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Joe Biden’s pardon for son Hunter condemned as ‘bad precedent’ – US politics live

The US president has been criticized by Democrats and Republicans for pardoning his son over federal gun and tax charges

Joe Biden and son Hunter Biden stepping out of a bookstore while shopping in Nantucket, Massachusetts on 29 November.

Chris Stein (now) and Luke Jacobs (earlier)

Mon 2 Dec 2024 08.58 EST

Key events 

08.58 EST

Legal experts who spoke to Politiconoted the scope of Joe Biden’s pardon of his son Hunter, saying that it is comparable only to the pardon Gerald Ford granted to his White House predecessor, Richard Nixon.

Rather than pardoning his son of the individual offenses that he faced, as is typical, Biden pardoned him of offenses over a period of more than 10 years – likely so the incoming Trump justice department can’t levy new charges against him.

Here’s more, from Politico:

Experts on pardons said they could think of only one other person who has received a presidential pardon so sweeping in generations: Nixon, who was given a blanket pardon by Gerald Ford in 1974.

“I have never seen language like this in a pardon document that purports to pardon offenses that have not apparently even been charged, with the exception of the Nixon pardon,” said Margaret Love, who served from 1990 to 1997 as the U.S. pardon attorney, a Justice Department position devoted to assisting the president on clemency issues.

“Even the broadest Trump pardons were specific as to what was being pardoned,” Love added.

Joe Biden’s “full and unconditional pardon” of his son is deliberately vague. Donald Trump and his allies have long fixated on the president’s son, and Trump has repeatedly pledged to use his second term to investigate and prosecute members of the Biden family. Conservative commentators have engaged in parlor-game speculation that Hunter Biden could be charged with bribery, illegal lobbying or other crimes stemming from his foreign business activities and drug addiction.

So rather than merely pardoning his son for the gun crimes for which he was convicted and the tax crimes for which he pleaded guilty, the president’s pardon covers all “offenses against the United States which he has committed or may have committed or taken part in” from Jan. 1, 2014, through Dec. 1, 2024. That language mirrors the language in Ford’s pardon of Nixon, which did not merely cover the Watergate scandal but extended to “all offenses against the United States” that Nixon “has committed or may have committed” between Jan. 20, 1969, and Aug. 9, 1974 — the exact span of Nixon’s presidency.