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The House Ethics Committee’s adjudicatory subcommittee on March 26–27 found Representative Sheila Cherfilus‑McCormick (D‑Fla.) guilty of 25 of 27 alleged violations after a rare, roughly seven‑hour public hearing and overnight deliberations.
Investigators say the third‑term congresswoman improperly received millions from her family’s health‑care firm after a roughly $5 million state disaster‑relief overpayment and routed significant sums into her 2021–22 campaigns.
The bipartisan panel concluded the evidence met the “clear and convincing” standard and will reconvene after the House returns from its mid‑April recess to recommend sanctions to the full committee — options range from fines or censure to expulsion.
Cherfilus‑McCormick, who was indicted by a federal grand jury in November 2025 on charges tied to alleged FEMA overpayments and has pleaded not guilty, denied wrongdoing and said she looks forward to proving her innocence.
Her attorney unsuccessfully sought delays, arguing the public process could prejudice an upcoming criminal trial.
Several House Democrats publicly called for her resignation, and Republican members signaled they will pursue an expulsion resolution if the committee backs severe punishment.
A full House expulsion would require a two‑thirds vote.








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