I doubt it. I doubt he'll give him a pardon for that. I don't know why he got the first one. He'd probably be so mad if Trump got a phone call from him, asking for a second pardon. Why'd he get the first one? Do you know? I have no idea. Let's find out. Let's ask. Why he got the pardon? Yeah. Why'd he get pardoned? There's a lot of people that got pardoned where you're like, wait, what? Yeah. The Biden thing was nuts. Where they pardoned more people than ever, ever. Any president, ever. And how much of it was done with the auto pen? So, he's literally, like, barely there, right? We all agree. At this point, I mean, there used to be disputes. Oh, yeah, there's a stutter. We all now say he was barely there. So, someone else was doing that. So, what's the legality of that? What is the legality of selling pardons? And the preemptive pardons, too. Oh, those are nuts. How about for crimes that just don't exist? You're not being accused of anything. What'd you do? He did not receive a pardon. His prison sentence was commuted by President Donald Trump, which led him out of prison early, but left his convictions in place. Interesting. In October 25th, October of 2025, rather, Trump signed a commutation for former representative George Santos, ordering his immediate release from federal prison, where he was serving a roughly seven-year sentence for fraud and identity theft. Commutation shortens or eliminates the punishment, but does not erase the conviction or declare the person innocent, unlike a full pardon. Trump said Santos had been horribly mistreated and had spent long periods in solitary confinement, which Trump framed as too harsh for a rogue politician compared with others. Commentators widely interpret the move as fitting Trump's pattern of granting clemency to political allies and loyalists rather than based on traditional justice system criteria. I mean, look, it's a weird thing that you could do. The fact that you're the president and you could just say, what did you do? You robbed a bank? Eh, you're sorry. Get free. Meanwhile, if you don't know the president, you're in the bank forever. Like, that is a crazy loophole that still exists that makes no logical sense whatsoever.