New round of Trump clemency benefits Manafort, other allies
President Donald Trump on Wednesday pardoned more
than two dozen people, including former campaign chairman Paul Manafort and
Charles Kushner, the father of his son-in-law, in the latest wave of clemency
to benefit longtime associates and supporters.
The actions, in Trump’s final weeks at the White
House, bring to nearly 50 the number of people whom the president has granted
clemency in the last week. The list from the last two days includes not only
multiple people convicted in the investigation into the Trump campaign’s ties
to Russia but also allies from Congress and other felons whose causes were
championed by friends.
Pardons are common in the final stretch of a
president’s tenure, the recipients largely dependent on the individual whims of
the nation’s chief executive. Trump throughout his administration has shucked
aside the conventions of the Obama administration, when pardons were largely
reserved for drug offenders not known to the general public, and instead
bestowed clemency on high-profile contacts and associates who were key figures
in an investigation that directly concerned him.
Even members of the president’s own party raised
eyebrows, with Republican Sen. Ben Sasse of Nebraska issuing a brief statement
that said: “This is rotten to the core.”
The pardons Wednesday of Manafort and Roger Stone,
who months earlier had his sentence commuted by Trump, were particularly
notable, underscoring the president’s desire to chip away at the results and
legacy of special counsel Robert Mueller’s Russia investigation. He has now
pardoned four people convicted in that investigation, including former national
security adviser Michael Flynn and campaign adviser George Papadopoulos, who
pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI.
“The pardons from this President are what you would
expect to get if you gave the pardon power to a mob boss,” tweeted Andrew
Weissmann, a Mueller team member who helped prosecute Manafort.
Manafort, who led Trump’s campaign during a pivotal
period in 2016 before being ousted over his ties to Ukraine, was among the
first people charged as part of Mueller’s investigation into ties between the
Trump campaign and Russia. He was later sentenced to more than seven years in
prison for financial crimes related to his political consulting work in
Ukraine, but was released to home confinement last spring because of
coronavirus concerns in the federal prison system.
Though the charges against Manafort did not concern
the central thrust of Mueller’s mandate — whether the Trump campaign and Russia
colluded to tip the election — he was nonetheless a pivotal figure in the
investigation.
His close relationship to a man U.S. officials have
linked to Russian intelligence, and with whom he shared internal campaign
polling data, attracted particular scrutiny during the investigation, though
Mueller never charged Manafort or any other Trump associate with conspiring
with Russia.
Manafort, in a series of tweets, thanked Trump and
lavished praise on the outgoing president, declaring that history would show he
had accomplished more than any of his predecessors.
Trump did not pardon Manafort’s deputy, Rick Gates,
who was sentenced last year to 45 days in prison after extensively cooperating
with prosecutors, or former Trump lawyer Michael Cohen, who pleaded guilty to
campaign finance crimes related to his efforts to buy the silence of women who
said they had sexual relationships with Trump. Both were also convicted in the
Mueller probe.
New York City prosecutors, meanwhile, have been
seeking to have the state’s highest court revive state mortgage fraud charges
against Manafort after a lower court dismissed them on double jeopardy grounds.
A spokesman for District Attorney Cy Vance said the pardon “underscores the
urgent need to hold Mr. Manafort accountable for his crimes against the People
of New York.”
Manafort and Stone are hardly conventional pardon
recipients, in part because both were scolded by judges for effectively
thumbing their nose at the criminal justice system as their cases were pending.
Manafort was accused of witness tampering even after he was indicted and was
accused by prosecutors of lying while trying to earn credit for cooperation.
Stone, who was convicted of lying to Congress about
his efforts to gain inside information about the release by WikiLeaks of
Russia-hacked Democratic emails during the 2016 campaign, was similarly
censured by a judge because of his social media posts.
In a statement Wednesday, Stone thanked Trump and
alleged that he had been subjected to a “Soviet-style show trial on
politically-motivated charges”
Kushner is the father of Trump’s son-in-law, Jared
Kushner, and a wealthy real estate executive who pleaded guilty years ago to
tax evasion and making illegal campaign donations. Trump and the elder Kushner
knew each other from real estate circles and their children were married in
2009.
Prosecutors allege that after Kushner discovered
that his brother-in-law was cooperating with authorities, he hatched a revenge
and intimidation scheme. They say he hired a prostitute to lure his
brother-in-law, then arranged to have a secret recording of the encounter in a
New Jersey motel room sent to his own sister, the man’s wife.
Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie has called it
“one of the most loathsome, disgusting crimes” he ever prosecuted as U.S.
attorney.
Trump’s legally troubled allies were not the only
recipients of clemency. The list of 29 recipients included people whose pleas
for forgiveness have been promoted by people supporting the president
throughout his term in office, among them former Florida Attorney General Pam
Bondi, Newsmax CEO Christopher Ruddy and Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky.
One recipient was Topeka Sam, whose case was
promoted by Alice Johnson, a criminal justice advocate whom Trump pardoned and
who appeared in a Super Bowl ad for him and at the Republican National
Convention.
“Ms. Sam’s life is a story of redemption,” the White
House said in its release, praising her for helping other women in need.
Others granted clemency included a former county
commissioner in Florida who was convicted of taking gifts from people doing
business with the county and a community leader in Kentucky who was convicted
of federal drug offenses.



