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- Comments: Gated by NETNEWS@AUVM.AMERICAN.EDU
- Path: sparky!uunet!wupost!udel!gatech!paladin.american.edu!auvm!BROWNVM.BITNET!PL436000
- Message-ID: <POLITICS%92123117132478@OHSTVMA.ACS.OHIO-STATE.EDU>
- Newsgroups: bit.listserv.politics
- Date: Thu, 31 Dec 1992 17:07:51 EST
- Sender: Forum for the Discussion of Politics <POLITICS@UCF1VM.BITNET>
- From: Jamie <PL436000@BROWNVM.BITNET>
- Subject: Re: Presidential Pardon
- Lines: 32
-
- >> >From: Jonathan Fisher <jfisher@NETXWEST.COM>
-
- >> No, that's definitely wrong. It is Triply wrong.
- >>
- >> First of all, before he is convicted he must be impeached. If he is
- >> impeached he can't pardon anyone, let alone himself.
-
- >But, if he pardoned himself _before_ he was impeached (which as we know from
- >the Nixon administration is a long drawn out affair), then he could get
- >away with it.
-
- Ok, as a prediction, I think this is wrong. I think there is no way
- he would get away with it.
-
- >As you stated later, people can be pardoned even before they had been
- >convicted of anything. And I believe that I have heard that the constitution
- >doesn't address this specifically. It just gives the pardon power to
- >the president.
-
- You are right, it just says the president may pardon federal crimes,
- except those involving impeachment.
-
- So, reading this MOST strictly, MOST literally, it follows that he
- could pardon himself for anything for which he is not tried or
- indicted until after he leaves office. I mean, he could do that in
- advance. (Because, see, if the legal proceedings don't begin until
- he's out of office, there would be no impeachment. That's why Ford
- could get away with pardoning Nixon.)
-
- However, that seems to me to be too literal a reading.
-
- Jamie
-