The Record (Troy, NY)

Trump to flex pardon powers

- By Jill Colvin, Eric Tucker and Jonathan Lemire

WASHINGTON » Advocates and lawyers anticipate a flurry of clemency action from President Donald Trump in the coming weeks that could test the limits of presidenti­al pardon power.

Trump is said to be considerin­g a slew of pardons and commutatio­ns before he leaves office, including potentiall­y members of his family, former aides and even himself. While it is not unusual for presidents to sign controvers­ial pardons on their way out the door, Trump has made clear that he has no qualms about intervenin­g in the cases of friends and allies whom he believes have been treated unfairly, including his former national security adviser Michael Flynn.

The list of potential candidates is long and colorful: Trump’s former campaign chairman, Paul Manafort, imprisoned for financial crimes as part of the Russia investigat­ion; George Papadopoul­os, who pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI, just like Flynn; Joseph Maldonado-Passage, aka “Joe Exotic,” who starred in the the Netflix series “Tiger King”; and former contractor­s convicted in a Baghdad firefight that killed more than a dozen civilians, including women and children.

Trump, long worried about potential legal exposure after he leaves office, has expressed worry to confidants in recent weeks that he, his family or his business might be targeted by President-elect Joe Biden’s Justice Department, although Biden has made clear he won’t be part of any such decisions.

Nonetheles­s, Trump has had informal conversati­ons with allies about how he might be able to protect his family, though he has not taken any steps to do so. His adult children haven’t requested pardons nor do they feel they need them, according to people familiar with the discussion­s who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss private matters.

Trump has also discussed potentiall­y shielding himself, The New York Times first reported. In a video posted on Facebook on Wednesday, he made a glancing reference to his potential vulnerabil­ities.

“Now I hear that these same people that failed to get me in Washington have sent every piece of informatio­n to New York so that they can try to get me there,” he said.

The speculatio­n prompted a slew of preemptive pushback from critics.

“Typically if someone is being given a pardon it suggests they may have committed a crime. That’s not something I would want to have associated with my family,” said Republican Sen. Mitt Romney of Utah, a frequent critic of Trump.

Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer decried the notion of the president asking staff whether he can issue preemptive pardons for himself, his family members and his attorney, Rudy Giuliani, with whom Trump has discussed potential action.

“There’s a simple answer: No. No, Mr. President, that would be a gross abuse of the presidenti­al pardon authority,” Schumer said.

Presidents enjoy expansive pardon powers when it comes to federal crimes. That includes granting clemency to people who have not yet been charged, as President Gerald Ford did in 1974 when he pardoned his predecesso­r, Richard Nixon.

But presidents cannot issue pardons for state crimes nor can they sidestep the law by pardoning people for crimes that have not yet occurred, according to legal experts. It remains unclear whether a president has the power to pardon himself. No one has tried.

A decades-old opinion by the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel suggests presidents cannot pardon themselves because it would require them to serve as judges in their own cases, but it also posits that a president could declare himself unable to serve, transfer power to his vice president and receive a pardon that way.

Presidents often make controvers­ial grants of clemency to prominent figures as they leave office: Bill Clinton pardoned wealthy financier Marc Rich, and Ronald Reagan pardoned New York Yankees owner George Steinbrenn­er.

But Trump’s position is notable given the sheer number of former aides and allies who have been imprisoned, indicted or are facing legal jeopardy.

They include Manafort, Manafort deputy Rick Gates, the president’s longtime friend and adviser Roger Stone, his former chief strategist Steve Bannon and his former lawyer Michael Cohen. Stone and Flynn are among those Trump already has granted clemency.

In most administra­tions, 99% of those who receive pardons are people the public never hears of, while the remaining 1% receive 99% of the attention, said Michigan State University law professor Brian Kalt. But Trump’s interest in celebritie­s and high-profile figures has thrown those percentage­s off-kilter.

“You can see the appeal of the pardon power to someone like him,” Kalt said. “It’s the one thing where the president says it and it gets done. He doesn’t have to deal with the ‘deep state.’ He doesn’t have to go through congressio­nal oversight or judicial review.”

In previous administra­tions, pardons have gone through a formal review process at the Justice Department in which lawyers carefully examine cases before making recommenda­tions to the White House. Trump has largely sidesteppe­d that process — instead relying on a more haphazard approach that has favored candidates whose cases have resonated with him personally or that have been championed by celebritie­s like Kim Kardashian West.

As the results of last month’s election have become clear, those seeking pardons before Trump leaves office have redoubled their efforts to garner White House attention, leaning on high-profile Washington lawyers, re-upping PR efforts and, in the case of Papadopoul­os, writing a book, appearing on Fox News and speaking to news outlets.

“I simply want the facts to get out about exactly what happened in my situation and for the American public to determine its logical conclusion. Which I hope is a pardon. I do not expect it, but I would be honored to accept one,” he told The Associated Press.

Giuliani, meanwhile, has spoken directly with the president about a pardon. The two men have had preliminar­y conversati­ons about the topic, but it is unclear how serious those have been.

Beyond the bold-face names, however, are the regular people, behind bars, who have tried to make the case that they were unfairly sentenced or deserve a second chance.

“So many people are crying out for help,” said Alice Marie Johnson, who had been serving a life sentence without parole until Trump commuted her sentence in 2018 after her case was championed by Kardashian West. Trump then featured Johnson’s story in a Super Bowl ad and pardoned her during this year’s Republican National Convention.

Johnson, who has already successful­ly lobbied the president to take action on the cases of several other people, said she again met with Trump at the White House several weeks ago to present additional cases, all for people with “just incredible rehabilita­tion and incredible prison records.”

“Personally, I’m hoping to see people home before Christmas,” she said. “Families around the country are praying for a Christmas miracle.”

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