Social
Media, Pleas From Allies and Prison Essays: How Santos Won His Freedom
On Friday
evening, President Trump commuted the sentence of former Representative George
Santos. “Good luck George, have a great life!” the president said.
Michael
Gold
By
Michael Gold
Oct. 18,
2025
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/18/nyregion/george-santos-prison-trump.html
In the
days before he was sentenced to federal prison last spring, George Santos said
that he was ready to accept his fate.
Mr.
Santos, the discredited former Republican congressman from New York whose name
had become practically synonymous with shameless deceit, had pleaded guilty to
wire fraud and aggravated identity theft. He admitted to a host of other
schemes and said that it was time to take accountability.
As has so
often been the case with Mr. Santos, he quickly changed his tune.
Faced
with more than seven years in prison, Mr. Santos, who begged a judge for
leniency and then sobbed in court when he did not receive it, took to social
media to make a plea that just days earlier he had sworn he would avoid.
“I
believe that 7 years is an over the top politically influenced sentence,” Mr.
Santos wrote in April, “and I implore that President Trump gives me a chance to
prove I’m more than the mistakes I’ve made.”
It took
months of social media pleas, weekly dispatches in a small newspaper,
handwritten letters from solitary confinement, entreaties from Republican
allies and 84 days of prison time. But Mr. Santos’s request was finally
granted.
On Friday
night, Mr. Trump commuted Mr. Santos’s sentence and ordered his release from
federal custody, part of a far-reaching wave of clemency that the president has
granted to political allies since taking office in January.
“Good
luck George, have a great life!” the president wrote on social media.
Mr.
Santos, 37, walked out of prison in New Jersey after serving less than three
months of an 87-month sentence. Though his criminal record remains intact, he
must no longer pay over $370,000 in restitution to his victims.
Mr.
Santos did not respond to phone calls and messages seeking comment. On Saturday
night, he said in a lengthy social media post that he and Mr. Trump had spoken.
He thanked those who supported him and said that he planned to move forward
with his life without retribution.
“Yesterday,
I was given something I never thought I’d have again: a true second chance at
life,” Mr. Santos said. “A chance to grow, to change, and to walk a better
path.”
Mr.
Santos was picked up by family on Friday night and spent Saturday at home.
Several people who had spoken with Mr. Santos since his release said that he
seemed to be in good spirits.
Representative
Tim Burchett, Republican of Tennessee, was one of a handful of Republican
lawmakers who had pushed for clemency for Mr. Santos. He said that Mr. Santos
called him moments after he left custody.
“He
sounded like the old George, and I was glad,” Mr. Burchett said, adding that
Mr. Santos told him that he had lost “about 43 pounds” in prison.
The
‘Weaponized Justice System’
When Mr.
Santos reported to the Federal Correctional Institution Fairton on July 25, he
seemed resigned to the length of his sentence.
That is
not to say that he went quietly. In the months that passed between his
sentencing and the start of his prison time, Mr. Santos, a social media
enthusiast, kept posting.
He asked
for clemency. He criticized the “weaponized justice system,” and then attacked
the attorney general over her handling of the Jeffrey Epstein case.
And Mr.
Santos lashed out at a host of Republicans whom he accused of blocking him from
being pardoned, pointing the finger initially at House Speaker Mike Johnson and
then at a group of New York Republicans who had pushed for his expulsion from
Congress.
But Mr.
Santos’s praise for Trump was, as with few things in a life marked by lies,
consistent and constant. And when it came to seeking clemency, that loyalty may
have been Mr. Santos’s greatest asset.
“It
doesn’t matter if I get pardoned or not,” Mr. Santos said in a video days
before he entered federal custody. “I’ve supported him for a decade.”
By that
point, Mr. Trump had issued a blitz of pardons and commutations to his
supporters or others whose cases he said were examples of the political
weaponization of the justice system.
His
actions included a broad grant of clemency to the nearly 1,600 people charged
in connection with the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol; a pardon for
reality television stars convicted of evading taxes and defrauding banks; and
one for another former Republican congressman from New York, Michael Grimm, who
had pleaded guilty to tax evasion.
Many of
those successful pardon seekers had forcefully accused the Justice Department
of singling them out over their political views. Mr. Santos had been doing the
same since he was indicted. And he had been a vocal adherent to Mr. Trump’s
Make America Great Again movement since 2016.
Yet while
other Republicans were released early or saw their convictions wiped clean, Mr.
Santos seemed to stand alone. Though his lawyer said he had started to apply
for clemency for Mr. Santos, the website of the Justice Department’s pardon
attorney’s office never showed a record of a clemency case.
The day
before he reported to prison, he issued a farewell to his social media
followers. “I may be leaving the stage (for now), but trust me legends never
truly exit.”
‘He Lied
Like Hell’
Then, the
week after Mr. Santos went to jail, Mr. Trump offered one possible explanation
for why Mr. Santos’s plea for clemency had not been granted.
In an
interview with the right-wing media outlet Newsmax, the president said that he
had never been asked.
Mr. Trump
acknowledged the former congressman’s penchant for fabrication. “He lied like
hell,” Mr. Trump said. “And I didn’t know him, but he was 100 percent for
Trump.”
Still,
the president did not rule out a pardon.
“Nobody’s
talked to me about it,” he said.
Days
later, Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene, the rabble-rousing far-right
Republican from Georgia, put in a formal request.
Mr.
Santos had considered Ms. Greene a friend in a Congress where he had few
allies. The two were ideologically aligned, and Ms. Greene had vocally opposed
Mr. Santos’s expulsion from the House.
On Aug.
4, Ms. Greene sent a letter to the pardon attorney, Ed Martin. In it, she
acknowledged that Mr. Santos’s “crimes warrant punishment.”
But Ms.
Greene maintained that Mr. Santos’s sentence was excessive, explaining her
argument with words that seemed designed to appeal to Mr. Trump’s grievances
with the justice system.
“I
strongly believe in accountability for one’s actions, but I believe the
sentencing of Mr. Santos is an abusive overreach by the judicial system,” she
wrote.
As Ms.
Greene was speaking on Mr. Santos’s behalf, the former congressman was making
the case for himself from prison. For nearly a year, Mr. Santos had been
writing a regular column for The South Shore Press, a small weekly newspaper
that covers Suffolk County on Long Island.
After he
went to prison, the column continued, giving Mr. Santos a rare public platform
for a federal prisoner.
At first,
Mr. Santos used his column to document his dismay at conditions inside the
medium-security prison where he had been assigned.
He
described a “punch to the gut” when he saw his own reflection in a prison
uniform and decried ramshackle conditions like mold in the ceiling and
insufficient air-conditioning for the New Jersey summer.
“The
building itself is hardly fit for long-term habitation: sheet metal walls,
shoddy construction, the look and feel of a temporary warehouse rather than a
permanent facility,” Mr. Santos wrote during his third week in prison.
He also
expressed surprise to find he was housed in the same dorm as a former campaign
aide, Samuel Miele, and seemed grateful at the chance for the two of them to
discuss their shared misdeeds. Like Mr. Santos, Mr. Miele pleaded guilty to
wire fraud in court, admitting he used his position to charge donors’ credit
cards without their permission. Unlike Mr. Santos, he is still in prison and
has not been granted clemency.
Before
his sentencing, Mr. Santos, who is gay, said that he wanted to be placed in
solitary confinement, alluding to fears of sexual assault. But he seemed to be
relieved that his time in prison offered some camaraderie.
Then, on
Aug. 28, that was taken away from him, according to Mr. Santos.
In a
column he wrote on Sept. 4, Mr. Santos said that his lawyer, Joseph Murray, had
been warned of a death threat against Mr. Santos. According to Mr. Santos, he
told his lawyer to ignore it. Instead, Mr. Murray told the prison warden.
Then,
according to Mr. Santos’s column, officials moved him to solitary confinement
in the prison’s “special housing unit,” citing safety concerns.
His
writings renewed a push by Republican allies to win him clemency.
Representative Lauren Boebert of Colorado began calling Mr. Martin, the pardon
attorney, she said in a social media post. And she and Mr. Burchett called for
an investigation into conditions at Mr. Santos’s prison to draw attention to
his case.
The Road
to Release
It was
early October when Mr. Trump gave the first indication that he was starting to
listen.
On Oct.
7, Mr. Trump wrote a social media post calling for an investigation of a
Democratic critic, Senator Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut. For years, the
president has blasted Mr. Blumenthal for mischaracterizing his military service
record during the Vietnam War.
“Right
now there is a Congressman sitting in prison for lying about his past during a
campaign,” Mr. Trump wrote on his social media platform Truth Social. “Well,
those lies were nothing compared” to Mr. Blumenthal’s.
Mr.
Santos was not in prison for lying. He had admitted in court to using one
donor’s credit card information to steal $11,000 for his personal use, and to
persuading other donors to give money to what he falsely said was a super PAC
supporting his campaign. He had fraudulently taken unemployment payments when
he was employed and had falsified campaign finance records to help secure money
from the national Republican Party.
In a
final plea to Mr. Trump, published in The South Shore Press on Oct. 13, Mr.
Santos made a political case for his release.
“A
lifelong Republican and a proud believer in your America First vision, I never
wavered,” Mr. Santos wrote. “Supporting you wasn’t just a political decision —
it was personal. It was rooted in my conviction that you were the only leader
who truly put this nation, and her people, first.”
Four days
later, Mr. Trump commuted Mr. Santos’s sentence. In his announcement, he noted
that the former congressman had “the Courage, Conviction, and Intelligence to
ALWAYS VOTE REPUBLICAN!”
Mr.
Santos told The South Shore Press that he had been released from solitary
confinement by the time Mr. Trump granted him clemency.
According
to the paper, other prisoners told Mr. Santos on Friday evening that he was on
TV. Initially, Mr. Santos ignored them. Then, he saw that the text on the
bottom of the screen said his sentence had been commuted.
In his
social media post on Saturday night, Mr. Santos, who adopted a tough-on-crime
stance as a politician, said that he planned to dedicate himself to “prison
reform and accountability” and a justice system that “believes in
rehabilitation.”
Shortly
after his release, Mr. Santos also quickly reactivated his account on the app
Cameo, where he had been charging for personalized videos practically up until
the day he went to prison.
On his
profile, he added one simple, celebratory phrase: “I’m back!!!”
Grace
Ashford contributed reporting.
Michael
Gold covers Congress for The Times, with a focus on immigration policy and
congressional oversight.


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