Barack Obama was unusually active with clemency orders and pardons in his last days in office.
|
In 2017 Barack
Obama spent the last days of his Presidential term churning out sentence commutations. Hundreds were given to non-violent
drug offenders facing draconian sentences under the exceptionally harsh Federal Sentence
Standards, the most vindictive
in the world. But there are
so many of those victims of the
failed war on drugs that the commutations hardly made a dent in
the American gulag. Also given
leniency were some white collar criminals, the kind of offenders that
drew the more stingy grace of Obama’s predecessor George W.
Bush. Even a beloved baseball
icon, Willie McCovey of
the San Francisco Giants who was
convicted on Income Tax evasion was
one of 64 that drew and outright pardon from
the President.
Most controversially Obama commuted the sentences of whistleblower Chelsea Manning, the former Army Private Bradley Manning, and Puerto Rican nationalist leader Oscar Lopez. Inexplicably he did not commute the sentence of ailing American
Indian Movement leader Leonard Peltier who has been behind bars for 40 years and
will now surely die in prison.
However disappointing and mystifying that travesty of
justice was, Obama gets credit for at least wrestling with the catastrophic effects of the lock-‘em-up-and-throw-away-the-key mania that created the school to prison pipeline.
Trumps swift pardon of racist Arizona Sheriff Joe Aripio, set the patter for his later favors.
|
No one,
except possibly sex offenders, gun nuts,
and White nationalist terrorists could
expect any such displays of mercy from his successor as occupant of the Oval Office. On the contrary.
Trump and his administration have
sought to swell the prison
population with those who resist his
autocratic rule, immigrants, and minorities of every sort.
And the recipients of his tender mercy were of a very different sort
including pardons for the ilk of Arizona racist sheriff Joe Aripio, Watergate figure Scooter Libby, right-wing
commentator Dinesh D’Souza, Army Lt.
Michael Behenna who was convicted of murdering
an Iraqi man, right wing Canadian media mogul Conrad Black, Chalmer Lee Williams convicted of
illegal firearms sales, Army Major
Mathew Golsteyn who was awaiting trial on a charge of murdering a suspected
Afghan bomb maker, and Lt. Clint Lorance convicted of
murdering two Afghan civilians.
Trump’s sentence
commutations have included well connected bank
fraudster Sholom Rubashkin, arsonists Dwight
and Steven Hammond who inspired Nevada
anti-government extremists Ammon and Ryan
Bundy in their armed seizure of
the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge,
and Medicare scammer Ted Shul who ran
faith-based behavioral healthcare
treatment centers for juveniles.
Do you
detect a pattern here? And it is widely
believed that Trump has promised eventual pardons or commutations to those who
have been loyal to him in various corruption investigations.
Forty-three
year ago this week another incoming president on his first day in
office, January 21, 1977, issued a blanket
amnesty of most draft evaders,
including those who went to Canada or
assumed new identities and went underground in the states.
On his first day in office President Jimmy Carter ordered a sweeping
amnesty for Vietnam era draft resisters including those who had fled the
country or gone underground.
|
President
Jimmy Carter’s controversial act, which brought harsh criticism from veterans’
organizations and near mutinous
grumbling from some high level officers in the military, was not unexpected. It fulfilled a campaign promise. The idea was to
put the bitter national divisions
over the Vietnam War and Nixon years behind us, or in Carter’s
own words, “to bind up the nation’s wounds.”
The accidental President, Gerald
Ford, had issued a conditional
pardon for draft offenders, including those who were abroad, in September
of 1974. That was mainly to
provide cover on the left for his pre-emptive pardon of his predecessor, Richard Nixon for any offenses that he “may have committed.” The Ford
conditional pardon is generally better
remembered than Carter’s much more
substantial action because of that linkage despite requiring those who accepted the pardon to work in alternative service occupations similar
to those of conscientious objectors for
six to 24 months. Far fewer men than expected took Ford up on his offer.
Gerald Ford's limited conditional pardon for draft resistors and evaders was meant to placate the Left and distract from his pardon of Richard Nixon for "crimes he may have committed.
|
Carter’s action was much more
sweeping, but a little noticed provision
said that amnesty would be given to all offenders who requested one. Some resistors refused to make a request because to do so was an admission that they had committed a crime in the first place. Many, many more were unaware, because of hazy press coverage, that they had to make a
request. The Justice Department
did not even make a cursory effort to inform the eligible by a letter to a “last known address.”
The wording also was unclear on an important point for men like me—did the
amnesty cover those who were already convicted
and had served sentences for
draft offenses? I don’t think that last point has yet been fully answered.
None-the-less tens of thousands of
draft refusers, evaders, and military deserters acted on the assumption that they were covered and the Justice
Department de facto ceased
actions against anyone who could have been covered by amnesty.
More than half a million young men were either charged with draft
evasion and resistance, avoided, or refused to serve in the Armed
Forces and were never charged during the Vietnam War.
|
During the war, and continuing after
it ended until Draft call-ups stopped
in 1973, 209,517 men were accused of violating draft laws, and another 360,000
were never formally charged.
Around 100,000 went abroad, 90% of them to Canada.
The exact number who went “underground” has never been established, but is
thought to be in the tens of thousands.
Upwards of 50,000 of those in Canada
chose to stay there rather than
return home. Most were granted Landed
Immigrant status and eventually Canadian
citizenship. A highly educated
group with significant resources,
these people had an impact on Canada. Many became leading figures in academia,
the arts, and in politics. They are widely credited with/accused of moving Canadian politics generally to the left.
Likewise a good, but unknown, number
of those who went underground chose to continue to live their lives under the identities that they assumed. In
the 1960’s and early 70’s it was absurdly easy to establish a new identity. It is thought that as this cohort
becomes eligible for Social Security or
die many of these assumed identities will unravel.
As for an old Draft con like me, I never got any amnesty papers. But I have
lived my life quite openly, and even
drawn some modest attention to myself without further molestation. So far
so good.
No comments:
Post a Comment