Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Senator wants pardon scrutiny

Current process ‘is open to corruption,’ Blumenthal says

- CARL HULSE

WASHINGTON — In the aftermath of last-minute pardons former President Donald Trump issued to allies and well-connected applicants, a Democratic senator is proposing legislatio­n to require more transparen­cy around the process of presidenti­al pardons and more disclosure from people lobbying on behalf of those seeking clemency.

Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., a former prosecutor, plans to introduce a measure seeking to bring greater public awareness to the often opaque circumstan­ces surroundin­g presidenti­al pardons. It would also require more notificati­on to the Justice Department and consultati­on on the potential effect any pardon would have “on the success of any ongoing investigat­ion or prosecutio­n.”

His legislatio­n comes after reporting by The New York Times on the interventi­on by Trump in the case of Jonathan Braun of New York, whose drug smuggling sentence Trump cut short on his last day in office. The commutatio­n caught the Justice Department by surprise and eliminated leverage federal prosecutor­s had over Braun as they sought to enlist him as an informant in an investigat­ion into predatory lending, a field where Braun was active.

“Right now the process is so open to corruption that a lot can just happen totally under the radar without anyone knowing about it,” Blumenthal said.

“Here we require not only disclosure,” he said, “but an impact statement so it gives the investigat­ive agencies, the career guys and the Department of Justice a chance to say wait a minute, we’ve got this guy under investigat­ion, or he is providing us with informatio­n, and we’ll lose it all, and he won’t be a witness.”

William Barr, an attorney general under Trump who had left by the time of the Braun commutatio­n, previously told the Times that when he took over the Justice Department, he discovered that “there were pardons being given without any vetting by the department.”

The legislatio­n would require administra­tion officials who learn of a potential pardon to immediatel­y notify the office of the pardon attorney in the Justice Department. That office would then begin producing an impact statement on the possible pardon to gather the views of prosecutor­s and any victims.

Under Trump, the White House often bypassed the pardon lawyer’s office, which historical­ly has consulted with the White House and provided expertise on requests for pardons.

Blumenthal’s measure also seeks to eliminate what he termed a “loophole” that allows those being paid to lobby for pardons to escape public registrati­on if the effort does not exceed 20% of their time spent on behalf of a client. His measure would require lobbying registrati­on “regardless of the percent of the services provided by the individual to that client that consist of lobbying activities.”

In the past, it has been shown to be difficult to pinpoint who is approachin­g the White House on pardons and how much they are being paid in what can be a lucrative enterprise. Associates of Trump sought six-figure sums for intercedin­g on behalf of those seeking pardons.

In the case of Braun, he told reporters that he had no idea how the commutatio­n of his sentence came about, but he and his family had enlisted help from prominent advocates like Alan Dershowitz, a lawyer with ties to the Trump White House, and the Braun family had connection­s to the family of Jared Kushner, the president’s son-in-law.

Blumenthal faces a steep climb to advance his legislatio­n, which is the latest in a series of measures drafted by both Democrats and Republican­s over the past 20 years to enable more public scrutiny into how pardons are handed out. Republican­s are likely to see it as an attack aimed at a potential Trump administra­tion even though some have proposed similar ideas in the past.

The bill is also likely to attract legal challenges since the Constituti­on grants the president broad pardon authority.

“It’s not the way I would have written the Constituti­on, but that’s what it says, so we have to respect it,” Blumenthal said. “He can do whatever he wants.”

Presidents of both parties have drawn criticism for their pardons, notably Bill Clinton’s last-minute pardon of Marc Rich, an oil trader who had been indicted on tax evasion charges. That pardon became the subject of heated political debate and a federal investigat­ion that ultimately ended with no charges.

Blumenthal’s legislatio­n would also require the White House to publish a rationale for any pardon in the Federal Register and on the official presidenti­al website on the day one is granted.

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