Marlborough Express

Trump sets drug dealer free

-

federal prison in Aliceville, Alabama hours later, and ran into her waiting family members’ arms.

Unlike a pardon, the commutatio­n does not erase Johnson’s conviction, but only ends her sentence.

Johnson was convicted in 1996 on eight criminal counts related to a Memphis-based cocaine traffickin­g operation. Federal courts, including the Supreme Court, rejected her appeals. Clemency was rejected by President Barack Obama, who commuted the sentences of hundreds of federal inmates convicted of drug crimes.

Trump’s decision, his latest inspired by a celebrity champion, comes amid a flurry of recent pardons issued by the president. He has been working outside the traditiona­l pardon process usually overseen by the US Justice Department, and has appeared to favour cases that catch his attention – because they have been championed by either friends and celebritie­s or conservati­ve media.

He has also been drawn to cases in which he believes prosecutor­s may have been motivated by politics – situations that may remind him of his own predicamen­t at the centre of special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion into Russian election meddling.

Trump recently pardoned conservati­ve commentato­r Dinesh D’souza, who was convicted of a campaign finance violation, and granted a posthumous pardon to boxing’s first black heavyweigh­t champion, Jack Johnson, which had been championed by actor Sylvester Stallone.

Some have seen the pardons as sending a message to former campaign aides ensnared in the Mueller probe or other legal inquiries, including Trump’s longtime lawyer and legal ‘‘fixer’’ Michael Cohen, whose finances are under federal investigat­ion. –AP

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand