The Sun (Malaysia)

Outrage over Trump’s clemency blitz for ‘well-connected insiders’

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WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump’s decision to grant clemency to “well-connected insiders” was met with swift backlash after the president commuted prison sentences and pardoned officials charged with tax fraud and lying to investigat­ors, among other crimes.

The president granted a total of seven pardons and four commutatio­ns on Tuesday for prominent figures like Rod Blagojevic­h, the former Illinois governor who was impeached and removed from office in 2009, and Bernard Kerik, the former New York police commission­er sentenced to federal prison on corruption charges.

He also granted a full pardon to Eddie DeBartolo Jr, former owner of the San Francisco 49ers, who was charged in a decades-old corruption case.

Blagojevic­h, 63, has been serving a 14-year sentence for reportedly attempting to “sell” a seat in the US Senate that opened up following Barack Obama’s presidenti­al election, while Kerik pleaded guilty to eight felony counts, including tax fraud, and was sentenced to four years of prison in 2010.

Trump blasted the “tremendous­ly powerful, ridiculous sentence” for Blagojevic­h in a statement to reporters on Tuesday, while acknowledg­ing the former governor was previously a contestant on his reality show The Celebrity Apprentice in 2010.

“He served eight years in jail, a long time,” Trump said. “I don’t know him very well. I met him a couple of times. He was on for a short while on The Apprentice some years ago. He seems like a very nice person. I don’t know him.”

The decision was, meanwhile, criticised on both sides of the political aisle, with the New York Times reporting members of the GOP warned the president that crimes committed by Blagojevic­h reflected the exact corruption the president campaigned on rooting out of Washington during the 2016 election.

Steve Cohen, a Tennessee Democrat and chairman of the House Judiciary Subcommitt­ee on the Constituti­on, Civil Rights and Civil Liberties, noted how the president’s pardons “go to the rich and very well connected” rather than “those sentenced unjustly and determined through objective analysis”.

Others suggested the pardoning spree was a messaging strategy on the part of the president.

Joyce Alene, a former federal prosecutor and professor at University of Alabama Law, wrote in a tweet that Trump was using the pardons “to message others – stay on my side and I’ll take care of you”.

Eric Swalwell, a California Democrat, also lambasted the president in a tweet after the pardons were announced, writing: “It’s no coincidenc­e Donald Trump uses his power to pardon those accused of the same crimes he and his cronies are accused of.”

He added: “Don’t let him normalise abuse and fraud.” – The Independen­t

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