Popular NYC SantaCon charity fundraiser was more con than Claus,
authorities say
[April 16, 2026]
By LARRY NEUMEISTER
NEW YORK (AP) — The annual SantaCon bar crawl that floods New York City
with inebriated young people in Santa suits every holiday season was run
by a real-life Grinch, according to federal prosecutors.
Event organizer Stefan Pildes was arrested Wednesday on charges that he
pocketed the majority of the $2.7 million supposedly raised for charity
through SantaCon events from 2019 to 2024.
Money that was supposed to be divided among neighborhood charities was
instead used to renovate a lakefront property in New Jersey, buy concert
tickets, pay for his fancy car, and finance extravagant meals and luxury
vacations in Hawaii and Las Vegas, according to an indictment.
Pildes, 50, of Hewitt, New Jersey, didn't respond to shouted questions
as he left a Manhattan courthouse following an appearance on a wire
fraud charge.
Widely reviled by many New York residents for the chaos it brings to
city streets and subways, the annual SantaCon bacchanal draws thousands
of costumed merrymakers to Manhattan’s streets and watering holes every
year, with most people dressed as Saint Nick, though there are usually a
few Mrs. Clauses, elves and the occasional Grinch.
Many participants pay $10 to $20 for tickets — money organizers insisted
would go to charity.
The event traces its origins to a 1994 flash mob-style event in San
Francisco dubbed “Santarchy,” intended to mock Christmas consumerism. As
the idea spread to cities nationwide, it moved away from its
countercultural origins and became more of a mass bar crawl.

The New York City version is now promoted as “a charitable,
non-political, nonsensical Santa Claus convention.”
Organizers have also tried to improve the event's reputation for drunken
misbehavior by instituting a “Santa code."
“Santa spreads JOY: Not terror. Not vomit. Not trash. Would you want
those under YOUR tree?” reads one rule. Another admonishes participants
not to urinate in the street, start fights, block streets, climb on cars
or deface property — all things that have been problems some years.
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Stefan Pildes leaves Manhattan federal court in New York on
Wednesday, April 15, 2026, after he was charged with wire fraud for
allegedly cheating participants in SantaCon in New York City who
thought their money was all going to charity. (AP Photo/Larry
Neumeister)

As public officials pressured organizers over the years to clean up
their act, SantaCon emphasized its charitable work, advertising that
money raised from ticket sales would go to antipoverty groups, food
banks, city parks and arts foundations.
According to an indictment, Pildes claimed he received no
compensation.
“No producer received income from this event, this is a charity
event,” the indictment alleges he wrote in a March 2023 email to a
potential venue.
But authorities said Pildes, who was freed on $300,000 bail,
siphoned more than half of the proceeds raised each year to an
entity he controlled, using those funds for personal expenses.
Those included $365,000 to renovate a lakefront property, $124,000
on leasing a luxury Manhattan apartment, a $100,000 investment in a
boutique resort in Costa Rica founded by a personal friend and a
nearly $3,000 birthday dinner at a Michelin-starred restaurant in
Manhattan.
"Instead of donating the millions of dollars he raised, he ran his
own con game,” U.S. Attorney Jay Clayton said in a news release.
Pildes was president of and controlled Participatory Safety Inc.,
the nonprofit entity that organized SantaCon, authorities said.
According to the indictment, he solicited dozens of bars and
restaurants to participate and donate 10% to 25% of their food and
beverage sales to his charity organization.
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