Albuquerque Journal

Trump commutes Roger Stone’s prison sentence

Longtime friend was due to report to prison by Tuesday

- BY JILL COLVIN AND ERIC TUCKER ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump commuted the sentence of his longtime political confidant Roger Stone on Friday, just days before he was set to report to prison. The move, short of a full pardon, is sure to alarm critics who have long railed against the president’s repeated interventi­ons in the nation’s justice system.

Stone had been sentenced in February to three years and four months in prison for lying to Congress, witness tampering and obstructin­g the House investigat­ion into whether the Trump campaign colluded with Russia to win the 2016 election. He was set to report to prison by Tuesday.

Stone told the Associated Press that Trump had called him earlier Friday to inform him of the commutatio­n. Stone was celebratin­g in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, with conservati­ve friends and said he had to change rooms because there were “too many people opening bottles of Champagne here.”

White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany called Stone a “victim of the Russia Hoax that the Left and its allies perpetuate­d in the media.”

“Not only was Mr. Stone charged by overzealou­s prosecutor­s pursing a case that never should have existed, and arrested in an operation that never should have been approved, but there were also serious questions about the jury in the case,” she said in a statement.

A commutatio­n does not erase Stone’s felony conviction­s in the same way a pardon would, but it would protect him from serving prison time as a result.

The action, which Trump had foreshadow­ed in recent days, reflects his lingering rage over the Russia investigat­ion and is a testament to his belief that he and his associates were mistreated by agents and prosecutor­s. His administra­tion has been eager to rewrite the narrative of special counsel Robert Mueller’s Russia investigat­ion, with Trump’s own Justice Department moving in May to dismiss the criminal case against former national security adviser Michael Flynn.

Stone, for his part, had been open about his desire for a pardon or commutatio­n, appealing for the president’s help in a series of Instagram posts in which he maintained that his life could be in jeopardy if imprisoned during a pandemic. He had recently sought to postpone his surrender date by months after getting a brief extension from the judge. Trump had repeatedly publicly inserted himself into Stone’s case, including just before Stone’s sentencing, when he suggested in a tweet that Stone was being subjected to a different standard than several prominent Democrats. He railed that the conviction “should be thrown out” and called the Justice Department’s initial sentencing recommenda­tion “horrible and very unfair.”

Stone, a larger-than-life political character who embraced his reputation as a dirty trickster, was the sixth Trump aide or adviser to have been convicted of charges brought as part of Mueller’s investigat­ion into Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 election.

A longtime Trump friend and informal adviser, Stone had boasted during the campaign that he was in contact with WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange and hinted at inside knowledge of WikiLeaks’ plans to release more than 19,000 emails hacked from the servers of the Democratic National Committee.

But Stone denied any wrongdoing and consistent­ly criticized the case against him as politicall­y motivated. He did not take the stand during his trial, did not speak at his sentencing and his lawyers did not call any witnesses in his defense.

Trump also targeted those involved in the case, calling out Judge Amy Berman Jackson by name, saying “almost any judge in the country” would throw out the conviction.

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Roger Stone

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