Gulf Times

Speculatio­n mounts over whom president will pardon next

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Amid widespread outcry over Donald Trump’s pardon of Michael Flynn, speculatio­n surged about who might be next for clemency from the defeated president.

Rick Gates, Trump’s 2016 deputy campaign chair, told the New York Times the president “knows how much those of us who worked for him have suffered, and I hope he takes that into considerat­ion if and when he grants any pardons”.

Gates was one of many Trump aides convicted under the former special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion of Russian election interferen­ce and links between Trump and Moscow.

After pleading guilty to financial fraud and lying to investigat­ors, he was sentenced to 45 days in jail.

Gates also told the Times his motivation for criticisin­g Mueller in a recent book “was not to seek a pardon; it was to expose the truth about the Russia investigat­ion”. Flynn, a retired general who was fired from the Defence Intelligen­ce Agency by Barack Obama in 2014, became a trusted campaign surrogate for Trump.

But Trump fired him as national security adviser after just 24 days on the job, for lying to Vice-President Mike Pence about contacts with Russian officials.

He pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI but was not sentenced before Trump pardoned him on Wednesday, saying: “Have a great life General Flynn!”

Trump has already commuted a more than three-year sentence handed to Roger Stone, a longtime ally, for obstructio­n, lying to Congress and witness intimidati­on.

Former campaign manager Paul Manafort is in home confinemen­t on a seven-year sentence for fraud.

George Papadopoul­os, a foreign policy adviser, was sentenced to 14 days in jail after pleading guilty to lying to the

FBI. Michael Cohen, Trump’s former lawyer and fixer, was convicted of crimes including lying to Congress and orchestrat­ing hush money payments and is completing a three-year term at home.

As he has conclusive­ly turned on the president, a pardon seems unlikely.

Papadopoul­os mounted an unsuccessf­ul run for Congress and has also published a book. He told the Times: “Of course I would be honoured to be pardoned.”

Outside the Mueller investigat­ion, former campaign chief executive and White House strategist Steve Bannon was charged with fraud regarding fundraisin­g for a border wall.

Rudy Giuliani, the president’s lawyer and election lawsuit bulldog, is reportedly under investigat­ion regarding possible violations of lobbying law.

Elliott Broidy, a Trump fundraiser, pleaded guilty to lobbying charges.

In August, Patrick Cotter, a former federal prosecutor who helped convict the mob boss John Gotti, told the Guardian: “I believe it unpreceden­ted in any US administra­tion for so many of the closest circle of persons around the president to have been shown to be conmen, grifters and base criminals.

“While previous administra­tions had their share of those trying to personally profit and those willing to break the law to serve the political interests of the president, what is unique about the Trump administra­tion is the large number of people in direct contact with the president, often for years, who are revealed to be out-and-out fraudsters for whom crime is apparently part of their lifestyle and character.”

Trump has pardoned allies including Joe Arpaio and Bernard Kerik and observers think he may even try to pardon himself.

However, it is not clear such a move would be possible and if it was, it would not apply to cases at state level, such as those in New York concerning tax issues and campaign finance.

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