Sideroxylon
Featherless biped
The extraordinary becomes normalised and one day you wake up in a third-world dictatorship.
The extraordinary becomes normalised and one day you wake up in a third-world dictatorship.
Turkey, right?
People do get what "a pardon" is, right?
Listen I loathe both Trump and Arpaio but people are acting like Trump somehow went outside the system and did something he wasn't supposed to be able to do. Saying a pardon is "subverting the legal system" ignores that pardons are built into the legal system by design.
But legally and Constitutionally... this is exactly why we have pardons, so the President can override legal proceedings. It's built into the system. This wasn't some shady, underhanded "Technicality" he performed it is literally the letter and the spirit (speaking in a purely legal and constitutional sense, not my personal opinion of it which I find odious) the concept.
People do get what "a pardon" is, right?
Listen I loathe both Trump and Arpaio but people are acting like Trump somehow went outside the system and did something he wasn't supposed to be able to do. Saying a pardon is "subverting the legal system" ignores that pardons are built into the legal system by design.
But legally and Constitutionally... this is exactly why we have pardons, so the President can override legal proceedings. It's built into the system. This wasn't some shady, underhanded "Technicality" he performed it is literally the letter and the spirit (speaking in a purely legal and constitutional sense, not my personal opinion of it which I find odious) the concept.
You do get who he has pardoned and why, right?
I'm not super versed on this, but I'm taking this as an opportunity to learn.
As I understand it, Arpaio's conviction was rooted not just in arbitrary federal law, but in violations of constitutional rights.
I don't believe the precedents for pardons include too many examples of presidential pardons for constitutional violations.
If the President has the power to overrule the constitution with a pardon, then he has removed any checks on power. Trump has also been investigating preemptive pardons and the ability to pardon himself, and both those questions are not entirely resolved.
Perhaps there are no precedents (although how exactly pardoning someone for a "constitutional violation" is any different then pardoning someone for a crime isn't clear to me) but there is nothing in the letter or legal and Constitutional spirit of the concept of the pardon that this is a violation of.
You are correct it is, sort of, an unchecked power. The only check is us electing better Presidents.
I'm not made that people are angry at Trump for doing this, hell I'm angry at Trump for doing this, but a lot of people are acting as if he pulled some dirty, underhanded legalize trick when all he did was... exactly by the books what the office of POTUS allows him to do.
He did something morally wrong, he didn't do anything procedurally wrong.
You do understand that there is no such thing as a Jury Trial for Contempt of Court cases, right?
No I do not understand that because there is such a thing.
No I do not understand that because there is such a thing.
Contempt of court is considered a prerogative of the court, and "the requirement of a jury does not apply to 'contempts committed in disobedience of any lawful writ, process, order, rule, decree, or command entered in any suit or action brought or prosecuted in the name of, or on behalf of, the United States.'
....
He did something morally wrong, he didn't do anything procedurally wrong.
You do understand that there is no such thing as a Jury Trial for Contempt of Court cases, right?
785. Jury Trial
The Supreme Court has adopted the standard set forth in 18 U.S.C. § 1(3) regarding the definition of a "petty offense," insofar as it has ruled that imprisonment for no more than six months for contempt is constitutionally permissible without a jury trial. Taylor v. Hayes, 418 U.S. 488 (1974). See also Frank v. United States, 395 U.S. 147 (1969) (sentence of three years probation permissible without jury trial). However, the Court has declined to rule that contempt proceedings, at least as to organizations, resulting in fines of greater than the amount set out in 18 U.S.C. § 1(3) are automatically entitled to jury trials. See Muniz v. Hoffman, 422 U.S. 454, 477 (1975).
A court may, during the course of a trial, impose successive summary contempt orders resulting in an aggregate sentence of imprisonment of more than six months in the absence of a jury trial. Such sentencing is permissible so long as no one contempt order carries a sentence of greater than six months. If, however, the court chooses to impose a single finding of contempt at the termination of the trial, imprisonment for longer than six months is constitutionally impermissible without a jury trial, even if the judge calculates the sentence of imprisonment for each contempt at six months or less. See Codispoti v. Pennsylvania, 418 U.S. 506 (1974).
If the contempt falls within the purview of 18 U.S.C. § 402, contempts constituting crimes, then the contemnor is automatically entitled to a jury trial by reason of 18 U.S.C. § 3691.
There was no requirement for a Jury trial.
Too bad Trump pardoned him, he should have been allowed a jury trial, instead of a bench trial.
Viva la constitution!