House Ethics panel finds Democrat Rep. Cherfilus-McCormick guilty on nearly all counts in $5 million disaster fund scheme
A House Ethics adjudicatory subcommittee has found Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick, D-Fla., guilty on nearly all alleged violations tied to the laundering of millions in disaster relief funds into her campaign account. The eight-member panel, chaired by Rep. Michael Guest, R-Miss., announced its decision in a written statement Friday morning after a rare public hearing that stretched past midnight the night before.
The subcommittee approved a motion for summary judgment covering Counts 1 through 15 and 17 through 26 of the statement of alleged violations. The panel will reconvene after the Easter recess to determine a recommended punishment, which could include expulsion from Congress.
Cherfilus-McCormick, 47, is accused of stealing more than $5 million in disaster relief funds that were improperly paid to her family's healthcare company. She and her siblings allegedly used the money to jumpstart her 2021 congressional campaign and for personal use. She also faces a separate federal criminal indictment, having been charged by a Miami grand jury on Nov. 18, 2025, and could face up to 53 years in prison if convicted at her federal trial this summer.
She has pleaded not guilty to the federal charges.
Six hours, four attorneys, and zero cooperation
Thursday's public ethics hearing lasted more than six hours, the first of its kind since 2010. That gap alone tells you something about the severity of what this committee believes it uncovered.
Rep. Mark Desaulnier, D-Calif., set the tone at the outset:
"The allegations before us are extremely serious. They not only concern an individual member's conduct, they also implicate the public's confidence in the House's integrity as an institution."
That a Democrat delivered those words is worth noting. This is not a partisan exercise. The evidence was damning enough to earn bipartisan gravity.
Cherfilus-McCormick has cycled through four different attorneys over the course of this investigation. Her latest, William Barzee, repeatedly claimed violations of her due process rights while maintaining her innocence. He also sought to delay the committee's proceedings until June, citing his recent entry into the case. The panel promptly denied the request in a closed-door session, as Fox News reports.
The delay tactics have been a consistent pattern. Rep. Guest made that abundantly clear in a combative exchange with Barzee:
"For you to sit here and make the claim that we, the committee, is trying to trample upon the rights of your client. I take offense to that."
"For two years we've tried to get documents from your client. Not only have we requested documents, but we have subpoenaed those documents. Those documents were not provided for two years."
Two years of subpoenaed documents ignored. Four attorneys burned through. A last-minute request for a multi-month delay. At some point, the stalling itself becomes the story.
The "handshake agreement" defense
Barzee's defense strategy produced one of the hearing's more remarkable moments. He claimed that an undated, unsigned chart constituted evidence of a "profit-sharing agreement" and argued that because Cherfilus-McCormick is of Haitian descent, it was "not atypical" to have a "handshake agreement" to divvy up millions of dollars.
Rep. Nathaniel Moran, R-Texas, a former business transaction attorney, was unmoved:
"I did a lot of business transaction law for a number of years before I came to Congress. I drafted a lot of profit-sharing agreements. Never saw one that was just a chart that was unsigned."
An unsigned chart is not a profit-sharing agreement. It is a piece of paper. The committee recognized that, and the defense crumbled under the weight of its own absurdity.
What comes next
Under House rules, expelling a member requires a two-thirds vote. Rep. Greg Steube, R-Fla., has already vowed to move forward with his resolution to expel Cherfilus-McCormick regardless of the committee's final recommendation.
The real question is whether House Democratic leadership will continue to stand by her. So far, they largely have. That silence grows more conspicuous by the day. When your own party's member on the ethics subcommittee calls the allegations a threat to institutional integrity, the "wait and see" posture starts to look less like caution and more like complicity.
This is a member of Congress accused of funneling FEMA disaster relief money, funds meant for Americans in crisis, into a family business and then into a political campaign. The ethics committee has now found those allegations proven on nearly every count. A federal trial looms this summer with a potential sentence of 53 years.
The committee investigation preceded the federal indictment by more than two years. That means Congress saw this before the DOJ acted. They did their work. Now the full House has to decide whether accountability still means something, or whether party loyalty outweighs a $5 million theft from disaster victims.
The facts have spoken. The votes haven't.




