-Caveat Lector-

http://writ.news.findlaw.com/dean/20001208.html

FindLaw
Friday, Dec. 08, 2000

PRESIDENT CLINTON'S INDICTMENT AND PARDON � COMING SOON

By JOHN DEAN

All the clues suggest that William Jefferson Clinton is going to
be indicted by Independent Counsel Robert Ray shortly after the
president leaves office. This action, if it happens, will have
major political consequences for the new president. If Al Gore
becomes president, the indictment will begin a nightmare that
could ruin his presidency. But if George W. Bush becomes
president, Clinton's indictment could make his presidency.

As for the soon-to-be former president, although he will never go
to prison (with his Secret Service detail to protect him and the
nation's national security), he may be seriously considering
granting himself a pardon. Not merely for himself, but for his
wife, his daughter, his party and his country.

Why A Clinton Indictment Is Likely

As I see it, Independent Counsel Robert Ray has only one purpose
in life: to indict Bill Clinton when he leaves office at noon on
January 20, 2001. That has been evident since Ray replaced Ken
Starr in October 1999 as independent counsel. During an exit
interview with Larry King Live, Judge Starr explained that he was
leaving � in essence � because he had become "politicized," and
that for the good of the continuing investigations and potential
prosecutions, he needed to step aside. In short, Robert Ray, an
ambitious and able career prosecutor, did not take the
independent counsel job merely to write the final report required
by the law and close down the operation.

While Ray initially ducked the questions about indicting Clinton,
as the months have passed, his plans have become clear. Last
summer, just before the Democratic National Convention in Los
Angeles, it was accidentally leaked to the media that Ray had
empanelled a new grand jury. In September, when reporting that he
had "determined that the evidence was insufficient to prove to a
jury beyond a reasonable doubt that either President Clinton or
Mrs. Clinton knowingly participated in any criminal conduct"
relating to the Whitewater matter, Ray acknowledged that his new
grand jury was investigating President Clinton's conduct in the
Lewinsky scandal. More specifically, Ray told CNN's Late Edition
he would give his decision about indicting Bill Clinton "very
shortly after the president leaves office in the best interest of
the country, and also not to unfairly tread on the new
president's administration."

Robert Ray has not been twiddling his thumbs for over a year in
his job, not knowing what he plans to do with Bill Clinton.
Rather, Ray is waiting for Clinton to leave office because it is
doubtful whether a sitting president can be indicted.

Of course Ray knows he is going to indict, and he has been
preparing for battle. How can he not indict? He has a formal
finding of a federal judge that the record in a civil lawsuit
against Clinton (the Paula Jones case) "demonstrates by clear and
convincing evidence that the president responded � by giving
false, misleading and evasive answers that were designed to
obstruct the judicial process." And Ray knows that about half the
members of the 106th Congress of the United States found that the
president not only committed perjury and obstruction of justice
in a civil lawsuit, but also did the same before a federal grand
jury and during impeachment proceedings.

No career prosecutor is going to ignore this evidence of the
president's criminal conduct and give him a pass. Nor will he let
Bill Clinton recover millions of dollars (in legal fees) from the
government, which would happen under the independent counsel law
if he is not indicted. The retiring president is about to leap
from the proverbial frying pan into the fire.

Gore's Nightmare: A Clinton Indictment and Trial

Should Al Gore become president, the indictment and criminal
trial of Bill Clinton at the outset of his presidency would be a
horror show. Only the resurrection of Richard Nixon could be more
disquieting to the Capital City than the return of the Lewinsky
scandal. For Gore to govern without the spectacle of the former
president in the dock for lying about his sexual dalliances would
be difficult enough, given Washington's proclivity for gridlock
compounded by the controversy over this presidential election. A
Clinton trial would send phalanxes of fuming Republicans, all
near paranoid in their conviction that Gore had stolen the
election, into a partisan tizzy.

There are only two people Republicans loathe more than Al Gore �
Bill and Hillary Clinton. Now fearful that Senator Hillary may
one day reclaim the White House, Republican zealots will find the
Clinton criminal trial an irresistible opportunity, seeing in it
the opportunity to further savage Bill Clinton and thereby also
taint his wife, as well as any Democratic defenders of the former
president. This is exactly the type of nasty partisan activity
that the Gore Administration would need to avoid, yet there would
be nothing the administration could do to prevent or ameliorate
it.

High-powered Democrats would then pressure Gore to pardon
Clinton, to end the carnage. He can't do it. For Al Gore to
deprive Republicans of both the Oval Office, and their revenge on
Bill Clinton, would be political suicide. It would tear the
already divided Capitol apart. Gore would lose all hope of
working with Republicans, who would be incapable of containing
their anger. Fury knows no wrath like that of a politically
scorned right wing Republican � I know about that, and it's not
sane. In fact, many Democrats might oppose a pardon for Clinton.
Thus, a pardon could guarantee that Gore, like Jerry Ford, serves
only one term.

Bush's Pardon of Clinton: A Political Masterstroke

On the other hand, if George W. Bush is in the Oval Office when
Clinton is indicted, a pardon of Clinton will present a marvelous
political opportunity for Bush. It would be chance to pacify
partisan rancor, and offer an olive branch to the Democrats.

Inherent in the power to pardon is the authority to forgive an
offense before an indictment, as President Ford did with Richard
Nixon. Thus, Bush can prevent the political embarrassment and
distraction of the Clinton criminal trial with an act of grace �
his presidential pardon. That pardon, of course, would send
Independent Counsel Ray packing, for then his work, other than a
final report, would be done. While a Clinton pardon would upset a
few Republican zealots who want to drive a stake into Clinton's
political heart, at best they could only groan, grumble, and
growl, and maybe snap at their new leader, but none will harm
him.

Clinton Could Refuse a Pardon

There is a problem, however. Bill Clinton may have no interest at
all in such a political ploy by Bush. Instead, he may want to
prove his innocence, and he may believe that he can do so without
hurting his wife politically or his daughter emotionally. "I
don't want [a pardon], and I'm prepared to stand before any bar
of justice that I have to stand before," Clinton told the
American Society of Newspaper Editors last summer.

The law is not absolutely clear that Clinton could, in fact,
prevent a President Bush from pardoning him � but it does suggest
that this may be the case. It is difficult to find a body of
constitutional jurisprudence smaller than that on presidential
pardons, which have been the subject of only a handful of rulings
by the Untied States Supreme Court. It appears, however, that a
presidential pardon cannot be forced on a person.

In 1915, the Supreme Court ruled in Burdick v. United States that
there was a "confession of guilt implied in the acceptance of a
pardon," so the recipient should have a right to refuse it.
However, twelve years later, in Biddle v. Perovich, the Court
held that a presidential commutation of a sentence was effective
notwithstanding the refusal of the recipient, stating that "[a]
pardon in our days is not a private act of grace from an
individual happening to possess power. It is a part of the
constitutional scheme. When granted it is the determination of
the ultimate authority that the public welfare will be better
served by inflicting less than what the judgment fixed."

Notwithstanding the Court's language referring to a "pardon,"
Biddle must be distinguished from Burdick because in commuting a
sentence, unlike with a pardon, guilt has been established � so a
presidential commutation does not cause an admission of guilt.
Biddle addresses the reduction of a sentence (which cannot be
refused), while Burdick prevents an imposition of guilt by an act
of clemency. Thus, under Burdick, a Bush pardon would appear to
have no effect if not accepted by Bill Clinton.

But would Clinton go to court to have a Bush pardon invalidated?
His statement during the presidential campaign of his Vice
President that he did not want a pardon, however, does not mean
that he might not welcome the relief. Faced with an indictment,
and the prospect of a criminal trial that would revive all of the
sordidness of his sexual liaison with Monica Lewinsky � a trial
that will require graphically detailed testimony about who
touched whom sexually � the former president might reconsider his
decision to "stand before any bar of justice."

A Bush pardon would give Clinton the chance to avoid giving not
only his detractors, but those of his wife � the junior United
States Senator from New York � a new stockpile of political
ammunition that could fatally wound them both. It would also
allow Clinton to save his daughter, Chelsea, from further
humiliation from her father's infidelity, to prevent another
media circus where the details of oral sex become daily news, and
to end the ongoing accrual of legal expenses that would far
exceed the joint income of his presidential pension and wife's
salary.

Would Clinton really, upon reflection, sacrifice all this, only
to gain the benefit of undergoing a problematic trial in the hope
of proving his innocence? Such a pardon might be difficult to
turn down.

Clinton's Self-Pardon: Another Possibility

President Clinton is no fool. He understands that if Al Gore
becomes president, Gore, for political reasons, will not be able
to pardon him. He will not want George W. Bush in a position to
politically profit from a pardon, if Bush is the candidate who
becomes president. And he surely knows an indictment and trial
have a greater downside potential than any upside. For these
reasons, I would be surprised if he has not given serious thought
to a self-pardon.

To pardon himself, Clinton would need only to take out a blank
sheet of White House stationery, write out his pardon (he's
signed 185 of them � so far the fewest of any of the modern
president but enough to know what they say), and request that a
couple of trusted White House aides witness his execution and
delivery of his pardon deed. Is it really so simple? Yes; the
courts have said there is no required form or procedure, nor need
there be compliance with Justice Department clemency regulations.

If Clinton were to take this action before noon, January 20,
2001, it would dramatically alter the dynamics of the terrible
predicament awaiting him after leaving office. Obviously, he will
be politically attacked for pardoning himself. But can those
attacks begin to equal the problems of an indictment and trial?
Not likely. Nor is there anything anyone would be able to do
about his presidential action.

If the Independent Counsel were to take him to court over his
self-pardon, he would be represented by the Department of
Justice, or by a private attorney hired by the Department, if the
Department believed it had a conflict of interest. (With Bush in
the White House, the Department would indeed suffer from such a
conflict.) So this would not cost him more in legal fees.

Good Authority for a Clinton Self-Pardon

While no president has ever pardoned himself, the law supports
the president's authority to do so. Scholarly inquiry into the
subject was provoked first by fear that Richard Nixon would
pardon himself to escape Watergate; later by thought that George
H. W. Bush would do so because of the Iran-Contra grand jury; and
most recently by concern about Bill Clinton's problem of a
possible post-Presidency indictment and trial. And while a few
scholars have concluded that the president cannot pardon himself,
many more believe that he can.

As one Member of Congress said during the Clinton impeachment
proceedings, "the prevailing opinion is the President can pardon
himself." Thus, should Bill Clinton pardon himself, and should
Independent Counsel Ray decide to go to Court to test his
presidential power to do so, not only would that court case delay
the prospect of resolving any criminal action against the former
president quickly, it would also present a case of first
impression, with the authority overwhelmingly on the side of the
former president.

The president's pardon power is set forth in the constitution.
Article II, section 2 grants the president "Power to grant
Reprieves and Pardons for Offenses against the United States,
except in Cases of Impeachment." The text of the constitution,
its history, and the placement of the pardon power within the
structure of the constitution, all show that there are no limits
on this power, other than the exception that prevents the
president from pardoning "impeachments." Accordingly, the Supreme
Court has described this presidential power as "plenary." As one
recent commentator summed it up, short of a constitutional
amendment, there is absolutely nothing "to prevent any president
from pardoning himself."

Will Bill Clinton do so? We won't know until he is indicted, for
he would have to plead it as his defense. I would assume that we
will have an answer to this question by March, or by end of April
at the latest � if Independent Counsel Ray proceeds as he has
indicated. Although I cannot predict the answer, this much I can
promise: it will be interesting.


John Dean, a FindLaw columnist, is a former Counsel to the
President of the United States.

Copyright � 2000 FindLaw


=================================================================
             Kadosh, Kadosh, Kadosh, YHVH, TZEVAOT

  FROM THE DESK OF:
                     *Michael Spitzer*  <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
                      ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  The Best Way To Destroy Enemies Is To Change Them To Friends
=================================================================

<A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/">www.ctrl.org</A>
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance�not soap-boxing�please!  These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'�with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds�is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html
 <A HREF="http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html">Archives of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]</A>

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
 <A HREF="http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/">ctrl</A>
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to