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Trump-era pardon recipients are increasingly back in legal jeopardy

An ABC News analysis of the 238 people who were pardoned or received clemency during the Trump administration has found at least ten who have again faced legal scrutiny.

Trump-era pardon recipients are increasingly back in legal jeopardy – 850 WFTL

(WASHINGTON) In February, former newspaper executive Kenneth Kurson pleaded guilty to cyberstalking his ex-wife. Months later, rapper Kodak Black was arreste

Trump-era pardon recipients are increasingly back in legal jeopardy

Trump-era pardon recipients are increasingly back in legal jeopardy
kbnwnews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from kbnwnews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

How the Trump administration pardon process broke down in favor of the rich and well-connected

The cottage industry behind Trump’s pardons: How the rich and well-connected got ahead at the expense of others Beth Reinhard, Rosalind Helderman, Tom Hamburger, Josh Dawsey © Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post As president, Donald Trump issued a blizzard of 144 pardon and commutations in his final hours at the White House. A federal judge in South Dakota was blunt last summer when she sentenced Paul Erickson, a seasoned Republican operative who had pleaded guilty to wire fraud and money laundering. “What comes through is that you’re a thief, and you’ve betrayed your friends, your family, pretty much everyone you know,” District Judge Karen E. Schreier told Erickson in July, before sentencing him to seven years in prison for scamming dozens of people out of $5.3 million.

The cottage industry behind Trump s pardons: How the rich and well-connected got ahead at the expense of others

Print article A federal judge in South Dakota was blunt last summer when she sentenced Paul Erickson, a seasoned Republican operative who had pleaded guilty to wire fraud and money laundering. “What comes through is that you’re a thief, and you’ve betrayed your friends, your family, pretty much everyone you know,” federal District Judge Karen Schreier told Erickson in July, before sentencing him to seven years in prison for scamming dozens of people out of $5.3 million. But Erickson, who had advised GOP presidential campaigns and a noted conservative organization, had a way out. He had the ear of White House adviser Kellyanne Conway, a member of President Donald Trump’s inner orbit. And, unrelated to his conviction, he had been caught up in the investigation of Russia’s interference in the 2016 presidential campaign, an inquiry much reviled by Trump.

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