George Santos Missed the Deadline to Reveal His Finances. Now What?

Authored by nytimes.com and submitted by greenielove
image for George Santos Missed the Deadline to Reveal His Finances. Now What?

There has been considerable speculation about whether Mr. Santos’s financial disclosure might shed light on the source of the more than $700,000 he lent to his campaign.

Mr. Santos has maintained that he earned the money legally through his company, the Devolder Organization, which he said acts as a paid go-between in deals involving wealthy people.

But federal prosecutors claim that Mr. Santos falsified the disclosures he filed as a House candidate in 2020 and 2022, saying that he misrepresented his income from the Devolder Organization and the amounts in his bank accounts.

They also say that he failed to report money he earned by defrauding the unemployment system, and from a Florida investment company that was shuttered after regulators accused it of operating as a Ponzi scheme.

If Mr. Santos reports further income from the Devolder Organization in his 2023 disclosure, he should also disclose the names of his clients — something he has yet to do.

Financial disclosures are a common transparency measure across state and federal government. They are intended to allow the public to assess their representatives’ financial ties for potential conflicts of interest that could affect their leadership.

But the laws and guidelines surrounding House financial disclosures are relatively generous when it comes to timely filings. Representatives are allowed to request extensions well into August, when they are typically on recess and facing less scrutiny from the public.

Late fees are a relatively paltry $200 — members of Congress make $174,000 annually — and are only assessed if a report is filed more than 30 days after its due date.

Mr. Santos is not the only member of New York’s House delegation who has yet to file a form. Representative Jamaal Bowman, a Democrat representing parts of the Bronx and Westchester County, also had yet to file as of Tuesday afternoon.

Representatives Anthony D’Esposito and Brandon Williams, two first-term Republicans, missed the initial May 15 deadline and did not request extensions, though they did eventually file their disclosures.

Nothing is ever certain concerning Mr. Santos, especially when it comes to finances. But this is not the first time that he has filed his disclosures late. Though he began raising large sums of money in 2021 for his 2022 House campaign, Mr. Santos did not file the required disclosure until Sept. 9, 2022, shortly before he was elected in November.

In the unlikely event that Mr. Santos does not file at all, he could face a civil penalty of up to $71,316.

Mr. Santos is due back in the Capitol from August recess on Sept. 12. His next court hearing will take place before that; he is set to appear before a judge in Central Islip on Sept. 7. He has pleaded not guilty.

AssociateJaded3931 on August 15th, 2023 at 22:27 UTC »

McCarthy is too much of a weenie to enforce his own rules.

theoldgreenwalrus on August 15th, 2023 at 22:14 UTC »

Now what?

Vote for the Democratic Party. That's it. Santos won't face consequences as long as there is a republican House

j1akey on August 15th, 2023 at 22:11 UTC »

Now nothing, republicans only care about criminal activity when they can fabricate it against their opponents.