Rep. George Santos, R-N.Y., speaks to reporters outside after an effort to expel him from the House, at the Capitol in Washington, May 17, 2023. AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File
A federal magistrate ruled Tuesday to make public the names of the cosigners on indictedย Rep. George Santosย โ $500,000 release bond, but said sheโll keep them secret for now to give his lawyer time to appeal the decision.
U.S. Magistrate Judge Anne Shieldsโ ruling came a day after Santosโ lawyer said the New York Republicanย would risk going to jailย to protect the identities of his cosigners whose backing enabled his pretrial release.
The decision was a victory for news outlets including The Associated Press and The New York Times that petitioned Shields last week to unseal the names, citing a need for โthe greatest transparency possible.โ
Santosโ lawyer, Joseph Murray, urged Shields to keep the names secret. He suggested that the congressmanโs cosigners could โsuffer great distress,โ including possible job losses and physical harm, if theyโre identified publicly.
Murray said he, Santos and Santosโ staff have been receiving threatening and harassing calls and messages, including death threats. He said he worries Santosโ critics โare just waiting to pounceโ on the people backing his release.
โMy client would rather surrender to pretrial detainment than subject these suretors to what will inevitably come,โ Murray wrote.
Shields gave Murray until 12 p.m. Friday to appeal. A message seeking comment was left with Murray.
Santos, 34, represents parts of Queens and Long Island. He pleaded not guilty May 10 to charges he duped donors, stole from his campaign, lied to Congress about being a millionaire and cheated to collect unemployment benefits he didnโt deserve.
At Murrayโs request, Shields agreed at Santosโ arraignment to keep the cosignersโ names out of the public court record. In her ruling Tuesday, Shields reversed that decision.
Santosย
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