George Santos: The Rise and Fall – Détails, épisodes et analyse
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George Santos: The Rise and Fall
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Fréquence : 1 épisode/217j. Total Éps: 4

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MTG Pushes Trump to Commute George Santos' 87-Month Prison Sentence | Clemency Bid Gains Steam
mardi 12 août 2025 • Durée 03:11
This is Biosnap AI. In the past few days, the most consequential development is the escalating push for clemency after I reported to federal prison on July 25 to begin serving an 87‑month sentence for wire fraud and aggravated identity theft, alongside restitution of roughly $374,000 and forfeiture of more than $200,000, a milestone that will define my biography for years unless changed by executive action, as reported by Fox News and TIME. Fox News reports that Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene sent a formal letter to the Justice Department’s pardon attorney urging President Donald Trump to commute my sentence, calling it a grave injustice; TIME adds that Trump told Newsmax that I lied like hell but did not rule out clemency, saying nobody’s talked to me about it. ABC News likewise reports Greene’s push to commute the seven year term and notes my prison column describing early days behind bars, underlining how allies are trying to reset the narrative. GV Wire details Greene’s commutation request and highlights that I have published two columns from prison in The South Shore Press, signaling an ongoing public voice even while incarcerated.
On the media front, Uinterview via IMDb notes that I tearfully urged Trump for a pardon earlier this spring and said I would accept commutation or clemency during a Piers Morgan Uncensored appearance; that prior plea has renewed relevance given Greene’s current effort. AOL recaps my surrender timeline, sentence length, restitution, and my farewell‑style social media post before reporting, underscoring the bookend of a flamboyant rise and a dramatic fall. CBS News maintains the definitive context of my expulsion by a 311 to 114 House vote in 2023, including 105 Republicans, a fact now repeatedly invoked to weigh proportionality against my sentence.
Headlines worth noting for the record include TIME’s Marjorie Taylor Greene calls for commutation of George Santos’s sentence and Fox News’s Marjorie Taylor Greene urges Trump to commute George Santos federal prison sentence. ABC News frames it as a push to commute a seven year sentence shortly after I began serving time. GV Wire similarly headlines the commutation bid and Trump’s response.
Speculation and unconfirmed: A New York State Police public information sheet circulating online lists a George Santiago in a minor accident and an unrelated DWI arrest of another individual; there is no verified tie to me, and reputable outlets have not reported any new legal troubles, so treat this as unrelated and unconfirmed. According to Fox News and TIME, unless pardoned or commuted, I remain incarcerated into the early 2030s, making the clemency effort the singular development with long term biographical consequence.
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Greene Fights for Santos: Controversial Clemency Call Divides Washington
samedi 9 août 2025 • Durée 03:04
George Santos made headlines this week as Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene kicked off a highly publicized bid to reduce his prison sentence. Greene sent a formal request to the Justice Department calling for Santos' seven-year term for wire fraud and identity theft to be commuted and described his punishment as a grave injustice. The New York Daily Record and ABC News both reported Greene's letter claimed other lawmakers had faced no repercussions for worse offenses and insisted Santos is being treated too harshly, emphasizing accountability but saying the sentencing was judicial overreach. In the latest twist worthy of a cable drama, Greene also took to social media and stated on X that George Santos has taken responsibility and shown remorse and called for the matter to be corrected. Greene has a history of advocating for controversial pardons, including recent pushes for Derek Chauvin and even Ghislaine Maxwell according to The Independent.
Fox News highlighted that Donald Trump, who Santos has continually supported and is hoping will grant him clemency, was quoted saying Santos' seven-year sentence is a long time but that nobody had asked him to intervene yet, coupled with the blunt observation that Santos "lied like hell." Santos openly admitted in a Piers Morgan interview that he is seeking any relief available, stating he'll accept a commutation or pardon and that the process was deeply politicized.
On the social media front, Santos has not disappeared from view. Before entering federal custody at New Jersey’s Fairton facility on July 25, he posted an X message to fans and critics alike: "Well, darlings… The curtain falls, the spotlight dims, and the rhinestones are packed. From the halls of Congress to the chaos of cable news what a ride it's been! Was it messy? Always. Glamorous? Occasionally. Honest? I tried… most days." The saga continued with a dispatch written from prison in The South Shore Press, lamenting the loss of dignity behind bars and reflecting on freedoms taken for granted.
His online presence persists through Cameo videos and a podcast called Pants on Fire, which built on his reputation for scandal. Headlines across outlets like The Independent and Brooklyn Eagle have covered Greene’s calls for presidential intervention and the continuing fallout from Santos’ expulsion following a damning ethics report in December 2023. Time magazine noted that Santos was only the sixth member ever expelled from the House, a distinction unlikely to fade. For biographical significance, the public efforts to commute his sentence and the Trump White House’s lack of engagement are now central threads in the story of George Santos, whose career remains as sensational—and controversial—as ever.
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From Congress to Convict: The Spectacular Fall of George Santos
lundi 4 août 2025 • Durée 02:59
George Santos, the former New York congressman whose explosive scandals captivated the nation, officially surrendered to federal custody on July 25, 2025, and began serving an 87-month sentence at the Federal Correctional Institution in Fairton, New Jersey, according to The Advocate and Patch. This marks a staggering fall from grace for someone once touted as a rising star in the Republican Party, especially as the first openly gay Republican to win a congressional seat. But the years since his 2022 election have been marked by revelations that Santos fabricated large swaths of his background, from his career bona fides to personal history, which unraveled into a sprawling scandal leading to numerous federal felonies.
He pleaded guilty in April to 23 counts covering wire fraud, aggravated identity theft, and misuse of campaign donations—which, as Rolling Stone and others have gleefully detailed, covered luxury goods, Botox, OnlyFans, and pandemic-era unemployment benefits. Shortly after sentencing, various outlets including IMDb and CBS reported that Santos revived his drag persona, not in political protest but to sell personalized Cameo videos, framing this as his latest “side hustle” to meet, as Santos himself posted, “judicial obligations.” On social media, Santos remained in character until the end, delivering a melodramatic farewell on X the night before prison: “Well, darlings…The curtain falls, the spotlight dims, and the rhinestones are packed. From the halls of Congress to the chaos of cable news what a ride it’s been! Was it messy? Always. Glamorous? Occasionally. Honest? I tried…most days. I may be leaving the stage (for now), but trust me, legends never truly exit.”
This past week, major headlines focused on his surrender, the start of his sentence, and his ongoing campaign begging former President Donald Trump for a pardon. Despite Santos’ public pleas (including a recent TV interview with Piers Morgan), Trump told Newsmax he “has the right to do it” but that no one’s asked him and “he lied like hell.” Trump maintains he hardly knew Santos but does not close the door on possible clemency, drawing more headlines from The Advocate, NY Post, and others.
On social media, Santos’s story continues to be meme fodder, with Instagram and TikTok users relishing the saga of the rhinestone-laden conman confined to federal prison. The public’s fascination, equal parts outrage and amusement, shows no sign of dimming, even as Santos’s next chapter—now unfolding behind bars—looks far less glamorous.
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Embattled Congressman Santos Pleads Not Guilty to New Charges, Expulsion Effort Gains Steam
lundi 30 octobre 2023 • Durée 03:10









