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Everybody Makes Mistakes
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Ford gives Nixon Pardon ''my mistakes''
Washington, Sept. 8--President Ford granted former President Richard M. Nixon an unconditional pardon today for all Federal crimes that he "committed or may have committed or taken part in" while in office, an act Mr. Ford said was intended to spare Mr. Nixon and the nation further punishment in the Watergate scandals.
Mr. Nixon, in San Clemente, Calif., accepted the pardon, which exempts him from indictment and trial for, among other things, his role in the cover-up of the Watergate burglary. He issued a statement saying that he could now see he was "wrong in not acting more decisively and more forthrightly in dealing with Watergate."
'Act of Mercy'
Phillip W. Buchen, the White House counsel, who advised Mr. Ford on the legal aspects of the pardon, said the "act of mercy" on the President's part was done without making any demands on Mr. Nixon and without asking the advice of the Watergate special prosecutor, Leon Jaworski, who had the legal responsibility to prosecute the case.
Reaction to the pardon was sharply divided, but not entirely along party lines. Most Democrats who commented voiced varying degrees of disapproval and dismay, while most Republican comment backed President Ford.
However, Senators Edward W. Brooke of Massachusetts and Jacob K. Javits of New York disagreed with the action.
Dangers Seen in Delay
Mr. Buchen said that, at the President's request, he had asked Mr. Jaworski how long it would be, in the event Mr. Nixon was indicted, before he could be brought to trial and that Mr. Jaworski had replied it would be at least nine months or more, because of the enormous amount of publicity the charges against Mr. Nixon had received when the House Judiciary Committee recommended impeachment.
This was one reason Mr. Ford cited for granting the pardon, saying he had concluded that "many months and perhaps more years will have to pass before Richard Nixon could obtain a fair trial by jury in any jurisdiction of the United States under governing decisions of the Supreme Court."
During this long period of delay and potential litigation, ugly passions would again be aroused, our people would again be polarized in their opinions, and the credibility of our free institutions of government would again be challenged at home and abroad," Mr. Ford said in a 10-minute statement that he read this morning in the Oval Office upon signing the pardon.
Mr. Ford's decision was not unexpected, in light of his previous statements that he thought the former President had suffered enough by being forced from office. Yet the unconditional nature of the pardon, taken without the recommendation of Mr. Jaworski, was more generous to Mr. Nixon than many had expected.
Mr. Buchen, the President's soft-spoken, white-haired lawyer, said, in response to questions, that no effort had been made to obtain acknowledgement of wrongdoing. When Vice President Agnew resigned last October he pleaded no contest to a charge of tax evasion and agreed to a bill of particulars that described in detail a number of other serious charges against him.
Before Mr. Ford finally decided to grant the pardon, the White House lawyers obtained from Mr. Nixon a letter in which he agreed to make available to the courts any subpoenaed records and tape recordings. But the agreement is also favorable to Mr. Nixon in that the documents are judged to be his personal property and the many tape recordings not yet made public are to be destroyed.
An Adverse Aspect
The only adverse aspect of today's action from Mr. Nixon's point of view is that he can now be more easily forced to testify in the forthcoming trial of several of his former aides accused of obstruction of justice in the Watergate case. The defendants have already subpoenaed the former President for the trial scheduled to open Sept. 30, and Mr. Nixon, having been pardoned, cannot decline to testify under the Fifth Amendment, which protects citizens against self-incrimination.
Mr. Ford's action today was a sharp reversal from the position his aides conveyed as he ascended to the Presidency on Aug. 9.
What would be done about prosecuting the former President was even then a major question, because Mr. Nixon admitted in a statement of Aug. 5 that he had ordered a halt to the investigation of the Watergate burglary, for political as well as national security reasons. Tape recordings released at the same time documented this.
J. F. terHorst, Mr. Ford's press Secretary, when asked Aug. 9 whether Mr. Ford would grant a pardon, pointed out that the new President had addressed that question in his confirmation hearings for Vice President before the Senate Rules Committee late last year.
Mr. Ford was asked then whether if a President resigned, his successor would have the power to prevent a criminal investigation or prosecution of the former President.
However, since taking office, there have been several changes. Mr. Nixon, in seclusion in San Clemente, has been reported by his friends to be deeply depressed and some have said that the legal troubles he faced were causing him so much anguish that his health was in jeopardy.
At the same time, high Republican officials, including Nelson A. Rockefeller, Mr. Ford's selection for Vice President, put out statements saying that the former President had suffered enough, and Mr. Ford agreed.
The way for a Presidential pardon was further prepared when Mr. Ford came out for conditional amnesty for Vietnam draft evaders and deserters as an act of mercy and as a means of uniting the nation.
The most surprising aspect of Mr. Fords' action was that it came on Sunday morning when the Government buildings were almost empty and no one was expecting any dramatic Presidential action. Mr. Ford attended early morning communion at St. John's Episcopal Church, then returned to the White House to make the announcement. He had chosen the Sabbath, it was learned later, to emphasize that the pardon was an act of mercy, not justice.
At 11:04 Mr. Ford walked into his Oval Office; where a small group of reporters and photographers was waiting, and sat at his desk. His face was grave.
An American Tragedy
He then opened a manila folder and began reading his decision, looking occasionally into the cameras, which were filming the event for later showing. He spoke of the difficulty of the decision.
"To procrastinate, to agonize and to wait for a more favorable turn of events that may never come," he said, "or more compelling external pressures that may as well be wrong as right, is itself a decision of sorts and a weak and potentially dangerous course for President to follow."
Of President Nixon and his family, Mr. Ford said: "Theirs is an American tragedy in which we all have played a part. It could go on and on and on, or someone must write 'The End' to it. I have concluded that only I can do that."
He pointed out that there was no historical or legal precedent for him to follow. Never before had a president resigned from office and never before had a former President been faced with criminal prosecution.
"But," Mr. Ford said, "it is common knowledge that serious allegations and accusations hang like a sword over our former President's head, threatening his health, as he tries to reshape his life, a great part of which was spent in the service of this country and by the mandate of its people."
The worlds, "threatening his health," were not in Mr. Ford's prepared remarks, and his assistants said later that he had added them because of the reports that Mr. Nixon "is not well."
He then spoke of the un-Mr. Nixon and said that Mr. Nixon, instead of enjoying equal treatment under the law, "would be cruelly and excessively penalized in preserving the presumption of his innocence or in obtaining a speedy determination of his guilt in avoidable delay in any trial of order to repay a legal debt to society."
In the end, he added, the courts might well hold that Mr. Nixon had been denied due process and "the verdict of history would even be more inconclusive with respect to those charges arising out of the period of his Presidency."
But he said that his decision had been based first on the public good and "my conscience tells me clearly and certainly that I cannot prolong the bad dreams that continue to reopen a chapter that is closed."
"Finally," Mr. Ford said, "I feel that Richard Nixon and his loved ones have suffered enough, and will continue to suffer no matter what I do, no matter what we as a great and good nation can do together to make his goal of peace come true."
At that, Mr. Ford took a blue silver felt-tip pen and signed the proclamation granting the pardon, reading the key paragraph:
"Now, therefore, I Gerald R. Ford, President of the United States, pursuant to the pardon power conferred upon me by Article II, Section 2, of the Constitution, have granted and by these presents do grant a full, free and absolute pardon unto Richard Nixon for all offenses against the United States which he, Richard Nixon, has committed or taken part in during the period from Jan. 20, 1969, through Aug. 9, 1974."
Mr. Buchen later briefed reporters on the events leading up to today's action. Sitting before the podium of the briefing room, Mr. Buchen, making his first public appearance as White House counsel, said Mr. Ford approached him about the pardon about a week ago and asked him to make a study of the matter.
Mr. Buchen said that he had first consulted Mr. Jaworski about what a trial of Richard Nixon would involve and got in writing, a statement that it would be "unprecedented."
Mr. Jaworski told him, he said, that the events leading up to Mr. Nixon's resignation--the House Judiciary Committee's recommendation for impeachment, the release of the tapes showing Mr. Nixon ordered a halt to the Watergate investigation six days after the burglary at the Democratic national offices here, on June 17, 1972, the decision of Republicans who had been supporting Mr. Nixon in Congress to vote for his impeachment or conviction on the basis of the new evidence--would necessitate a long delay because it would involve much "prejudicial, pretrial material" that the courts would have to dispose of.
Mr. Jaworski advised Mr. Buchen, the President's counsel said, that the case against Mr. Nixon was "readily distinguishable" from that against the Watergate defendants whose trial is set for Sept. 30, because they had not been tried before a Congressional body in the way, Mr. Nixon had in the impeachment proceedings.
Mr. Buchen said that he had picked a Washington lawyer, Benton L. Becker, to negotiate with Mr. Nixon and his lawyers. Mr. Becker, a friend of both the President and Mr. Buchen, went to San Clemente last week and advised Mr. Nixon that he probably would receive a pardon. Mr. Nixon told Mr. Becker, either personally or through an aide, that in such an event he intended to issue a statement similar to the one he put out today a few minutes after Mr. Fords' announcement.
Mr. Ford, after announcing the decision, went to the Burning Tree Country Club and played a round of golf. At the White House, switchboard operators said, "angry calls, heavy and constant," began jamming their boards soon after Mr. Ford's announcement.
Bangladesh pardons 20 death-row prisoners
Bangladesh's president has pardoned 20 death-row prisoners four years after they were sentenced for the murder of a then-ruling party activist, a prison official said Tuesday.
Ten of the prisoners were freed from the capital Dhaka's central jail, with the rest being released from a jail in northwestern Bangladesh, central jail superintendent Touhidul Islam told AFP. "We received the presidential clemency order last night," he said.
A fast-track court, which deals only with serious crime, sentenced the 20 to death in 2006 for the murder of then-ruling Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) student activist Sabbir Ahmed in northwestern district town of Natore.
Sabbir was also a nephew of a junior BNP minister.
According to the local media reports, all 20 men were active members of then-main opposition Awami League party. The Awami League has always maintained that the case was politically motivated and the men innocent of all charges.
Led by the current premier Sheikh Hasina, the Awami League swept to power following a landslide victory in December 2008 elections. It installed a party veteran as the country's president.
The position of president in Bangladesh is largely ceremonial, but has the power to grant clemency on all death sentences.
Earlier this year, the president used his limited power to quash graft cases against Awami League officials, including one against the son of its deputy party chief.
Ten of the prisoners were freed from the capital Dhaka's central jail, with the rest being released from a jail in northwestern Bangladesh, central jail superintendent Touhidul Islam told AFP. "We received the presidential clemency order last night," he said.
A fast-track court, which deals only with serious crime, sentenced the 20 to death in 2006 for the murder of then-ruling Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) student activist Sabbir Ahmed in northwestern district town of Natore.
Sabbir was also a nephew of a junior BNP minister.
According to the local media reports, all 20 men were active members of then-main opposition Awami League party. The Awami League has always maintained that the case was politically motivated and the men innocent of all charges.
Led by the current premier Sheikh Hasina, the Awami League swept to power following a landslide victory in December 2008 elections. It installed a party veteran as the country's president.
The position of president in Bangladesh is largely ceremonial, but has the power to grant clemency on all death sentences.
Earlier this year, the president used his limited power to quash graft cases against Awami League officials, including one against the son of its deputy party chief.
15-year-old killed in bizarre ATV accident:
MARYSTOWN, N.L. - A 15-year-old boy is dead following a bizarre and tragic all-terrain vehicle accident in Newfoundland.
The RCMP said the boy was riding the machine Monday morning with a blanket tied around his neck like a cape when it became entangled in the rear axle.
The blanket tightened around the boy's neck and he was pulled off the ATV.
The accident occurred near Golden Bay Sands Resort in Marystown.
An emergency room nurse who happened upon the scene performed CPR on the boy until paramedics arrived.
The boy was pronounced dead at the scene.
MARYSTOWN, N.L. - A 15-year-old boy is dead following a bizarre and tragic all-terrain vehicle accident in Newfoundland.
The RCMP said the boy was riding the machine Monday morning with a blanket tied around his neck like a cape when it became entangled in the rear axle.
The blanket tightened around the boy's neck and he was pulled off the ATV.
The accident occurred near Golden Bay Sands Resort in Marystown.
An emergency room nurse who happened upon the scene performed CPR on the boy until paramedics arrived.
The boy was pronounced dead at the scene.
RCMP require finger printing of any volunteers who have birth dates that match those of pardoned sexual offenders. http://bit.ly/98DqLp
Tangled in RCMP'S red tape
Someone, somewhere out there in Canada, has the same birthdate or name as teacher Michelle Gagnon.
And that someone was pardoned for a sexual offence.
Gagnon doesn't know who the person is, but their criminal history has made her own work life a hassle, to say the least.
The 45-year-old St. Catharines resident has been tangled up in new changes to the way criminal background checks are done for employment or volunteering.
The changes by the RCMP were designed to make Canadians safer, but for those who share common birth dates or names with convicted criminals, the process has become a lot more complicated.
"I've been flagged," said Gagnon, who said her name is fairly popular in French.
"It's serious. I can't be labelled with someone else's criminal activity."
Gagnon needed a criminal record clearance to work as a supply teacher with French Catholic and public school boards. She found out last week from Niagara Regional Police that the clearance couldn't be provided.
Now, she has to be fingerprinted and her prints will be sent to the RCMP, a process she was told by Niagara Regional Police would take a minimum 120 days.
While the RCMP says the turnaround is really 14 days -- a widespread communications problem -- it's clear the number of people in Niagara who require fingerprinting for background checks has soared.
The NRP said 45 people have been flagged since the changes were brought in three weeks ago. That compares with the usual four people per year.
READ MORE.... http://www.stcatharinesstandard.ca/ArticleDisplay.aspx?e=2709772
And that someone was pardoned for a sexual offence.
Gagnon doesn't know who the person is, but their criminal history has made her own work life a hassle, to say the least.
The 45-year-old St. Catharines resident has been tangled up in new changes to the way criminal background checks are done for employment or volunteering.
The changes by the RCMP were designed to make Canadians safer, but for those who share common birth dates or names with convicted criminals, the process has become a lot more complicated.
"I've been flagged," said Gagnon, who said her name is fairly popular in French.
"It's serious. I can't be labelled with someone else's criminal activity."
Gagnon needed a criminal record clearance to work as a supply teacher with French Catholic and public school boards. She found out last week from Niagara Regional Police that the clearance couldn't be provided.
Now, she has to be fingerprinted and her prints will be sent to the RCMP, a process she was told by Niagara Regional Police would take a minimum 120 days.
While the RCMP says the turnaround is really 14 days -- a widespread communications problem -- it's clear the number of people in Niagara who require fingerprinting for background checks has soared.
The NRP said 45 people have been flagged since the changes were brought in three weeks ago. That compares with the usual four people per year.
READ MORE.... http://www.stcatharinesstandard.ca/ArticleDisplay.aspx?e=2709772
SOUTH KOREA PARDONS BROTHER OF EX-PRESIDENT
South Korea pardons brother of ex-president, corporate executives as part of annual tradition
By The Associated Press (CP) – Aug 12, 2010
SEOUL, South Korea — South Korea announced special pardons for the imprisoned older brother of late President Roh Moo-hyun and 18 corporate executives as part of traditional amnesties granted during Liberation Day celebrations.
The Justice Ministry said 2,493 people would be given presidential pardons, reduced sentences or have their civil rights restored starting Saturday. Liberation Day — which commemorates the Aug. 15, 1945, end of Japanese colonial rule over the Korean peninsula — and other holidays are often marked in this way.
Among those pardoned is Roh Gun-pyeong, who was convicted and sentenced last year to two and a half years in prison for influence-peddling while his brother was president in 2006. The former president jumped to his death in May last year while embroiled in a separate corruption scandal.
The corporate executives pardoned include former Samsung group vice chairman Lee Hak-soo, who was sentenced to two and a half years in prison for breach of trust. Lee had been given a suspended five-year prison sentence.
The vast majority of the pardons were given to those found guilty of election law violations, including a number of politicians.
By The Associated Press (CP) – Aug 12, 2010
SEOUL, South Korea — South Korea announced special pardons for the imprisoned older brother of late President Roh Moo-hyun and 18 corporate executives as part of traditional amnesties granted during Liberation Day celebrations.
The Justice Ministry said 2,493 people would be given presidential pardons, reduced sentences or have their civil rights restored starting Saturday. Liberation Day — which commemorates the Aug. 15, 1945, end of Japanese colonial rule over the Korean peninsula — and other holidays are often marked in this way.
Among those pardoned is Roh Gun-pyeong, who was convicted and sentenced last year to two and a half years in prison for influence-peddling while his brother was president in 2006. The former president jumped to his death in May last year while embroiled in a separate corruption scandal.
The corporate executives pardoned include former Samsung group vice chairman Lee Hak-soo, who was sentenced to two and a half years in prison for breach of trust. Lee had been given a suspended five-year prison sentence.
The vast majority of the pardons were given to those found guilty of election law violations, including a number of politicians.
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