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2024-12-15 Government Corruption
Justice Department: Jan. 6 defendants who accept pardons will make ‘a confession of guilt'
[Politico] Some defendants claim that Trump can issue “pardons of innocence,” but federal prosecutors told a judge that pardons would not wipe away their guilt.

The Justice Department sent a message Wednesday to Jan. 6 defendants: Accepting a pardon from Donald Trump is “a confession of guilt” for your crimes.
Ditto for Hunter Biden and the large number of others President Biden has been pardoning recently — and still to come — right? Good to know.
“[A] pardon at some unspecified date in the future ... would not unring the bell of conviction,” federal prosecutors argued in a Jan. 6 case before U.S. District Judge Carl Nichols. “In fact, quite the opposite. The defendant would first have to accept the pardon, which necessitates a confession of guilt.”

The pronouncement is the latest attempt by the Justice Department to salvage the legacy of its Jan. 6 investigation, which leaders say is the most sweeping criminal probe in American history. Trump has pledged to unravel that probe with the stroke of his pen by granting clemency to many of the nearly 1,600 people who have been charged for their roles in the attack on the Capitol four years ago.

The legal significance of presidential pardons, and whether they imply guilt, has been debated in courts for decades.
Makes sense. The Justice Department has been full of really bad advice for its targets, as has the FBI, et al. Which is why we’re told to never, ever say anything to them without a good lawyer present, even when their agents assure you that you aren't a target, but merely helping them with their inquiries.
The Supreme Court has opined that pardons often carry an “imputation of guilt” even if the consequences for that guilt are erased. And the Justice Department has previously concluded that even if pardons eliminate criminal consequences, those convicted of crimes can still face punishment in other forums, like professional ethics boards.

“A pardon … does not erase the conviction as a historical fact or justify the fiction that the pardoned individual did not engage in criminal conduct,” the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel wrote in a 2006 opinion.

But Jan. 6 defendants have increasingly been seeking “pardons of innocence,” claiming Trump has the authority to grant them clemency without forcing an admission of guilt. Those who haven’t been convicted are hoping Trump’s Justice Department simply drops their charges, obviating the need for a pardon altogether.

The Justice Department’s comments on the effect of Jan. 6 pardons came in a court filing in the case of Dova Winegeart, who is seeking to delay her imminent jail term in anticipation of a possible pardon from Trump. Nichols, a Trump appointee, convicted Winegeart for damaging government property after a brief bench trial in October and acquitted her of several misdemeanor counts. On Monday, he sentenced her to four months in prison but agreed to hear arguments on whether the sentence should be delayed to await a potential pardon.

Winegeart is one of many Jan. 6 defendants who have been seeking to delay their sentences or pause their cases in light of Trump’s electoral victory and the potential for him to issue mass pardons when he returns to office.

Prosecutors sharply opposed Winegeart’s request and warned of far-reaching consequences to criminal justice if she is granted a delay based on speculation about a future pardon.

“The criminal justice system cannot operate on such uncertainty. Indeed, it is neither the court’s role or function to speculate about any president’s pardon decisions, nor is it appropriate for the Court to halt the normal functioning of criminal procedure based solely on that speculation,” the prosecutors wrote.

“If a future Executive cannot, today, grant a pardon, this Court cannot expand the temporal grace that Executive may or may not extend in the future to … affect the present,” the DOJ attorneys added.
Sure the court can. Courts do all sorts of things that prosecutors dislike.


Posted by Skidmark 2024-12-15 00:00|| || Front Page|| [11138 views ]  Top

#1 Don't worry DOJ, when you get prosecuted for your malicious prosecution, deprivation of rights under the color of law, torture and other crimes against the J6 people, there won't be any pardons, just lengthy jail terms and executions for the sh*tstain that murdered Ashli.
Posted by Silentbrick 2024-12-15 05:27||   2024-12-15 05:27|| Front Page Top

#2 
DOJ playing Politics again.
Where were they for the Hunter pardon with such comments.

Also, strongly agree with comment #1.
There should be NO Pardons for those in the DOJ that violated the US law for political agenda goals and reasons.
Posted by NN2N1 2024-12-15 05:49||   2024-12-15 05:49|| Front Page Top

#3 So, where's Hunter's admission of guilt?
Posted by ed in texas 2024-12-15 09:17||   2024-12-15 09:17|| Front Page Top

#4 Personally I believe there should be a separate class of Law and punishment for the abuse of public office. A public servant is just that and the time is ripe for a swift, sustained, and very harsh reminder.
Posted by Cesare 2024-12-15 10:38||   2024-12-15 10:38|| Front Page Top

#5 No one from the DOJ should be pardoned by Biden then.
Posted by Super Hose 2024-12-15 14:51||   2024-12-15 14:51|| Front Page Top

#6 Well...what a dipshit.
Posted by swksvolFF 2024-12-15 20:01||   2024-12-15 20:01|| Front Page Top

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