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‘Watched her die a painful death’: Veteran caught in Santos dog scam furious about release



Veteran Rich Osthoff was defrauded by ex-Rep. George Santos who, he claimed, set up a GoFundMe for his dying dog — and then pocketed the cash. Watching President Donald Trump free the disgraced congressman Friday has left him furious.

Speaking to MSNBC on Monday, Osthoff said he was "sick to my stomach" after hearing about Santos' commutation. "For the president of the United States to stick me in the gut with a knife, and every other veteran and every other military member gets a knife to the gut."

Osthoff had hoped that Santos would serve at least half of the sentence before he was released or pardoned.

"His sentence would serve as a warning to federal officials that if you do this, you'll end up in prison. That's what the DOJ wanted the message to be. What message does him walking out of prison after three months send him?" Osthoff asked.

"Walking out of prison after three months is a complete travesty. Same with the the Jan. 6th people. This is the president, a rogue president now just using his pardon power like a cudgel against everything that's decent, good and holy. It's shameful and a disgrace. And I'm almost ashamed that I served my country. Now, this is not the country I raised my hand three times to re-enlist for."

Osthoff's service dog had cancer and he sought help from individuals who could contribute to fund the treatment he couldn't afford. Santos offered to start a GoFundMe for the dog, but, in the end, Osthoff never saw a dime of the money.

After the scam was revealed, individuals stepped up to help him get another service dog, but it meant his dog Sapphire suffered.

"Sapphire still died and I watched her die a painful death," he said.

"And that guy is the one who did that to me. Every time I see him on TV now ... it brings a wound right back into the forefront again," Osthoff lamented.

Santos told CNN over the weekend that he hopes to be a more honest person and express contrition for those he wronged. But Osthoff isn't buying it.

"He's been so rude to me. He's lied about me. He's defamed me on TV dozens of times. He has no remorse," the Navy veteran said.

Santos spent 84 days in prison out of the 87 months in prison.



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‘Just a complete lie’: Top Dem rips Trump administration on ‘absolutely illegal’ bombings



The top Democrat on the House Armed Services Committee blasted President Donald Trump and his administration for carrying out "absolutely illegal" military action in the Caribbean Sea and resisting congressional oversight.

Alvin Holsey, the admiral who had been overseeing the bombings of boats as head of U.S. Southern Command, announced his sudden retirement after the military conducted a sixth strike near Venezuela, and Rep. Adam Smith (D-WA) told The New Republic his departure after just under a year was concerning.

"Prior to Trump becoming president, no combatant commander that I’ve ever dealt with has resigned in the middle of their term," Smith said. "So it sounds an awful lot like — and we have heard rumors to this effect — that he has been forced out, and this is a question that I’ve raised with senior leaders at the Pentagon on a number of occasions in recent days."

"Look, ever since Trump became president, one of the big questions in my world of the Department of Defense is: What do you do if you’re given an illegal order?" Smith added. "And the military, you know, has steadfastly said, we serve the Constitution, we will not carry out illegal orders."

That question has been put to the test, Smith said, with orders by Trump and his Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth.

"The orders to blow up those six boats, in my view and in the views of most legal scholars, are absolutely illegal," the congressman said. "It is an extrajudicial killing. There is no possible Article II justification for that, and there has been no congressional authorization for the use of force."

"So I don’t think it takes an enormous leap of logic to think that maybe Admiral Holsey wasn’t comfortable with that — they had a discussion, and then he was forced out," he added. "We’ll see if something else comes out in the next couple of days, but I think that has to be the presumption until we see some evidence otherwise."

Administration officials have briefed lawmakers on the bombings, which have killed 27 people, but Smith said the administration has not shared enough information with Congress.

"We don’t know much, and I have not yet been directly briefed by anyone at the Department of Defense," he said. "There was a briefing to one of our subcommittees a couple of weeks ago early on, but it was very light on details, and, look, I’ve been through this stuff many times before — stuff we did in Afghanistan and Iraq and Somalia and elsewhere – and when we have a target in this case, the committees are regularly briefed on the specific, very specific details — who was targeted and why, you know, and what was the accumulation of intel and evidence that led to the strike, and they’ve always given us the answer: This was the person, this was who did it, this is why we did it."

"None of that has been given on these Venezuelan strikes," the congressman added. "But Press Secretary [Katherine] Leavitt today saying, 'We’ve been very transparent on this' — that’s just a complete lie. They haven’t been transparent at all."