and continues to,” said Jody Kass Finkel of Great Neck, the
founder of Concerned Citizens of NY-03, a left-leaning group that was created
explicitly to advocate for Mr. Santos’s removal from Congress. The “silver
lining is that we’re now organized, and we are not sitting down taking it,” she
said.
Marc
Sittenreich, who is from Port Washington and is affiliated with Concerned
Citizens, said the commutation was an attack on the rule of law.
“We feel
like in many ways he got his just deserts,” Mr. Sittenreich on Saturday. “Now
we’re in a situation where if you’re with President Trump and you commit real
crimes, you get off scot-free.”
Richard
Osthoff, who had tangled with Mr. Santos in 2016, said he found the former
congressman’s release “disgusting and sickening.”
Mr.
Osthoff, a veteran living in New Jersey, was connected to Mr. Santos after Mr.
Santos set up a GoFundMe page to help raise money for a surgery that Mr.
Osthoff’s dog required. But Mr. Osthoff said he never received those funds, and
his dog eventually died. Mr. Santos denied any wrongdoing.
Mr.
Osthoff said he felt that any justice that had been won when Mr. Santos went to
prison had been undone by the commutation.
“I feel
like I got personally stabbed in the gut by the president of the United
States,” he said. “I don’t think he even realizes what George did, what he was
guilty of.”
In a post
on social media, Representative Nick LaLota, a Republican from Long Island who
was among the lawmakers leading calls for Mr. Santos’s removal in 2023, said
that the former congressman’s crimes warranted more than the three-month term
he had served.
“George
Santos didn’t merely lie — he stole millions, defrauded an election,” Mr.
LaLota wrote. “He should devote the rest of his life to demonstrating remorse
and making restitution to those he wronged.”
But some
Republican critics of Mr. Santos’s stopped short of criticizing the president.
“I am
proud that I was an early voice calling for Santos to resign from the House
recognizing that his behavior was totally unacceptable,” Bruce Blakeman, the
Nassau County executive who has allied himself with Mr. Trump, said in a
statement. “That said, critics of the commutation are the same ones who
silently stood by while President Biden pardoned his son Hunter, Senator Adam
Schiff and Anthony Fauci.”
Joseph G.
Cairo, the chairman of the Nassau County Republican Committee who had
previously called for Mr. Santos’s resignation and said that he had “disgraced”
the House of Representatives, on Saturday issued a muted statement.
The
committee was “united in calling for the expulsion of George Santos from the
House of Representatives based on our shared belief that integrity, honesty,
and accountability are nonnegotiable standards for anyone seeking to serve the
public,” the statement said. “Our focus remains on justifying the public’s
confidence in government and ensuring that the Republican Party continues to
stand for ethical leadership, transparency, and service to the people.”
Former
Representative Anthony D’Esposito, a Republican who helped lead the effort to
oust Mr. Santos and later lost his congressional seat, did not immediately
respond to a request for comment, nor did Thomas Suozzi, the Democrat who now
represents Mr. Santos’s former district.
On
Saturday, many New Yorkers said they hoped more Republicans would take a firmer
stand against Mr. Santos’s release.
“I think
there will be widespread outrage,” Kim Keiserman, a Democrat from Port
Washington, said. “I just don’t know if that outrage will be bipartisan.”
Maia
Coleman is a reporter for The Times covering the New York Police Department and
criminal justice in the New York area.


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