The Curtain Call: Santos Released After Just 3 Months in Prison
The tumultuous saga of disgraced former New York Rep. George Santos took its most dramatic turn yet on Friday night when President Donald Trump announced an immediate commutation of Santos’s seven-year federal prison sentence.
The announcement came via a characteristic post on Truth Social, where Trump declared he had “just signed a Commutation, releasing George Santos from prison, IMMEDIATELY.”

Santos, the former Congressman expelled from the House and convicted on 23 counts of wire fraud and aggravated identity theft, was picked up by his family from a New Jersey federal prison, having served less than three months of his term. The theatrical nature of his political life continued right up to his incarceration, as he previously wrote on X: “Well, darlings. The curtain falls, the spotlight dims, and the rhinestones are packed.”
I'll preface this by saying I agree with Trump commuting George Santos' sentence.
But let's admit it's funny that the first congressman in modern history to serve prison time was released because there are members of Congress committing worse crimes & will never serve time. pic.twitter.com/TDrB75SIip
— Chadwick (@thechadwickpaul) October 18, 2025
George Santos is the 10th Republican congressman to receive a pardon or clemency from Donald Trump.
“Law and order.” pic.twitter.com/WBxAL3e1xN
— Republicans against Trump (@RpsAgainstTrump) October 17, 2025
Trump’s Defense: From “Rogue” to Victim
In his lengthy defense of the commutation, President Trump framed Santos not as a convicted fraudster who lied about everything from his education to his employment to his Jewish heritage, but as a victim.
Trump claimed Santos had been kept in solitary confinement and was “horribly treated for a long time.”
He also tried to justify the extraordinary act of clemency by comparing the disgraced former Representative to a political opponent:
“George Santos was somewhat of a ‘rogue,’ but there are many rogues throughout our Country that aren’t forced to serve seven years in prison. I started to think about George when the subject of Democrat Senator Richard ‘Da Nang’ Blumenthal came up again.”
Trump’s post referenced his ongoing demand for an investigation into Senator Blumenthal’s past claims about his Vietnam service, concluding with the ultimate show of political allegiance: “This is far worse than what George Santos did, and at least Santos had the Courage, Conviction, and Intelligence to ALWAYS VOTE REPUBLICAN!”
Justice Denied? Convictions Remain
While Santos is free, the Department of Justice confirmed that his criminal convictions for wire fraud and aggravated identity theft will remain on his record; a commutation does not erase the legal finding of guilt.
Prosecutors had initially pushed for a longer sentence, citing Santos’s attention-seeking behavior and lack of remorse throughout the legal proceedings.
Santos’s attorney, however, hailed the move, reflecting that they “never lost hope,” and claimed the original sentence was already “fair and commensurate.” Trump concluded his post with a simple: “good luck and a great life.” The immediate release of one of the nation’s most notorious political fabulists is sure to ignite a fresh firestorm over the limits of presidential power