Listen to George Santos lie to a judge

Presented by Amazon: POLITICO's must-read briefing on what's driving the afternoon in Washington.
Feb 24, 2023 View in browser
 
Playbook PM

By Garrett Ross

Presented by

Amazon

JUST POSTED — “George Santos lied to a judge in 2017 bid to help a ‘family friend’ charged with fraud,” by Jacqueline Sweet: “GEORGE SANTOS lied to a Seattle judge about working for Goldman Sachs while speaking at a 2017 bail hearing for a ‘family friend’ who later pleaded guilty to fraud in an ATM skimming scheme, according to an audio recording of the proceeding and court records.”

A thumbnail image shows Rep. George Santos (R-N.Y.)

Audio: George Santos lies to Seattle judge in 2017 testimony.

The exchange: “‘So what do you do for work?’ King County Superior Court Judge SEAN O’DONNELL asked Santos at the May 15, 2017, arraignment of defendant GUSTAVO RIBEIRO TRELHA. ‘I am an aspiring politician and I work for Goldman Sachs,’ Santos replied. ‘You work for Goldman Sachs in New York?’ the judge asked. ‘Yup,’ Santos responded.”

The context: “Santos appeared at the 2017 hearing on behalf of Trelha using his full name, George Anthony Devolder Santos. He told the judge he would secure ‘a long extended-stay apartment through Airbnb’ in Seattle during the case if the defendant was released on bail.

“‘How do you know this man?’ the judge asked. ‘We’re family friends. Our parents know each other from Brazil,’ Santos said. Trelha was ultimately deported to Brazil in early 2018 after serving seven months in jail and pleading guilty to felony access device fraud.

“In a telephone interview, Trelha said Santos lied about their relationship, too. Trelha, through a translator, said he met Santos in the fall of 2016 on a Facebook group for Brazilians living in Orlando, Fla., and that his mother died in 2012. Trelha eventually moved into Santos’ Winter Park, Fla., apartment in November 2016, according to a copy of the lease viewed by POLITICO.”

TOP-ED — “Mike Pence’s Dangerous Gambit,” by J. Michael Luttig in NYT: Former VP MIKE PENCE’s “decision to brand the Department of Justice’s perfectly legitimate subpoena as unconstitutional is a far cry from the constitutionally hallowed ground he stood on Jan. 6.”

INFLATION TICKS UP — After months of signals that inflation was abating, January figures bring a reminder that we’re not out of the woods yet.

The topline summary: “Inflation remains stubbornly elevated and unexpectedly picked up in January, a fresh reading of the Fed’s preferred index showed, underscoring the daunting challenge facing central bankers as they try to wrestle price increases back to a normal pace,” NYT’s Jeanna Smialek and Ben Casselman write.

The deets: “[T]he Personal Consumption Expenditures price index rose 5.4% in January from a year earlier, the Commerce Department’s Bureau of Economic Analysis reported Friday. In December, prices rose 5.3% annually. In January alone, prices were up 0.6% from the prior month, a higher monthly gain from December’s increase of 0.2%,” CNN’s Alicia Wallace writes.

What it means: “All of the numbers suggest inflation accelerated to start the new year, putting the Fed in a position where it likely will continue to raise interest rates. The central bank has pushed benchmark rates up by 4.5 percentage points since March 2022 as inflation hit its highest level in some 41 years,” CNBC’s Jeff Cox writes.

The headlines: “Key US inflation measure surges at fastest rate since June,” AP … “Fed’s Preferred Inflation Gauge Accelerates, Adding Pressure for More Rate Hikes,” Bloomberg … “The Fed’s Preferred Inflation Gauge Sped Back Up,” NYT

Related reads: “Fed Rate Policy Is Shaking Up the World of Muni Debt,” by WSJ’s Heather Gillers … “Fed can’t tame inflation without ‘significantly’ more hikes that will cause a recession, paper says,” by CNBC’s Jeff Cox

TALK OF THIS TOWN — Michael Schaffer writes for POLITICO Magazine: “It’s Easy for National Democrats To Support D.C. Statehood. It Might Not Stay That Way.”

Happy Friday afternoon. Thanks for reading Playbook PM. Drop me a line: gross@politico.com.

 

A message from Amazon:

A new survey from Workplace Intelligence found that 78% of workers are concerned they lack the skills needed to advance their careers. Amazon is working to make skills training attainable and affordable for all their employees.

As a part of their commitment to supporting employee growth, Amazon has pledged $1.2 billion to provide employees with the tools and opportunity for career advancement.

Learn about free career development programs at Amazon.

 

CONGRESS

BIPARTISAN BEGINNINGS — Speaker KEVIN McCARTHY is moving to create a “a bipartisan task force to set parameters for when a lawmaker can be kicked off a committee, with McCarthy reaching out to members to ask them to serve on it,” WaPo’s Leigh Ann Caldwell and Theodoric Meyer report. “Democrats plan to participate and House Minority Leader HAKEEM JEFFRIES (D-N.Y.) is expected to submit the names of Democratic members to serve on the bipartisan group, according to a senior leadership aide.” The move comes after Republicans kicked Rep. ILHAN OMAR (D-Minn.) off the House Foreign Affairs Committee earlier this month.

2024 WATCH

JAMES PASSES ON SENATE RUN — “GOP Rep. John James won’t seek Michigan’s open Senate seat,” by AP’s Joey Cappelletti: “Republican Rep. JOHN JAMES filed paperwork Friday to run for reelection to his Detroit-area House seat, opting against a campaign for the Senate seat being vacated by Democrat DEBBIE STABENOW in 2024. James, a 41-year-old first-term representative and rising star in the party, had been considered one of Republicans’ most promising potential Senate candidates. He ran unsuccessfully for the Senate twice before, losing to Stabenow in 2018 and to Democratic Sen. GARY PETERS in 2020.”

NOT-SO DEEP IN THE HEART — “Tired of Texans running for president? 2024 may be reprieve,” by AP’s Will Weissert and Paul Weber: “The Texas-size hole in the field will be on stark display Friday at a closed Republican donor event outside the state capital, Austin, featuring the likes of former Vice President MIKE PENCE, who is expected to mount a campaign, and former South Carolina Gov. NIKKI HALEY, who announced her bid last week.”

While AP notes that some Texans (looking at you, TED CRUZ, GREG ABBOTT and WILL HURD) could still jump into the race, “if none of them seeks the White House, it’d be the first time since 1972 without at least one major candidate who rose to public prominence in Texas or lived in the state while running for or holding office.”

CONVENTIONAL THINKING — A group of high-profile New York Democrats are pitching President JOE BIDEN to pick the Empire State as the location for the 2024 Democratic National Convention, Punchbowl’s Max Cohen and John Bresnahan scooped. The letter is signed by the likes of Senate Majority Leader CHUCK SCHUMER, Jeffries and Rep. JERRY NADLER, and it comes as Chicago and Atlanta continue their own lobbying pushes for the location. Read the letter

TRUMP CARDS

DOCU-DRAMA — “How a box with classified documents ended up in Trump’s office months after FBI searched Mar-a-Lago,” by CNN’s Katelyn Polantz, Paula Reid and Jeremy Herb: “People familiar with the Trump legal team’s efforts to locate documents describe a confusing chain of events that delayed discovery of the box, including having its contents uploaded to the cloud, emailed to a Trump employee, and moved to an offsite location before finally ending up back at a Mar-a-Lago bridal suite that is now Trump’s office – the very place that the FBI had searched just weeks earlier. …

“One person who described the box’s movements and the special counsel’s inquiry into it described federal investigators as suspecting a ‘shell game with classified documents.’ The person said Trump’s daily movements and instructions to staff are a core part of prosecutors’ questions as well.”

 

We’re spilling the tea (and drinking tons of it in our newsroom) in U.K. politics with our latest newsletter, London Playbook PM. Get to know all the movers and shakers in Westminster and never miss a beat of British politics with a free subscription. Don’t miss out, we’ve got some exciting moves coming. Sign up today.

 
 

BEYOND THE BELTWAY

ON THE GROUND IN EAST PALESTINE — “Seen in East Palestine: Buttigieg, Giuliani and a total political circus,” by Adam Wren: “The partisan fracas over a Feb. 3 derailment has drawn politicians, national media and a TikTok broadcaster to eastern Ohio. It hasn’t eased residents’ worries.”

VANCE’S VIEWPOINT — “East Palestine Crisis Tests a Trump-Backed Senator,” by NYT’s Jazmine Ulloa: “While a fight brews between Democrats and Republicans over the role of the federal government in the derailment’s aftermath, [Sen. J.D.] VANCE, 38, has been at the center of it all. Some of his actions have been the conventional response of any seasoned politician. He has drafted letters calling on federal officials for more oversight and met with some of the residents most affected by the derailment and chemical spill. But he also has joined far-right Republican figures in depicting the deep-red village in northeastern Ohio as a forgotten place, taking a page from Mr. Trump’s grievance-politics playbook.”

STORM WARNING — “New storm brings threat of blizzards, floods to California,” by AP’s Robert Jablon: “California and other parts of the West girded Friday for floods and blizzards from the latest winter storm to pound the U.S., while thousands of people in Michigan shivered through extended power outages wrought by one of the worst ice storms in decades. The National Weather Service warned of a ‘cold and dangerous winter storm’ that began Thursday and was expected to linger through Saturday in California.”

JUDICIARY SQUARE 

HEADS UP — “A federal judge may rule as soon as Friday on a lawsuit seeking to block the use of medication abortion nationwide, in the biggest abortion-related case since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade last year,” CNN’s Devan Cole writes. “The lawsuit, filed in November by anti-abortion advocates against the US Food and Drug Administration, targets the agency’s two-decade-old approval of mifepristone, the first drug in the medication abortion process. US District Judge MATTHEW KACSMARYK, an appointee of former President Donald Trump, has extended the briefing deadline in the case until Friday. He could then issue a ruling at any time on a motion by the plaintiffs to temporarily block use of the medication.”

 

JOIN POLITICO ON 3/1 TO DISCUSS AMERICAN PRIVACY LAWS: Americans have fewer privacy rights than Europeans, and companies continue to face a minefield of competing state and foreign legislation. There is strong bipartisan support for a federal privacy bill, but it has yet to materialize. Join POLITICO on 3/1 to discuss what it will take to get a federal privacy law on the books, potential designs for how this type of legislation could protect consumers and innovators, and more. REGISTER HERE.

 
 

WAR IN UKRAINE

THANKS BUT NO THANKS — “You ain’t no middleman: EU and NATO slam China’s bid to be a Ukraine peacemaker,” by Stuart Lau: “Earlier on Friday, the Chinese foreign ministry published a 12-point, 892-word ‘position paper’ with a view to settling what it calls the ‘Ukraine crisis,’ without referring to it as a war.”

THE DIASPORA — “Ukrainians are finding refuge at fast pace thanks to everyday Americans. But is it enough?” by USA Today’s Maureen Groppe

YELLEN YELLING — “Yellen Confronts Russian Officials at G20 Meeting,” but NYT’s Alan Rappeport: “Treasury Secretary JANET L. YELLEN directly confronted senior Russian officials during a meeting of finance ministers of the Group of 20 nations on Friday, calling it a ‘moral imperative’ to end the war in Ukraine. … Her condemnation of the war was a rare direct interaction between American and Russian officials.”

TALE OF TWO LEADERS — “‘It’s Complicated’: How Biden and Zelensky Forged a Wartime Partnership,” by NYT’s Peter Baker and Andrew Kramer: “The two leaders have been on a remarkable journey together since the invasion one year ago on Friday, forging a partnership that is critical to the future of the international order but that at times has been fraught with friction. … Mr. Biden has secured $113 billion in military and other aid to be delivered to Ukraine, but in their telephone calls it has never been enough for Mr. Zelensky, who presses for more, more, more, faster, faster, faster. It took months to develop a better understanding of each other and smooth over hard feelings.”

Related read: “Tears, defiance and new tanks in Ukraine for war anniversary,” by AP’s John Leicester, Hanna Arhirova and Samya Kullab

AMERICA AND THE WORLD 

FOR YOUR RADAR — “Chinese Jet Fighter Shadows U.S. Aircraft Over South China Sea,” by WSJ’s Alastair Gale: “A Chinese J-11 jet fighter, armed with four air-to-air missiles, appeared at the rear of an American P-8 patrol aircraft, passed above and settled a few hundred feet from the wing of the U.S. Navy plane.

“‘American aircraft, this is the PLA air force. You are approaching Chinese airspace. Keep a safe distance or you will be intercepted,’ a Chinese military ground station broadcast to the P-8, using the abbreviation for the People’s Liberation Army. Encounters such as the one on Friday over the South China Sea are now a near-daily occurrence, and they are becoming more dangerous, U.S. officials say.”

VALLEY TALK

FOLLOW THE MONEY  — “Gmail creates online fundraising “apocalypse,” by FWIW’s Kyle Tharp: “Last fall, Google’s Gmail created a special program allowing political fundraisers to bypass spam filters if they met certain qualifications and adhered to a set of industry standards. When that program ended on January 31st, the major campaigns that were enrolled saw their email deliverability plummet and online fundraising shrink.”

THE BRAVE NEW WORLD — “The right’s new culture-war target: ‘Woke AI,’” by WaPo’s Nitasha Tiku and Will Oremus: “The new skirmishes over what’s known as generative AI illustrate how tech companies have become political lightning rods — despite their attempts to evade controversy. Even company efforts to steer the AI away from political topics can still appear inherently biased across the political spectrum. It’s part of a continuation of years of controversy surrounding Big Tech’s efforts to moderate online content — and what qualifies as safety vs. censorship.”

PLAYBOOKERS

MEDIA MOVE — Vice CEO Nancy Dubuc announced she is leaving the company, Semafor’s Max Tani scoops.

TRANSITIONS — Jeff Ventura is now VP of comms at the Council for Responsible Nutrition. He previously was director of comms for HHS. … Danny Jativa is now comms adviser and press secretary for Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.). He previously was comms director and foreign policy adviser for Rep. Carlos Gimenéz (R-Fla.). …

… Mitch Heidenreich is now senior legislative assistant for Rep. Jill Tokuda (D-Hawaii). He previously was a legislative analyst with the American Council of Life Insurers. … Luis Reyes is now military legislative assistant for Rep. John James (R-Mich.). He most recently was deputy legislative assistant for Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.).

BONUS BIRTHDAYS: Rep. Rudy Yakym (R-Ind.) … Blake Waggoner

Did someone forward this email to you? Sign up here.

Send Playbookers tips to playbook@politico.com or text us at 202-556-3307. Playbook couldn’t happen without our editor Mike DeBonis, deputy editor Zack Stanton and producers Setota Hailemariam and Bethany Irvine.

 

SPONSORED CONTENT

With the help of Amazon Technical Training, Mina turned a job into a career

Amazon offers hourly employees like Mina technical training and prepaid college tuition to turn entry level jobs into long-term, higher-paying careers. Hear what Amazon employees are saying about their career development.

Sponsored by Amazon

Advertisement Image

 
 

Follow us on Twitter

Rachael Bade @rachaelmbade

Eugene Daniels @EugeneDaniels2

Ryan Lizza @RyanLizza

Eli Okun @eliokun

Garrett Ross @garrett_ross

 

Subscribe to the POLITICO Playbook family

Playbook  |  Playbook PM  |  California Playbook  |  Florida Playbook  |  Illinois Playbook  |  Massachusetts Playbook  |  New Jersey Playbook  |  New York Playbook  |  Ottawa Playbook  |  Brussels Playbook  |  London Playbook

View all our politics and policy newsletters

Follow us

Follow us on Facebook Follow us on Twitter Follow us on Instagram Listen on Apple Podcast
 

To change your alert settings, please log in at https://www.politico.com/_login?base=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.politico.com/settings

This email was sent to ateebhassan000.ravian@blogger.com by: POLITICO, LLC 1000 Wilson Blvd. Arlington, VA, 22209, USA

Please click here and follow the steps to unsubscribe.

California Today: Finding hope in ballroom dance after tragedy

Monterey Park has a tight-knit world of passionate dance students who are determined to carry on after the mass shooting in January.

It's Friday. Passionate dance students in Monterey Park are determined to carry on. Plus, snow has arrived in California in some unusual places.

Dancers at the Lai Lai Ballroom and Studio in Alhambra, which reopened in late January.Li Qiang for The New York Times

It has become a tragic routine: A mass shooting draws attention to an area, thrusting it into an unfortunate spotlight. Suddenly we want to learn the intricate details of a community that had always been in our midst.

And so it went last month when Star Ballroom Dance Studio in Monterey Park became the destination of a lone gunman who fatally shot 11 people. He then appeared at a nearby studio known as Lai Lai but was fought off in the lobby by the grandson of its original owners.

In the days that followed, I spent time talking to patrons and instructors of the two studios and discovered a tight-knit world of passionate dance students. Many were first-generation Asian Americans, drawn to the artistry of the tango, fox trot and cha-cha after having spent most of their lives working and raising children.

They held a reverence for the craft and were dedicated to studying its technique. Some favored the social gatherings that featured an open floor, where they could buy a ticket to what is known as the afternoon tea dance or the night dance. And there were often parties and showcases, which would draw crowds of 200 or more.

Star and Lai Lai shared a clientele and had been places of refuge. There were accounts of confidence, displays of style and verve — and with them, transformations of lives that had once been shaped mostly by duty and routine. And patrons had built bonds with world-class instructors, many of them born in Europe, who found their edges softening among such eager students.

ADVERTISEMENT

Ad

There is a regret that comes from not having previously known about such a rich community and the history behind it. And I wondered if there was a way to write about these studios in all their glory, to magnify the beauty and dignity that could have been seen before violence brought us to their doors.

The result was an article published last week that included videos and photographs from my colleagues Isabelle Qian, Li Qiang and Ben Laffin.

It helped to speak with Jo-Ann and David Chui, siblings whose mother, Ivy Wang, opened Star ballroom in 1995. Wang was a dancer from Taiwan and a single mother. Together, the three ran Star, which never closed its doors and was bustling until late at night.

Much of its revenue came from galas and celebrations that were held for every holiday, even Christmas and New Year's Day. Some would drive for hours, turning up in crystal-studded gowns and heels.

ADVERTISEMENT

Ad

The work was grueling, but Wang and her children saw the studio as a hub for those far from their birth lands.

"At the time we provided comfort and a place to go for those new immigrants who are struggling," Jo-Ann Chui, 49, told me. "If we close, then where are they going to go? It's going to be lonely, and they want to hang out with their friends. Star offered a community where they feel they can belong."

She taught ballroom classes at the studio along with other instructors, and she eventually took over the business from her mother before selling it around 2013.

A memorial with flowers, candles and photos of the victims now sits outside Star. It is not clear whether Maria Liang, the current owner, will reopen it.

ADVERTISEMENT

Ad

Lai Lai, on a main thoroughfare in Alhambra, has tried to carry on, welcoming many back to its wooden floor — a place for those who still find hope in dance.

Fur coats haven't been en vogue in California for many years, according to some stylists and clothing store owners in the state.Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

If you read one story, make it this

California's fur ban took effect in January. So far, it's been largely met with a shrug.

Subscribe Today

We hope you've enjoyed this newsletter, which is made possible through subscriber support. Subscribe to The New York Times with this special offer.

Twin Lakes State Beach in Santa Cruz had a coating of snow on Thursday, as winter storms passed through California.Karen Krenis, via Associated Press

The rest of the news

  • Snowfall: California residents saw snowfall on Thursday in some unusual locations, and the storm is about to intensify in the state.
  • Oil profits bill: A California bill penalizing oil profits has made little progress in the months since Gov. Gavin Newsom called for the proposal, The Associated Press reports.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
  • Weinstein sentenced: Harvey Weinstein, the movie producer whose treatment of women propelled the #MeToo movement in 2017, was sentenced to 16 years in prison for committing sex crimes in Los Angeles County.
  • Police shooting: Los Angeles police officers shot and killed a woman who pointed a pellet gun at them, The Associated Press reports.
CENTRAL CALIFORNIA
  • Hunger strike: After detainees began a hunger strike last week at two Central Valley facilities to protest the conditions, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement said it takes allegations of misconduct seriously, The Fresno Bee reports.
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
  • Merchants: Many small-business owners in San Francisco saw revenues plunge during the pandemic and suffered losses from commercial burglaries — to the point that they're hanging on by a thread, The San Francisco Chronicle reports.
  • Reverend steps down: The Rev. Cecil Williams is stepping away from GLIDE, the world-renowned Tenderloin church and social movement he started 60 years ago, The San Francisco Chronicle reports.
David Malosh for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Simon Andrews.

What we're eating

Cyclists on the American River Parkway in Sacramento.Max Whittaker for The New York Times

Where we're traveling

Today's tip comes from Fred Hoffman:

"The American River bike trail stretches 32 miles from the confluence of the Sacramento and American Rivers near downtown Sacramento and heads eastward to Folsom Lake. This car-free path hugs the American River, attracting cyclists, runners, walkers, bird watchers and others attracted to its serenity and natural beauty. Wildlife and native plants are in abundance. It's no wonder smiles are in big supply there."

Tell us about your favorite places to visit in California. Email your suggestions to CAtoday@nytimes.com. We'll be sharing more in upcoming editions of the newsletter.

Sasithon Photography

And before you go, some good news

In a relationship open to perusal by millions of followers, the podcasters Cody Michael Kolodziejzyk and Kelsey Lang Kreppel have made a practice of not letting their favorite moments turn into content.

Kreppel, 29, and Kolodziejzyk, 32, live in Los Angeles. They have separate YouTube channels but collaborate on certain series, including "Couples Cringe." Both have built an audience on playful musings.

Kolodziejzyk, who shortened his professional name to Ko at the start of his media career, is known, among other things, for co-hosting the "Tiny Meat Gang" podcast with Noel Miller. Kreppel, a vlogger known for her red-carpet fashion reviews, runs a fashion and accessories line, TRULUVE, and hosts a podcast called "Circle Time."

Thanks for reading. We'll be back on Monday.

Soumya Karlamangla and Briana Scalia contributed to California Today. You can reach the team at CAtoday@nytimes.com.

Need help? Review our newsletter help page or contact us for assistance.

You received this email because you signed up for California Today from The New York Times.

To stop receiving California Today, unsubscribe. To opt out of other promotional emails from The Times, manage your email preferences.

Subscribe to The Times

Connect with us on:

facebooktwitterinstagram

Change Your EmailPrivacy PolicyContact UsCalifornia Notices

LiveIntent LogoAdChoices Logo

The New York Times Company. 620 Eighth Avenue New York, NY 10018