Disgraced former Rep. George Santos had served just three months of a seven-year prison sentence for fraud when President Donald Trump gave him a commutation last week.
The news was a shock to the disabled Navy veteran he defrauded, but not surprising to legal experts who have been tracking Trump’s expansive use of the pardon power.
At this stage in his second term, Trump has far exceeded the clemency record of his first stint in the Oval Office, and he has front-loaded these actions compared to past presidents, who typically issued pardons and commutations in their final days in office. So far, less than a year into his second term, the president has granted clemency to more than 1,600 people, according to the Justice Department’s website, far exceeding the level of most presidents in a full four-year term.
The bulk of those actions went to Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol riot offenders. Those offenders protested the results of the 2020 election, which Trump continues to falsely claim was stolen due to widespread voter fraud.
Read Akayla Gardner’s full analysis here.