Los Angeles Times

Trump pardons a batch of allies

Duncan Hunter and Blackwater workers are among the latest to receive clemency.

- By Chris Megerian and David Lauter

WASHINGTON — President Trump on Tuesday pardoned Duncan Hunter, the former California congressma­n who last year pleaded guilty in a campaign finance scandal, as the president races to reward allies and settle scores in the final weeks of his term.

Hunter, an outspoken supporter of Trump who had been scheduled to begin his nearly one- year prison sentence next month, admitted to using more than $ 150,000 in campaign donations to buy video games, dog food, luxury hotel rooms and even plane tickets for his family’s pet rabbits.

The White House said Trump was pardoning Hunter “at the request of many members of Congress.”

He did not issue a pardon to Hunter’s estranged wife, Margaret, who pleaded guilty to her role in the same scheme and has since f iled for divorce.

The pardon was part of a new batch of clemency actions by Trump, who has relished his unilateral power to wipe felonies from supporters’ records or cut their sentences short. Tuesday’s announceme­nt of 15 pardons and f ive commutatio­ns included two other former members of Congress, two men who pleaded guilty in connection with the Russia investigat­ion and four former private security guards involved in one of the most notorious incidents in the Iraq war.

Hunter was the second member of Congress to endorse Trump. The f irst, former New York congressma­n Chris Collins, also received a pardon on Tuesday. He pleaded guilty last year to securities fraud and lying to investigat­ors.

A key part of the case against Collins was a series of phone calls he made from the South Lawn of the White House, where he was attending a congressio­nal picnic three years ago, to share inside informatio­n about a pharmaceut­ical company in which his family had invested. Informed that

the company’s only product, a drug aimed at treating multiple sclerosis, had failed its trials, Collins told his son, who quickly sold roughly 1 million shares the next day.

A third former Republican congressma­n, Steve Stockman of Texas, had his sentence commuted by Trump. Stockman has served two years of his 10year sentence for misusing charitable funds.

In addition, the president continued to target the Russia investigat­ion with his clemency power. He pardoned George Papadopoul­os, a former campaign advisor, and Alex van der Zwaan, a lawyer who was connected to Trump campaign leaders. Both of them pleaded guilty to lying to federal investigat­ors.

Last month, Trump pardoned Michael Flynn, his former national security advisor, and commuted the sentence of Roger Stone, a longtime political advisor.

Flynn pleaded guilty to lying about his conversati­ons with the Russian ambassador, and he admitted to secretly lobbying for Turkey.

Last year, Stone was convicted of lying to Congress and witness tampering.

Tuesday’s pardons included four men who had been convicted for their involvemen­t in one of the most notorious incidents in the Iraq war, the killing of civilians in Baghdad’s Nisoor Square by employees of Blackwater, a private company hired to provide security to State Department officials in the country.

Ten men, two women and two boys, ages 9 and 11, were shot and killed in the 2007 incident. One of the men receiving a pardon, Nicholas Slatten, was serving a life sentence after a jury convicted him in December 2018 of first- degree murder.

The other three defendants — Paul Slough, Evan Liberty and Dustin Heard — had been given mandatorym­inimum sentences of 30 years each on manslaught­er and firearm charges.

Slatten and his supporters had argued that he and the other three were scapegoate­d by U. S. officials to assuage Iraqi public opinion, which was inf lamed by what many Iraqis considered an unprovoked massacre.

The Iraqis were shot in the mistaken belief that a potential suicide bomber was moving toward the convoy they were guarding, defense lawyers argued.

U. S. District Judge Royce Lamberth, who presided over the trial, rejected the scapegoati­ng argument when he sentenced Slatten last year.

“The jury got it exactly right,” the judge said. “This was murder.”

Blackwater’s founder, Erik Prince, is the brother of Trump’s secretary of Education, Betsy DeVos.

Trump has brushed off crimes committed by U. S. personnel in war zones. Last year he pardoned Clint Lorance, a former Army lieutenant who was serving a 19- year sentence for ordering his men to open f ire on unarmed Afghan men in 2012. Two of them were killed.

“Lie to cover up for the president? You get a pardon,” Rep. Adam B. Schiff ( D- Burbank), chairman of the House Intelligen­ce Committee, tweeted on Tuesday night. “Corrupt politician who endorsed Trump? You get a pardon. Murder innocent civilians? You get a pardon.”

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