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Puerto Vallarta News NetworkAmericas & Beyond | December 2008 

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Two words crop up around the White House these days:

"Pardon me."

As George W. Bush's lame-duck Presidency enters its final weeks, a flood of pardon applications land on his desk. Convicted felons ranging from drug dealers to high-profile white collar criminals want a shot at the 'get out of jail free cards' that Presidents issue during thier final days in office.

Outgoing Presidents tend to be generous with pardons because they have nothing to lose politically by letting felons take a walk. Still, they create controversy, as former President Bill Clinton's pardon of fugitive financier Marc Rich did in 2001.

But Clinton survived the controversy, just as he did so many others.

Now it's Bush's turn to try his hand at the game of political pardon poker.

Reports The Associated Press:

Some high-profile convicts past and present are among more than 2,000 people asking President George W. Bush to pardon them or commute their prison sentences before he leaves office.

Junk-bond king Michael Milken, media mogul Conrad Black and American-born Taliban soldier John Walker Lindh have applied to the Justice Department seeking official forgiveness.

But with Bush's term ending Jan. 20, some lawyers are lobbying the White House directly to pardon their clients. That raises the possibility that the president could excuse scores of people, including some who have not been charged, to protect them from future accusations, such as former Attorney General Alberto Gonzales or star baseball pitcher Roger Clemens.

Those who have worked with Bush predict that will not happen. The White House has declined to comment on upcoming pardons.

"I would expect the president's conservative approach to executive pardons to continue through the remainder of his term," said Helgi C. Walker, a former Bush associate White House counsel.

"There would also be a concern about avoiding any appearance of impropriety in the waning days of his administration — i.e. some sort of pardon free-for-all," Walker said. "I don't think that is anything that is going to happen on this president's watch."

Last week, Bush issued 14 pardons and commuted two sentences — all for small-time crimes such as minor drug offenses, tax evasion and unauthorized use of food stamps. That brought his eight-year total to 171 pardons and eight commutations granted.

That is less than half as many as President Bill Clinton or President Ronald Reagan issued. Both were two-term presidents, like Bush.

A pardon is an official act of forgiveness that removes civil liabilities stemming from a criminal conviction. A commutation reduces or eliminates a person's sentence.



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