The
Campaign Legal Center, a non-partisan government watchdog, made
the complaint in a filing with the Federal Election Commission (FEC)
after Santos admitted in an interview with the New York Post
that he fabricated much of his resume.
"The commission should thoroughly investigate what appear to be
equally brazen lies about how his campaign raised and spent
money," according to the complaint.
Santos' office in Congress referred queries to the lawmaker's
election campaign, which did not immediately respond to a
request for comment.
Santos, who was elected in November to represent a district in
New York City's Queens borough and parts of its wealthy Long
Island suburbs, already faces an investigation by a New York
prosecutor's office, according to the district attorney for
Nassau County. The nature of that inquiry remains unclear.
Citing federal disclosures, the complaint filed on Monday with
the FEC alleges that Santos "appears to have spent $13,500 on
rent payments for Santos's personal residence in blatant
violation of the law."
The Campaign Legal Center said Santos' campaign finance
disclosures also do not square with other disclosures he has
made regarding his income and assets.
"The overall circumstances instead indicate that unknown
individuals or corporations may have illegally funneled money to
Santos's campaign," according to the complaint.
An FEC spokesman said the commission does not comment on pending
enforcement matters.
Following news stories detailing falsehoods in how Santos has
described his education and work and family history, Santos last
month apologized for "embellishing" his resume, while defending
aspects of the way he had represented himself.
(Reporting by Jason Lange; Editing by Scott Malone and Bill
Berkrot)
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