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Santos Behind Bars Week Three: From Prestige to Prison

[quote]Week three in prison.

[quote]The weight of those words alone is enough to knock the wind out of me.

[quote]Yet here I am, living it, breathing it, and confronting the harsh reality every single day.

[quote]No amount of denial or wishful thinking can erase where I find myself. I went from standing at the pinnacle of power and prestige, attending galas, navigating multimillion-dollar fundraisers in glittering Manhattan apartments and Long Island mansions, to the rock bottom of federal confinement. It has been a fall played out for the world to see.

[quote]And let me tell you this: some people are reveling in it, almost celebrating my downfall like it’s a sport.

[quote]Others, quietly and steadfastly, are rooting for me to rise again. In between those extremes, I am simply trying to survive mentally, emotionally, and physically. Ironically, one small grace has emerged in this strange chapter of my life: the people I’ve found myself surrounded by. Against all odds, I’m sharing space with men who, despite our circumstances, maintain a sense of normalcy in our conversations.

[quote]We aren’t hardened criminals. We aren’t career inmates.

[quote]For the most part, we are individuals who stumbled, fell, and are trying to figure out the next step forward. Perhaps most surreal of all is that my dorm mate is none other than Sam Miele.

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by Anonymousreply 23August 25, 2025 6:36 PM

[quote]Yes, the same Sam who once stood beside me at high-end fundraisers.

[quote]Today, instead of discussing campaign strategy in penthouses and estate living rooms, we find ourselves reflecting on the past while lying on prison bunks. We talk openly about our so-called “fall from grace,” but we also talk about rebuilding, about the future, about proving that this is not our final chapter.

[quote]At least, I pray it isn’t. Still, even with camaraderie, reality bites, and sometimes it burns.

[quote]This past week has been unbearable in the most literal sense of the word. The government has many inefficiencies, but no one could have convinced me that being slowly baked alive in a metal warehouse was part of the experience.

[quote]Imagine fifty men jammed together in a makeshift dormitory, with temperatures rarely dipping below 85 degrees and often soaring into the 90s.

[quote]No relief, no reprieve, just suffocating, relentless heat.

[quote]I have begged, pleaded, and filed every request imaginable for the administration to fix the air conditioning. Yet here we remain, cooking in conditions that are not just uncomfortable but dangerous.

[quote]The building itself is hardly fit for long-term habitation: sheet metal walls, shoddy construction, the look and feel of a temporary warehouse rather than a permanent facility.

[quote]On my first night, I discovered a gaping tear in the vinyl ceiling six feet long and four feet wide, exposing thick black mold overhead.

[quote]After weeks of raising the alarm and pointing out my increased reliance on my albuterol inhaler, what was the solution?

[quote]A maintenance officer came by and simply covered it up. Out of sight, out of mind, right?

[quote]Except the heat doesn’t go away. The mold doesn’t disappear.

[quote]And the toll on our health keeps mounting. Breathing becomes a daily struggle.

[quote]Sleep, once a refuge, is now a luxury. On most nights, I scrape together four, maybe five restless hours before the suffocating air jolts me awake.

[quote]The Fifth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States of America states clearly that “cruel and unusual punishment” is forbidden.

[quote]Now, I may be an inmate, but I am also an American. Every man in here is still entitled to basic rights and basic dignity.

[quote]To ignore those rights in the name of bureaucratic incompetence is nothing short of unconstitutional. And let me be clear: the fantasy stories of “Club Fed,” the supposed cushy lifestyle of federal inmates, are nothing but lies. Hogwash.  A myth for the uninformed.

[quote]The truth is that I am living through a broken system, rotting facilities, and administrators who seem incapable or unwilling to correct it.

[quote]If there’s one silver lining, it’s the correctional officers on the ground. Many of them do their best under impossible circumstances, showing professionalism in the face of an administration that appears to have abandoned both staff and inmates. But they are not the decision-makers.

[quote]The people who are supposed to run this facility responsibly—the ones at the top are failing miserably. And it is the men inside, along with the officers tasked with keeping order, who pay the price.

[quote]I refuse to be silent. I refuse to sit quietly and accept this as my reality without shining a light on it. Each week, I will continue to document my experience, my struggles, and my observations, because the American people deserve to know the truth about how their government treats its prisoners. This is my own personal hell, but it is also a fight.

[quote]And if I know one thing about myself, it is that I don’t back down.

by Anonymousreply 1August 25, 2025 3:31 PM

Two words...tough titties.

by Anonymousreply 2August 25, 2025 3:33 PM

Is he being RAPED a lot in prison? I sure hope so!!!

by Anonymousreply 3August 25, 2025 3:35 PM

I forgot to make a thread for week two, so it’s linked below.

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by Anonymousreply 4August 25, 2025 3:37 PM

Week two, August 12, 2025

[quote]Week two in what some here dramatically — and perhaps not inaccurately — call “hell on earth.”

[quote]Officially, it’s FCI Fairton Camp in New Jersey. But labels don’t do justice to the reality.

[quote]Each day here is a strange, almost surreal exercise in detachment, as though I’m watching my own life play out from a distance. The simplest, most ordinary tasks from the outside world — the kind you’d never think twice about — are suddenly uphill battles in this place.

[quote]From day one, I’ve encountered characters who could populate a novel. Within hours of my arrival, a man walked right up to me, no hesitation, and said, “You’re the Congressman, but you can call me the Senator.” That was my welcoming committee.

[quote]I thought I’d seen eccentric confidence before. I hadn’t. But the surprises didn’t stop there. Two years of silence ended when I realized there was a familiar face in the dorm: Sam Miele, my former campaign fundraiser and, technically, co-defendant.

[quote]At first, I didn’t know what to expect. Anger? Indifference? Much of what had been written about him simply wasn’t true.

[quote]Yet instead of trying to tear me down to lighten the blow for himself, his silence in both the courtroom and the media was a testament to his toughness and character. Here I saw a man taking back control to survive under the same suffocating circumstances.

[quote]Sam is a very smart guy who got caught up in the hurricane of my very public unraveling, and seeing him here reminded me just how many lives were altered when my world collapsed.

[quote]This place is a kaleidoscope of humanity. Every inmate carries a story — some sordid, some tragic, some so bizarre you’d swear they were fiction. It’s a treasure trove of personalities and life histories, a living anthology of “how I ended up here” tales. Before I came, I had my own opinions about prison and the people in it. Those opinions have changed.

by Anonymousreply 5August 25, 2025 3:38 PM

[quote]The truth? The system isn’t built to rehabilitate — it’s engineered to break you down, to grind away at hope until all that’s left is compliance.

[quote]That’s been my experience so far. And yet, even here, politics thrives. In fact, the political maneuvering inside this camp could give Capitol Hill a run for its money.  We’re only forty-seven men, but the alliances, rivalries, and gossip swirl constantly. I’ve made it my mission to stay out of the prison politics and the “cliques” that form.

[quote]I talk to everyone — no exceptions. If they choose to ignore me, that’s their loss. I’ve been called “Sunshine” more than a few times in my life, and I’m doing my best to live up to the name — at least on most days.

[quote]Other days… well, let’s just say I’ve cried into my mattress more than once to fall asleep.

[quote]The most soul-crushing part of this existence isn’t the food, the rules, or even the loss of privacy. It’s the disconnect. Out there, the world moves forward. In here, time just sits.

[quote]News trickles in slowly, distorted through the filter of rumor, half-truths, and whatever version of events someone claims to have seen on the TVs in the lunchroom.

[quote]The other day, inmates saw an interview President Trump gave on Newsmax, speaking on the matter of pardons for high-profile individuals — myself included.

[quote]That was enough for half the camp to start congratulating me and predicting I’d be out of here “any day now.” I’ve been quick to shut that down. Just because you hear something on TV doesn’t make it reality. I’m here for what feels like the long haul.

[quote]The question that keeps me up at night isn’t how long I’ll serve, it’s who I’ll be when, or if, I finally walk out of here.  Will the man who leaves this place resemble the George Santos who walked in? Right now, I’m not so sure. These days wear you down in ways I can’t fully explain, though I’m grateful for the few good men here who keep their heads straight and offer genuine support when I’m down. In the meantime, I thought I had found refuge in the one place I could still be creative and that felt like second nature to me — the kitchen.

[quote]I dived right into that role after being here just two days. But now, even that has soured. I’ve taken a step back, and I’m back to watching the clock as the minutes crawl by at a glacial pace. In reality, it’s prison — and prison isn’t supposed to be comfortable.

[quote]I’m reminded of that every day. The only question is: will I manage to keep my mental health stable?

[quote]Until next week, this is my dispatch from inside FCI Fairton — the latest chapter in my personal journey I never thought I’d be writing.

[quote]— George Santos

[quote]Former U.S. Representative, advocate for redemption, reform, and resilience.

by Anonymousreply 6August 25, 2025 3:39 PM

George, honey? You’re a TERRIBLE writer.

by Anonymousreply 7August 25, 2025 3:41 PM

That stupid bitch needs to stop crying and annoying her roommates or they’re going to broomstick her fat ass.

by Anonymousreply 8August 25, 2025 3:43 PM

He’s not a person, he’s a victim narrative generator

by Anonymousreply 9August 25, 2025 3:44 PM

What a drip. Debbie Downer.

by Anonymousreply 10August 25, 2025 3:48 PM

Will they… force him to open his towel so they can spray his privates down with pesticides????

Will he be forced to serpentine serpentine serpentine escape with heavy chains?

by Anonymousreply 11August 25, 2025 3:48 PM

Oh, please.

by Anonymousreply 12August 25, 2025 3:51 PM

Has he gotten fucked in the slammer yet?

by Anonymousreply 13August 25, 2025 3:51 PM

I'm gonna be constructive here: you should kill yourself.

by Anonymousreply 14August 25, 2025 3:56 PM

Samuel Miele, Santos' campaign fundraiser/fellow grifter and now "dorm mate."

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by Anonymousreply 15August 25, 2025 4:17 PM

[quote] Others, quietly and steadfastly, are rooting for me to rise again.

These "others." Has anyone else seen them, George? Can you describe them?

by Anonymousreply 16August 25, 2025 4:26 PM

This Miele guy is another Republican sleaze-ball:

[quote] Sam Miele was caught soliciting donations in late 2021 under the alias Dan Meyer, who was then chief of staff for Rep. Kevin McCarthy, when the former House speaker was the Republican minority leader, according to Santos. Federal authorities still have not confirmed that Meyer was the aide who Miele impersonated.

[quote] Miele, 27, who had been indicted on four wire fraud charges and one count of aggravated identity theft, is scheduled to be sentenced April 30. He faces more than two years in prison, according to estimated sentencing guidelines, a spokesperson for the U.S. attorney’s office said.

[quote]He also acknowledged he committed access device fraud by charging credit cards without authorization to send money to the campaigns of Santos and other political candidates, and for his own personal use, prosecutors said. That fraud totaled about $100,000, they said.

[quote]“The defendant used fraud and deceit to steal more than $100,000 from his victims, funneling this money into the campaign committees of candidates for the House, and into his own pockets,” Breon Peace, U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of New York, said in a statement. “Defrauding potential political contributors undermines our democracy, and we will vigorously prosecute such conduct.”

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by Anonymousreply 17August 25, 2025 4:32 PM

[quote]Has he gotten fucked in the slammer yet?

Who'd wanna fuck that thing R13?

by Anonymousreply 18August 25, 2025 5:00 PM

I do feel bad about the mold if it’s true. I’m sure prisons in this country are a scandal.

He’s got 7 more years of this and he is not adjusting well. I think he may be one of the most prolific drama queens we’ve seen here and that’s saying something.

by Anonymousreply 19August 25, 2025 5:50 PM

Mein Kampf it's not.

by Anonymousreply 20August 25, 2025 5:55 PM

I hope he comes out of prison stacked and spitting Jesus. He’ll still have that wide hip disability. Poor fella.

by Anonymousreply 21August 25, 2025 6:01 PM

Countdown to Georgie comparing himself to Nelson Mandela in three, two ...

by Anonymousreply 22August 25, 2025 6:17 PM

Oh hunny, her and Kevin Sessums are the Devil’s gay bookends!

by Anonymousreply 23August 25, 2025 6:36 PM
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