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George Santos to Plead Guilty to Charges in Fraud Case

George Santos, the former Republican congressman from New York undone by a mind-bending array of biographical lies and moneymaking schemes, has told prosecutors that he intends to plead guilty and avoid a federal trial that was expected to begin next month, according to a lawyer involved in the case and another person with knowledge of the matter, New York Times reported.

The plea, which is expected to occur on Monday in Federal District Court in Central Islip, N.Y., would spare Mr. Santos from a trial that almost certainly would have been a colorful spectacle.

Mr. Santos, whose trial on 23 felony charges was scheduled to begin on Sept. 9, could still change his mind. But on Friday, a lawyer representing multiple witnesses in the case was told by federal prosecutors that Mr. Santos had decided to plead guilty.

Another person with knowledge of the plans confirmed that he is expected to plead guilty on Monday. The terms of his expected guilty plea and what sentence he might face were not clear.

Public court records show that an in-person hearing has been scheduled for Monday afternoon at the request of prosecutors and Mr. Santos’s lawyers. The records did not explain the purpose of the hearing. Representatives for the U.S. attorney’s office in the Eastern District of New York did not respond to requests for comment, nor did Mr. Santos and one of his lawyers, Joseph Murray.

The expected plea was first reported by Talking Points Memo.

Mr. Santos, 36, was first indicted on 13 charges in May 2023 after a lengthy investigation into a series of financial crimes that federal prosecutors accused him of. Ten more counts followed in October.

Mr. Santos had initially pleaded not guilty to all counts, and, in an apparent effort to invoke former President Donald J. Trump, declared the prosecution to be “a witch hunt.” His apparent decision to change course comes months after two-thirds of his colleagues in the House of Representatives voted to expel him in December — making him only the sixth member of the House to be expelled in the body’s history.

Two of his campaign staffers pleaded guilty for misconduct related to his campaign. His former campaign treasurer, Nancy Marks, pleaded guilty last year to doctoring the campaign’s financial records in coordination with Mr. Santos, including a role in fraudulently reporting a fictitious $500,000 loan that Mr. Santos claimed to have made to his campaign. Prosecutors this week would not clarify whether they intended to seek Ms. Marks’s testimony in Mr. Santos’s trial.

The majority of the counts in the indictment against Mr. Santos were linked to his successful 2022 congressional campaign in New York’s Third Congressional District, which covers parts of northeast Queens and Nassau County on Long Island. Prosecutors said that Mr. Santos and Ms. Marks strategically falsified his official filings, including nonexistent donations and the fictional $500,000 loan, to bolster the campaign’s image and earn support from national Republicans.

Mr. Santos was also accused of stealing tens of thousands of dollars from donors by repeatedly charging their credit cards and through soliciting donations to what they claimed was a super PAC. Prosecutors said that Mr. Santos spent some of the money on his and other candidates’ campaigns, and some on personal expenses, including credit card debt and luxury designer clothing.

Mr. Santos was also charged with lying about his income on his House disclosure form and collecting $24,000 of unemployment money when he was, in fact, employed.

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