As I agree with You even living in the other side of the world, I wish to ask You a couple questions if I may:
a) Is it legal in US system for a President to disawow any pardon granted from a previous President? cough possibly Fauci cough?
b) Assuming they should be hanged for willing massacre an inordinate number of people, realistically could Don at day 1 issue an executive order like this one? Every one who committed a crime related to covid who will fully and entirely confess all the crimes and co-cospirators during the next 7 days should have the penalties reduced to 1/10th of the normal, so putting the whole cabal under a strong pressure to confess and finally enlight the whole world on what happened in those fateful years?
Biden’s use of “preemptive pardons” is unprecedented. In the American justice system, a person is innocent until convicted of a crime in a court of law. Therefore, Biden seeks to “pardon” a person who is de facto “innocent.” Because of this, I’m not sure that presidential “preemptive pardons” will survive the Supreme Court’s scrutiny.
As I agree with You even living in the other side of the world, I wish to ask You a couple questions if I may:
a) Is it legal in US system for a President to disawow any pardon granted from a previous President? cough possibly Fauci cough?
b) Assuming they should be hanged for willing massacre an inordinate number of people, realistically could Don at day 1 issue an executive order like this one? Every one who committed a crime related to covid who will fully and entirely confess all the crimes and co-cospirators during the next 7 days should have the penalties reduced to 1/10th of the normal, so putting the whole cabal under a strong pressure to confess and finally enlight the whole world on what happened in those fateful years?
Your opinion... could this works?
Thanks
Biden’s use of “preemptive pardons” is unprecedented. In the American justice system, a person is innocent until convicted of a crime in a court of law. Therefore, Biden seeks to “pardon” a person who is de facto “innocent.” Because of this, I’m not sure that presidential “preemptive pardons” will survive the Supreme Court’s scrutiny.
Hope so, but i'm not holding my breath... They seemed so fluffy and plyable in all these years...
just to say...
2020... nothing to see here???