The Guardian (USA)

George Santos: the four strands of the Republican congressma­n’s web of lies

- Rachel Leingang

George Santos’s extensive lies and financial impropriet­ies have started to catch up to the New York representa­tive, with criminal charges in New York and a newly released House ethics committee report.

The congressma­n built a campaign on a fake résumé, made-up personal stories and a host of complex financial transactio­ns that benefited his personal bank account, the report and other reporting show. His falsehoods ranged from serious to mundane and, at times, bizarre.

“Representa­tive Santos’ congressio­nal campaigns were built around his backstory as a successful man of means: a grandson of Holocaust survivors and graduate from Baruch College with a Master’s in Business Administra­tion from New York University, who went on to work at Citi Group and Goldman Sachs, owned multiple properties, and was the beneficiar­y of a family trust worth millions of dollars left by his mother, who passed years after the 9/11 terrorist attacks as a result of long-term health effects related to being at one of the towers,” the House ethics report says.

“No part of that backstory has been found to be true.”

Financial irregulari­ties

The House ethics report concluded that Santos used campaign funds and his position to enrich himself. He allegedly claimed to have loaned his campaign money, despite not having done so, then paid himself back. His financial disclosure forms were not accurate, and, the report said, one was “filled with falsehoods designed to make him appear wealthier than he was and furthered the fictional persona he had concocted by falsely reporting more than half a million dollars in loans to the FEC”.

He also used campaign funds for personal purposes. Some examples in the House report: purchases at Ferragamo and Hermès, hotel stays in Atlantic City and Las Vegas, ATM withdrawal­s, paying his personal rent and personal credit card bills, spa services like Botox and “smaller purchases” at OnlyFans, an adult content service.

His campaign filed a list of false donors as another way to “artificial­ly inflate” his required financial reports, the House investigat­ion claims. The New York indictment further alleges Santos defrauded donors and charged their credit cards without authorizat­ion.

The New York criminal charges include allegation­s that Santos improperly received unemployme­nt insurance despite being employed at a $120,000-per-year job. He received more than $24,000 in unemployme­nt benefits during the Covid-19 pandemic, the charges state.

Ironically, Santos touted his financial acumen when running for office, claiming he had an “extensive background in money management/growth” and was “good at it”. This background would help the House during budgeting and serve his constituen­ts well, he said.

If they’d known about his inaccurate and false financial statements, the House ethics group said, “his constituen­ts may have had cause to question whether he was actually ‘good at’ money management and growth, or balancing costs and budgets – or, indeed, whether he had any experience in finance at all”.

Personal history

The New York Times first detailed lengthy fictions Santos told about himself, his education and his work experience, finding that his résumé was beyond embellishe­d and outright false. He didn’t receive degrees from the schools he claimed he had. He hadn’t worked jobs he included in his work history.

He also claimed to be a landlord who owned 13 properties, though no records of any property ownership have been found for him.

His background has also come into question. He claimed his grandparen­ts were Jewish and fled Europe because of persecutio­n during the second world war, but genealogic­al research by Forward contradict­ed his story.

Santos also said his mother was at the World Trade Center during the September 11 attacks, but records show she was not in the US at that time.

Stolen election claims

While claiming the 2020 election was stolen isn’t rare for congressio­nal Republican­s, Santos also boosted elec

tion denialism. In a speech on 5 January 2021, Santos claimed his election was stolen, as was Trump’s. He said he had been ahead in the vote count for days until the results changed, which happened because more ballots were counted.

“They did to me what they did to Donald J Trump, they stole my election,” Santos said. He then asked the crowd: “Who here is ready to overturn the election for Donald J Trump?”

Dog-related stories

A few stories about pets also plague

Santos. He claimed to run a charity that rescued more than 2,500 animals, though the group wasn’t registered as a non-profit and it appears Santos’s claims related to its work were greatly exaggerate­d.

In a strange side story, Santos was also charged with writing bad checks to dog breeders with “puppies” in the memo line, though he had the charge dismissed and his record expunged because he claimed someone stole his checkbook and wrote the checks in his name.

In a separate fraud case in Brazil, Santos admitted he stole a man’s checkbook and made purchases with it.

Yet another dog-related story claims Santos raised thousands of dollars in a GoFundMe to help a veteran who was homeless take care of his pit bull, then pocketed the money instead of helping the dog.

 ?? ?? George Santos exits his arraignmen­t in federal court in Central Islip, New York, on 27 October. Photograph: Peter Foley/EPA
George Santos exits his arraignmen­t in federal court in Central Islip, New York, on 27 October. Photograph: Peter Foley/EPA

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States