The Daily - The Life and Lies of George Santos
Episode Date: January 5, 2023George Santos, the Republican representative-elect from New York, ran for office and won his seat in part on an inspiring personal story.But when Times reporters started looking into his background, t...hey made some astonishing revelations: Almost all of Mr. Santos’s story was fake.Guests: Michael Gold, a reporter covering New York for The New York Times. Grace Ashford, a reporter covering New York politics for The Times.Background reading: Mr. Santos said that he was the “embodiment of the American dream.” But his résumé was largely fiction.On the first day of the 118th Congress, the Santos saga arrived on Capitol Hill.For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Okay.
So I'm in the Longworth office building.
And I see a bunch of reporters, who I assume are also doing the same thing I'm doing,
outside an office that I believe is George Santos'.
Hi, this is Michael Gold.
I'm a reporter for The New York Times.
And I have been with my colleague, Grace Ashford,
covering a newly elected representative from Long Island and part of Queens, George Santos.
And as part of our reporting, we found that George Santos misled voters about his background.
We've been trying to talk to him now for a few weeks and have been met with silence.
So this is the first time where I'll know where he's going to be
and I can try to catch him face to face.
We seem to have spotted him.
He's on the phone down the hallway right now,
pointedly walking away from us.
Now we're chasing him.
Congressman-elect, do you have a second?
What do you have to say to voters in your district?
Safe to assume that's a no comment. From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro.
This is The Daily.
Over the past 48 hours, as the House of Representatives has descended into chaos over the election of a speaker,
another political drama has come to the Capitol in the form of George Santos.
Today, the story of how a serial fabricator was elected to Congress
and how my colleagues Michael Gold and Grace Ashford
discovered that he was a fraud. It's Thursday, January 5th.
Grace, I want to begin this saga where it started, not with a huge public scandal, but with a campaign for Congress on Long Island.
So tell us the story that George Santos told voters about himself in the run-up to November's election.
So George Santos throws his hat in the ring for a congressional seat in New York's 3rd District.
And he really relies on his own background to
make that pitch. My mother migrated to the United States in search of the American dream.
I am her American dream. He talks about how he is the son of Brazilian immigrants
who came to this country, you know, with relatively little, but was able to work his way up.
You can wake up today and change your life in such a fundamental way that you don't know
what tomorrow will hold for you, but you can keep trying and trying.
Going to public schools, attending public colleges.
He says that he's worked both at Citigroup and at Goldman Sachs.
He's a seasoned financial investor with 14 years of experience.
Real blue chip companies on Wall Street.
Yeah, yeah.
A lot of people think the American dream is about money.
No, it's about opportunity.
Money will come, but it's about having opportunities.
And he describes himself as really the embodiment of the American dream.
As a gay man, I stand proudly behind not teaching our children sex or sexual orientation.
He is gay. He is orientation. He is gay.
He is young.
He is energetic.
And he's really proud of that and is really sort of able to make a kind of pitch that
I think other people can't make about, you know, just how inclusive the Republican Party
can be, you know, using his own story to do so.
And how do voters in the third congressional district
respond to the story that George Santos is telling them?
Well, no one's really sure exactly how voters will respond.
This is a newly drawn district,
kind of a new collection of communities
that will be making this decision.
But he's able to marshal the support of the big messages
that Republicans are running with in this election
and that do really well elsewhere in New York. You know, he runs hard on crime and he runs on
inflation. And on election night, he wins. He beats his Democratic opponent, Robert Zimmerman,
by eight points and prepares to take office in January. It's one of the races that make up this
very kind of consequential change.
There wasn't really a red wave across the country in the way that it was predicted.
But here in New York, there were a handful of really key seats that, you know,
helped make up the difference between a Republican majority and a Democratic one in Congress.
Right. And George Santos can rightfully claim that he helped Republicans win back control of the House.
Absolutely.
Okay, so at some point after this election,
you decided to look into George Santos.
Tell us about that.
Yeah, so we were curious because this election had seen the rise of a couple of candidates
whose views were farther to the right than others
that had been elected in New York in the past.
And one of those was George Santos. And he also had this really interesting, dynamic
biography. And we were curious to know more about him. And so my colleague Michael Gold and I got
started on what we thought was going to be a couple of days looking into who this guy was and
what kind of a congressman he'd be. Right, kind of a classic Times profile. Yeah, just about, yeah.
Okay, so what happens? Well, we started with his biography, the things that he sort of said about himself on his
campaign. And one of the things that really jumped out at me was part of his philanthropic efforts.
He talked about how he had run this charity called Friends of Pets United from 2013 through
2018, and that this charity had rescued thousands of
dogs and cats. Wonderful. Who could argue with that? Yeah. So I was sort of curious about it.
And so I looked it up, but was not able to find any kind of trace of it. And this is not necessarily
crazy. You know, there's all sorts of different names that things can be listed under. I tried a
bunch of them, wasn't able to find it. So I reached out to the IRS to confirm and they weren't able to
find it either. Interesting. So what did you make of that? Yeah, I mean, on its own, it's like not
really a huge deal, but it certainly brought a degree of skepticism, I would say, to our reporting.
And, you know, the other sort of kind of key thing that you do when you do these profiles is you
reach out to people that may have worked with the person that you want to talk to, found out what kind of a colleague they are, what kind of work they were
doing, so you can kind of better understand it. But his profile didn't really have much in the
way of dates. And I sort of said, I think we should just kind of check with Goldman Sachs.
I think we should check with Citi to kind of figure out exactly when he was there,
confirm the dates of his employment, which we did. And we're pretty
surprised to hear that they had no record of him ever working there. Hmm. So these two fancy Wall
Street firms, Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, their response to your inquiry about his employment
is basically like, who the heck is George Santos? He never worked there. Not in quite those words,
but yeah, basically. Yeah. I mean, and from there, you know, we started to be obviously curious about a whole lot of other things.
On his website, he listed that he had received degrees in business and economics from Baruch College.
There was an NRCC bio that listed him as also attending NYU.
And we were not able to confirm that he'd graduated
from either institution. Yeah, and so at this point, we were starting to question
whether anything he said about his life is true.
One of the claims that we started to look at was that on a radio show, he said that
the company that he worked for had lost four of its employees in the Pulse nightclub shooting, which was a massacre in Orlando at a gay club where 49 people died.
Right.
But when Michael took a look through the obituaries of each of the 49 people that died, he wasn't able to find anyone who was associated with any of the firms that Mr. Santos worked at.
find anyone who was associated with any of the firms that Mr. Santos worked at.
Another one of the seemingly contradictory claims that Mr. Santos made was about his heritage and religion. In some places, he said that he was a proud American Jew,
where elsewhere he described his Catholic faith. On his website, he said that his
grandparents had fled Jewish persecution in Europe before coming to Brazil.
The publication The Forward did some reporting and discovered that, in fact, his maternal grandparents were born in Brazil.
So seemingly, that claim about fleeing the Holocaust was not true.
Wow.
So to summarize what you have found, it's that much of the story George Santos has told voters is not true.
As you're doing all this reporting, what do you and Michael come to learn about who George Santos really is and what's actually true and real about him?
Yeah, so we were able to confirm a few of the items on his resume.
He did work for kind of a tech hospitality company that he listed, as well as one that did some financial services type work. And he did get his GED, as he said, in 2006. But the public record
paints a portrait that stands in pretty stark contrast to the one that Mr. Santos has on his campaign bio. It shows him living a pretty modest life with his mom and his sister in a series of
rented apartments in Queens. Rather than climbing the ranks of Wall Street and owning multiple
properties, he was actually evicted multiple times from his own apartment. Interesting.
And one of the things that we're able to do also is kind of
begin to speak with people who actually knew him during this period of his life. You know,
former friends, former roommates, an ex-boyfriend, who help us kind of get a sense of the friend and
the roommate and the boyfriend that they knew. Right. And what is it that they tell you?
They describe a man who has always sort of had very high ambitions for himself, who's very quick-witted and able to, I think his boyfriend said, he had everything on the tip of his tongue.
His friends recalled a man with fine tastes who didn't always have the bank account to match, who borrowed money that he wasn't always able to repay.
One of those friends remembered loaning him over $5,000 to help him move in with his boyfriend.
But he said shortly after he loaned him the money, George stopped responding to his calls and text messages and then eventually stopped responding to him at all.
He ended up having to go to court to try to get the money back.
And a judge did fine in his favor, but he said even so, he never was repaid.
So basically, George Santos stole $5,000
from him. That's what he said and what the judge agreed with. But that's really just the beginning
of the questions about his finances. The records we have show that he earns most of his money from
his own company, the Devolder Organization, that he's the sole owner of. This company was set up in May of 2021 and since then
has become tremendously successful, allowing him to pay himself a salary of $750,000 a year
plus dividends. But we know very little about what this company actually does. It doesn't have a
website. The way he's described it has been a little bit confusing and a little contradictory.
site. The way he's described it has been a little bit confusing and a little contradictory. And more to the point, we don't know anything about who its clients are. In his financial disclosure,
he filed as a candidate. He didn't disclose having any clients, which could be a problem for him if
he does have clients. And investigators were to find that he intentionally omitted them from that
filing. Right. And it's pretty hard to imagine
a company earning its owner $700,000 or more
without having any clients.
And you're saying if he did have clients
and he didn't tell the public,
that could be a violation of the law.
If he did so intentionally, yeah.
And finally, we found out that Mr. Santos' financial problems
stretch all the way back to 2008 and all the way to Brazil, where records show he was living as a young man with his mother when he got into some trouble with the police.
We found a court case that shows that he stole a checkbook belonging to a man that his mother had worked for and used it to make some fraudulent purchases.
to a man that his mother had worked for and used it to make some fraudulent purchases.
Eventually, the police were called in and they investigated,
and Mr. Santos and his mother actually confessed to the fraud.
But when the charges were approved by a judge
and the case was supposed to proceed,
they weren't able to find him.
He had somehow escaped.
We don't know exactly what the circumstances were,
but just a few months after
those charges were officially approved, he was working in New York. So once all of this is
revealed, what is fake and what is true, and what is true doesn't seem all that flattering,
what does George Santos have to say? Well, he didn't have anything to say to us. We spent
several weeks requesting interviews, sending questions questions and trying to get any sort of clarification and answers to the questions that our reporting raised, but didn't hear anything.
And for actually about a week or so after our first story dropped, it was radio silence.
It was radio silence.
But after about a week of silence, he speaks up.
And he says that he's finally ready to explain himself.
We'll be right back. So what does it look like for George Santos to finally explain himself amid these mounting lies and fabrications?
So he goes on a media tour.
I'm doing well, granted the circumstances, and I appreciate you asking.
He goes on the radio. He does some TV interviews with what he perhaps might think would be friendly formats to tell his story.
If I disappointed anyone by resume embellishment, I'm sorry.
And he admits that he did not, in fact, graduate from Baruch College or any institution of higher learning.
I believe I used a poor word, but I did work in the industry for a number of years.
I did deliver on those negotiations.
He admits that he did not work directly for Citigroup or Goldman.
A lot of people overstate in their resumes or engrange themselves.
I'm not saying I'm not guilty of that.
I'm just saying I've done so much good work in my career.
I will be an effective member of Congress.
I will be a diligent member of Congress and I will be able to deliver results for Congress for the people of New York's third district.
And he asks the voters to forgive him and to trust that he will be a good representative for them going forward.
And why does he say that he has done these things?
He says that he comes from humble beginnings,
and he sort of appeals to the sense that he was ashamed, perhaps, of his background.
But he also doesn't say that everything was a lie.
In certain instances, he pivots. You know, he says that he didn't personally own property, but his family did. And with regards to his employees who perished in the Pultz nightclub shooting, he says that they were not employees of the firm that he worked for at the time, but they were potential employees.
Potential employees?
We've reached out to his team to try to figure out the names of these people, you know, where they did work or where they would have worked,
but we haven't heard back. So some of these responses are a little bit confusing and
hair-splitting. Yeah, but some of them are very clear. He says, for example, that he never has
had any kind of criminal issue in, you know, the United States or Brazil or in any jurisdiction in
the world. But that does not seem to be the case based on what you have found in your reporting.
No. And in fact, we found out just this week that Brazilian authorities intend to
revive the case against him now that they have been able to locate him and
that whether he appears or not, he will be tried on these fraud charges.
So I have to mention that even these friendly media personalities inevitably asked George Santos,
doesn't this number of lies disqualify you from serving in Congress?
Yeah. Now, there are new accusations that George Santos has actually been lying extensively about his own past.
Now we have the opportunity to hear directly from George Santos himself.
In one particular interview on Fox News where former Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard was filling in for Tucker Carlson, she asked him
this question pretty directly. These are blatant lies and it calls into question how your constituents
in the American people can believe anything that you may say when you are standing on the floor of
the House of Representatives supposedly fighting for them. That's the real issue here. Asks him how voters can trust him, given the degree of, you know,
falsehood and misrepresentation on his resume.
We can debate my resume and how I worked with firms such as Goldman and Citigroup.
Is it debatable or is it just false?
And what he comes up with is sort of an equivocation.
Tulsi, I can say the same thing about the Democrats and the party.
Look at Joe Biden.
He says that his lies pale in comparison to the lies that have been told by Democrats.
And he says that he still very much intends to take office
and do the work that the people elected him for.
Right.
He's saying, I'm headed to Congress no matter what.
Pretty much. But of course,
that's not entirely up to him, right? I mean, presumably Republican leaders in Congress
could have something to say about that. Well, yes and no. At this point,
Mr. Santos's future is a little uncertain. The only requirements for attaining office once you've
been elected are that you are 25 years old, that you've been a citizen of the United States for seven years,
and that you live in the state that you represent, not even the district. Obviously,
there's nothing about embellishing your resume in the Constitution. But, you know,
sort of as a practical matter, Kevin McCarthy, the would-be House Majority Leader, does have
the ability to perhaps force him to resign,
or he could call for an ethics investigation, as a few members of the Democratic Party have,
and I believe at least one Republican member. But Mr. McCarthy's in a really tough position
right now. He is struggling to pull together a coalition to give him the power in Congress that
would allow him to do even basic things
like staffing committees.
So he has almost kind of no incentive
to force something like that,
particularly given that the district itself
is not necessarily a safe Republican seat.
Got it.
Well, let's talk more about the scene in Washington right now
because it's very strange,
not just because the House Speaker's race is unresolved,
but because George Santos is there because the House Speaker's race is unresolved, but because George Santos is
there on the House floor, a new member of Congress, not yet sworn in because there is no new Speaker,
but an almost official member of Congress known as a serial liar. And I'm really curious
what his experience has been like so far. Yeah, so George Santos went to Washington on Tuesday for his first day.
He spent most of the day being chased by reporters throughout the Capitol building,
asking him questions like, what is your legal name?
In the House, he was relatively isolated from his fellow members.
There was a lot of photos which just show him sort of sitting alone.
And there's a photo of the other members of the House Republican caucus from New York that he's sort of not included in.
So I'm curious, in the absence of someone like Kevin McCarthy demanding that George Santos leave the Congress,
are there going to be any consequences for what he has done?
Is there a scenario under which he doesn't serve out the
next two-year term? In the past few weeks, there have been a couple of investigations that have
been opened into Mr. Sandoz's conduct. One is the Nassau County DA. One is the New York State
Attorney General. And one is federal prosecutors in the Eastern District. We don't know exactly
what they're looking at, but they have the ability to investigate things like campaign finance violations.
And if they do find that a crime has been committed,
that could lead to some pretty serious charges.
And that's important because
while actually being convicted of a crime
does not necessarily make you ineligible to hold office,
it certainly makes it a lot harder politically
for you to kind of exist in the ecosystem of Washington.
Grace, what I'm hearing you say is that while Santos might end up being forced out of this
congressional seat, there's not really an easy or quick way to prevent someone like
him, a victorious candidate who has been revealed as a fraud, from being put in Congress, right?
There's just not really a rule against being a liar in the House of
Representatives. And what that means, of course, is that we need to know the information that you
have been telling us before an election, not after it, after the election is too late. Which
brings me to the delicate question of why we didn't learn all of this before November.
There's two ways to think about that question. One is to do with the way that candidates
are vetted by their parties.
In theory, each party would vet their own candidates.
But in practice, Democrats end up relying on Republicans
to vet their candidates,
and Republicans end up relying on Democrats.
And they do that through something called
opposition research.
And there was opposition research done in this case.
Right, and we should just clarify for listeners,
what we mean by opposition research is usually it's a report about a candidate that gets handed to reporters as a basis for their journalism.
Right. And we got that report.
And it did find some of the things that we ended up including.
It found, for example, the evictions.
It found that he had been working for this company called Harbor City that was later sued by the SEC as a Ponzi scheme.
It even found some of
the questions about the pet charity and that it wasn't registered with the IRS.
But rather than taking that as sort of a basis for further investigation,
it ended up focusing on some of the other things that Mr. Santos had done and said.
For example, his anti-abortion stance and his embrace of former President Donald Trump
and some of the things
that he said about January 6th. And that was really the narrative that took hold in the media.
But it's also the reality that Republicans bear a degree of responsibility, either for not knowing
these things about their candidate or not trying to know them. Right. And then, of course, there's
the responsibility of us, of the news media.
How do you think about that?
Yeah, well, I thought about that a lot.
I didn't pitch this story before the election.
I wish that I had.
Right.
But the reality is that I and members of all of the media, as well as the political parties themselves, were, you know, focused on other races.
We knew that New York could be really consequential for the makeup of the House,
but the reality is just that this race didn't get the scrutiny that it should have.
Right.
And I think here it's worth acknowledging
that many news organizations,
the New York Times included,
are not as focused on local news coverage
as we have been in the past.
I mean, I'm old enough as a Times person
to remember when the New York Times
had its own freestanding print New York section.
That went away.
The reality is that we have become
much more of a national paper,
even though we have the word New York in it.
And I think versions of that are true around the country
that lots of local political coverage is not as
ambitious or well-funded as it once was. Yeah, absolutely. And in order to take the time to do
a story like Michael and I were able to do, you need the resources to do it. Right. And that's
not the case for a lot of local papers anymore. So I'm curious, having been on this long journey with George Santos, has this story in all its dimensions, what you guys did and what you didn't do and when you did and when you didn't do it, how has this potentially changed the way you're approaching being a politics reporter?
I think that George Santos is a very unique figure
because he tested our political system to a degree that most politicians don't.
But I think that the sort of journalistic hygiene that we used in this case
can certainly be and should be applied more broadly.
I think that a lot of people are wondering
why nobody noticed this sooner,
you know, why these red flags weren't kind of followed up on.
And part of the reason, I think,
is because nobody really expects people to lie to this degree.
There's just sort of a degree of trust that we expect,
you know, in society.
And when someone breaks that,
it can be pretty jarring. And I think a lot of our systems don't necessarily know how to respond.
Right. We expect people in politics to lie, just to be clear. But I think it's fair to say we don't
expect people in public life to lie about everything.
We don't expect people to invent their entire lives.
But maybe now we should.
Well, Grace, thank you very much.
We appreciate it.
Thank you, Michael.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to know today.
By Wednesday night, House Republican Leader Kevin McCarthy had lost six consecutive votes to become speaker as right-wing lawmakers dug in their heels and continued to deny him
enough votes to lead the chamber. As a result, the House was rendered a useless entity,
unable to swear in its members, adopt rules, assign lawmakers to committees, or pass legislation.
I just want to take a minute to read what our adversaries are saying.
During a news conference, several moderate House
Republicans, including Mike Walz of Florida, called the situation an embarrassment that
undermined faith in American government and its standing around the world. In North Korea, in Iran,
in Venezuela, in Cuba, authoritarian regimes all over the world are pointing to what's going on in the House of Representatives and saying, look at the messiness of democracy.
Look at how it doesn't work, how it can't function.
The vote for a speaker is expected to resume for a third straight day later today.
Today's episode was produced by Eric Krupke, Carlos Prieto, and Claire Tennesgetter.
It was edited by Patricia Willans, contains original music from Marian Lozano, Alisha Ba'itup, and Dan Powell, and was engineered by Chris Wood.
Our theme music is by Jim Grunberg and Ben Landferk of Wonderly.
and Ben Landferk of Wonderly.
That's it for The Daily.
I'm Michael Bilboro.
See you tomorrow.