George Santos: The imposter in Congress | On The Ground
The Department of Justice has given its clearest sign yet that it has launched a criminal probe into George Santos, according to a new report.
The Washington Post, citing two sources familiar with the matter, reported that the DOJ has asked the Federal Election Commission to postpone any enforcement against Mr Santos while they conduct a parallel criminal investigation.
The request also asked for any relevant documents to be handed over to the DOJ, the newspaper reported.
Meanwhile, an investigation by Mother Jones found that many donors listed on Mr Santos’s 2020 campaign records do not exist, or deny having given him money.
It comes after Mr Santos was accused of making a vile joke about Hitler and killing Jews and Black people in a resurfaced Facebook post – marking just the latest scandal to hit the newly-elected congressman.
In a 2011 comment on Facebook, obtained by Patch, Mr Santos allegedly wrote: “hiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiigh hiiiiiiiiiiiitlerrrrrrrrrrr (hight hitler) lolololololololololololol sombody kill her!! the jews and black mostly lolllolol!!! Dum.”
Mr Santos’ former roommate confirmed the account’s validity to the outlet and said that the congressman used to often make antisemitic comments. An attorney for Mr Santos told Patch the Facebook post is “completely false”.
The congressman has previously been caught in a lie about being Jewish and his grandparents fleeing the Holocaust. He later walked back the claims saying he was “Jew-ish”.
As well as being exposed for making a series of lies during his campaign run, Mr Santos is also under scrutiny over an amended financial disclosure form he filed with the FEC this week. For starters, there are two loans — for $500,000 and $125,000 — that are no longer identified as coming from Mr Santos’s personal funds, as they had been previously.
Many of congressman’s top 2020 donors do not exist, report claims
Many of George Santos’s top donors do not exist or deny donating to the New York congressman’s campaign, according to an investigation by Mother Jones.
The magazine found found more than a dozen people listed on Mr Santos’s 2020 campaign finance reports — the year he first ran for the seat he would eventually win — for whom the name or address of the donor could not be confirmed.
“These questionable donations, which account for more than $30,000 of the $338,000 the Santos campaign raised from individual donors in 2020, have not been previously cited in media reports,” Mother Jones reported.
Richard Hall28 January 2023 20:29
Department of Justice appears to be conducting criminal probe — report
The Department of Justice has given its clearest sign yet that it has launched a criminal probe into George Santos, according to a new report.
The Washington Post reveals that the DOJ has asked the Federal Election Commission to postpone any enforcement against Mr Santos while they conduct a parallel criminal investigation.
The request also asked for any relevant documents to be handed over to the DOJ, the newspaper reported, citing two people familiar with the matter.
The 34-year-old congressman was found to have told a litany of lies during his campaign for election, which attracted the attention of the DOJ and FED. And while he has admitted to “embellishing” his resume, he has refused to resign.
Richard Hall28 January 2023 15:19
Santos claimed to have ‘personal relationship’ with California Retirement System CEO
While working at the small Florida investment firm Harbor City, Mr Santos claimed to have “a personal relationship with Marcie Frost, the CEO of CalPERS”.
He said that they had had “a lot of good rapport for the past four years”.
CalPERS – the California…