Thursday, July 9, 2020

List of Presidential Pardons



A list of people pardoned or granted clemency by the President of the United States. The plenary power to grant a pardon or a reprieve is granted to the president of the United States by Article II, Section 2, Clause 1 of the Constitution; the only limits mentioned in the Constitution are that pardons are limited to federal offenses, and that they cannot affect an impeachment process: "The president shall ... have power to grant reprieves and pardons for offenses against the United States, except in cases of impeachment".


Though pardons have been challenged in the courts, and the power to grant them challenged by Congress, the Court has consistently declined to put limits on the president's discretion. The president can issue a full pardon, reversing a criminal conviction (along with its legal effects) as if it never happened. A pardon can be issued from the time an offense is committed, and can even be issued after the full sentence has been served. The president can issue a reprieve, commuting a criminal sentence, lessening its severity, its duration, or both while leaving a record of the conviction in place. Additionally, the president can make a pardon conditional, or vacate a conviction while leaving parts of the sentence in place, like the payment of fines or restitution.


Approximately 20,000 pardons and commutations were issued by U.S. presidents in the 20th century alone. Pardons granted by presidents from George Washington until Grover Cleveland's first term (1885–1889) were handwritten by the president; thereafter, pardons were prepared for the president by administrative staff requiring only that the president sign it. The records of these presidential acts were openly available for public inspection until 1934. In 1981 the Office of the Pardon Attorney was created and records from President George H. W. Bush forward are now listed.


George Washington


President George Washington pardoned, commuted, or rescinded the convictions of 16 people. Among them are:


Philip Vigol (or Wigle) and John Mitchel, convicted of treason for their roles in the Whiskey Rebellion


John Adams


Federalist president John Adams pardoned, commuted or rescinded the convictions of 20 people. Among them are:


David Bradford, for his role in the Whiskey Rebellion


John Fries, for his role in Fries's Rebellion; convicted of treason due to opposition to a tax; Fries and others were pardoned, and a general amnesty was issued for everyone involved.


Thomas Jefferson


Democratic-Republican president Thomas Jefferson pardoned, commuted or rescinded the convictions of 119 people. One of his first acts upon taking office was to issue a general pardon for any person convicted under the Sedition Act. Among them are:


David Brown – convicted of sedition under the Sedition Act of 1798 because of his criticism of the U.S. federal government, receiving the harshest sentence of anyone; pardoned along with all violators of the act.


Benjamin Fairbanks – Convicted with Brown of erecting a Liberty Pole in Dedham, Massachusetts. He received the lightest sentence of anyone under the Act.


James Madison


Democratic-Republican president James Madison pardoned, commuted or rescinded the convictions of 196 people. Among them are:


William Hull – while Governor of the Michigan Territory, sentenced to death for surrendering Fort Detroit during the War of 1812; pardoned due to his heroic conduct during the American Revolution.


Jean Lafitte and Pierre Lafitte and the Baratarian Pirates for past piracy, granted due to their assistance during the War of 1812; granted February 6, 1815.


James Monroe


Democratic-Republican president James Monroe pardoned, commuted or rescinded the convictions of 419 people. Among them are:


Numerous individuals convicted of piracy.


John Quincy Adams


Democratic-Republican president John Quincy Adams pardoned, commuted or rescinded the convictions of 183 people. Among them are:


Captain L. O. Helland – arrested for having more passengers on board the vessel (Restauration) than were allowed by American law; pardoned in 1825


Wekau and Chickhonsic – Ho-Chunk leaders pardoned for their role in the Winnebago War


Andrew Jackson


Democratic president Andrew Jackson pardoned, commuted or rescinded the convictions of 386 people. Among them is:


George Wilson – convicted of robbing the United States mails. Strangely, Wilson refused to accept the pardon. The case went before the Supreme Court, and in United States v. Wilson the court stated: "A pardon is a deed, to the validity of which delivery is essential, and delivery is not complete without acceptance. It may then be rejected by the person to whom it is tendered; and if it is rejected, we have discovered no power in this court to force it upon him." Rather than serve a sentence of 20 years, Wilson was executed by hanging.


Martin Van Buren


Democratic president Martin Van Buren pardoned, commuted or rescinded the convictions of 168 people. Among them are:


William Lyon Mackenzie – violation of American neutrality laws; pardoned


William Henry Harrison


Whig president William Henry Harrison was one of only two presidents who issued no pardons, the other being James Garfield. This was due to Harrison's death shortly after taking office.

John Tyler


Whig president John Tyler pardoned, commuted or rescinded the convictions of 209 people. Among them are:


Alexander William Holmes – sailor convicted of voluntary manslaughter (U.S. v. Holmes); pardoned


James K. Polk


Democratic president James K. Polk pardoned, commuted or rescinded the convictions of 268 people. Among them are:


John C. Frémont – convicted by court martial of mutiny. Frémont later became the 1856 Republican candidate for the Presidency of the United States.


Gideon Johnson Pillow – convicted by court martial of insubordination in 1848.


Zachary Taylor


Whig president Zachary Taylor pardoned, commuted or rescinded the convictions of 38 people.

Millard Fillmore


Whig president Millard Fillmore pardoned, commuted or rescinded the convictions of 170 people. Among them are:


Daniel Drayton and Edward Sayres – convicted in the Pearl incident (transporting slaves to freedom); pardoned


Franklin Pierce


Democratic president Franklin Pierce pardoned, commuted or rescinded the convictions of 142 people.


Noah Hanson – a free black man who was tried and convicted of assisting slaves to escape, convicted in 1851; pardoned in 1854; only known presidential pardon of a black person for Underground Railroad activities;


James Buchanan


Democratic president James Buchanan pardoned, commuted or rescinded the convictions of 150 people. Among them are:


Brigham Young – pardoned for role in the Utah War.


Daniel Vandersmith – a former judge, pardoned for forgery.


Abraham Lincoln


Republican president Abraham Lincoln pardoned, commuted or rescinded the convictions of 343 people. Among them are:


264 of 303 Dakota Indians who attacked white settlers in the Great Sioux Uprising of 1862.


Clement Vallandigham – Copperhead Congressman sentenced for disloyalty; sentence commuted, and deported to the Confederacy.


Various men who enlisted in the army, but who were, among other circumstances, underage, bounty jumpers, or AWOL.


Andrew Johnson


Democratic president Andrew Johnson pardoned about 7,000 people in the "over $20,000" class by May 4, 1866. More than 600 prominent North Carolinians were pardoned just before the election of 1864. President Andrew Johnson pardoned, commuted or rescinded the convictions of 654 people. Among them are:


Ex-Confederates – On Christmas Day, 1868, Johnson issued a full and unconditional pardon and amnesty to all former Confederates of the rebellion (earlier amnesties requiring signed oaths and excluding certain classes of people were issued by both Lincoln and Johnson). Among them were:


Charles D. Anderson

Richard H. Anderson

Eli Metcalfe Bruce

Horatio Washington Bruce

Charles Clark

Jefferson Davis

Harris Flanagin

Augustus Hill Garland

Benjamin Harvey Hill

Wade Keyes

Enoch Louis Lowe

Andrew Gordon Magrath

Eugenius Aristides Nisbet

James Byeram Owens

Walter Preston

James Seddon

Alexander H. Stephens

George Trenholm

Samuel Arnold – charged with conspiring to murder Lincoln

Samuel Mudd – charged with conspiring to murder Lincoln

Edmund Spangler – charged with conspiring to murder Lincoln


Ulysses S. Grant


Republican president Ulysses S. Grant pardoned, commuted or rescinded the convictions of 1,332 people. Among them are:


Ex-Confederate leaders – All but 500 former top Confederate leaders were pardoned when President Grant signed the Amnesty Act of 1872.


Rutherford B. Hayes


Republican president Rutherford B. Hayes pardoned, commuted or rescinded the convictions of 893 people. ,Among them is:


Ezra Heywood – an Anarchist convicted of violating the 1873 Comstock Act; pardoned after 6 months


James Garfield


Republican president James A. Garfield was one of only two presidents who issued no pardons, the other being William Henry Harrison. This was due to Garfield's assassination shortly after he took office.


Chester A. Arthur


Republican president Chester A. Arthur pardoned, commuted or rescinded the convictions of 337 people. Among them is:


Fitz John Porter – former Army officer court-martialed in 1863 for his actions at the Second Battle of Bull Run; sentence commuted


Grover Cleveland


Democratic president Grover Cleveland pardoned, commuted or rescinded the convictions of 1,107 (est.) people during his two, non-consecutive terms. Among them are:


James Brooks – Texas Ranger indicted for manslaughter in 1883; pardoned in 1886 after lobbying from his fellow Rangers


Rudger Clawson – A Mormon convicted of polygamy in 1882; pardoned in 1887


David King Udall – convicted on perjury charges; spent 3 months in prison; full and unconditional pardon in 1885


"Billy Wilson" (David L. Anderson) – outlaw and associate of Billy the Kid; pardoned in 1896


Benjamin Harrison


Republican president Benjamin Harrison pardoned, commuted or rescinded the convictions of 613 people. Among them are:


Members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints – On January 4, 1893, granted amnesty and pardon for the offense of engaging in polygamous or plural marriage to members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church).


William McKinley


Republican president William McKinley pardoned, commuted or rescinded the convictions of 918 (est.) people. Among them are:


Alexander McKenzie – North Dakota political activist convicted of contempt of court in 1901; pardoned after spending three months in prison


Charles Chilton Moore – Atheist newspaper publisher jailed for sending obscene material in the mail in 1899; sentence commuted after six months in prison


Theodore Roosevelt


Republican president Theodore Roosevelt pardoned, commuted or rescinded the convictions of 981 (est.) people. Among them are:


Servillano Aquino – Filipino general received death sentence in 1902 for anti-American activities in the Philippines; pardoned after 2 years


Al Jennings – former train robber sentenced to life in prison for robbery in 1899, freed on technicality three years later; pardoned in 1904


Stephen A. Douglas Puter – convicted of land fraud in 1906; pardoned after 18 months so he could turn state's evidence


William Howard Taft


Republican president William Howard Taft pardoned, commuted or rescinded the convictions of 758 people. Among them are:


John Hicklin Hall – attorney and politician convicted in 1908 for his role in the Oregon land fraud scandal; pardoned


Charles W. Morse – ice shipping magnate convicted in 1909 of violations of federal banking laws; pardoned in 1912 due to ill health (later found to be feigned)


William Van Schaick – steamboat captain convicted for criminal negligence for the General Slocum steamship disaster of 1904, pardoned after 3 ½ years in prison


Woodrow Wilson


Democratic president Woodrow Wilson pardoned, commuted or rescinded the convictions of 2,480 people. Among them are:


George Burdick – a New York newspaper editor, who had refused to testify in federal court regarding the sources used in his article concerning the collection of customs duties. He pleaded the 5th Amendment; President Wilson then granted him a full pardon for all of his federal offenses, which he refused. He continued to plead the 5th, at which he was sentenced by a federal judge for contempt. It was then that the Supreme Court reinforced the necessity of accepting a pardon to be valid; the federal judge had imprisoned Burdick on the grounds that he was claiming falsely his need for protection against self-incrimination.


Frederick Krafft – Socialist political candidate convicted for alleged violation of the Espionage Act in June 1918, pardoned after serving nine months. Only person convicted under this law to receive a full executive pardon.


Warren Harding


Republican president Warren G. Harding pardoned, commuted or rescinded the convictions of 800 people. Among them are:


Eugene V. Debs – Socialist convicted of sedition under the Espionage Act of 1917; sentence commuted in 1921


Kate Richards O'Hare – convicted of sedition under the Espionage Act of 1917; sentence commuted in 1921


Calvin Coolidge


Republican president Calvin Coolidge pardoned, commuted or rescinded the convictions of 1,545 people. Among them are:


Marcus Garvey – Jamaican immigrant and founder of Universal Negro Improvement Association UNIA, convicted of mail fraud in 1923; sentence commuted and deported in 1927


Lothar Witzke – German spy and saboteur convicted in 1918; pardoned and deported in 1923.


Herbert Hoover


Republican president Herbert Hoover pardoned, commuted or rescinded the convictions of 1,385 people. Among them are:


Warren T. McCray – Governor of Indiana convicted of Mail Fraud in 1924, paroled in 1927; pardoned in 1930 after learning of the KKK's role in his arrest and conviction


Thomas W. Miller – former Congressman and World War I veteran, convicted of conspiring to defraud the U.S. government in 1927; pardoned in 1933.


Franklin D. Roosevelt


Democratic president Franklin D. Roosevelt granted 3,687 pardons in his four terms in office. Among them are:


George R. Dale – newspaper editor convicted of violating Prohibition laws in 1932; pardoned in 1933 after the repeal of Prohibition


Roy Olmstead – a bootlegger convicted for violating the National Prohibition Act in 1926, released in 1931; appealed, arguing that the wiretapping evidence used against him constituted a violation of his constitutional rights to privacy and against self-incrimination; U.S. Supreme Court upheld the conviction in the landmark case of Olmstead v. United States; pardoned on Christmas Day of 1935


Duncan Renaldo – Romanian-born actor arrested for illegal entry into the US in 1933; pardoned


Harry Truman


Democratic president Harry S. Truman pardoned, commuted or rescinded the convictions of 2,044 people. Among them are:


George Caldwell – Louisiana building contractor convicted in 1940 of income tax evasion and bribery for requiring kickbacks from contractors, paroled the following year; pardoned


Oscar Collazo – A Puerto Rico nationalist, Collazo attempted Truman's assassination in 1950; Commuted death sentence to life sentence; also see listing under Carter


James Michael Curley – Mayor of Boston, Massachusetts convicted of fraud and mail fraud in 1947; pardoned in 1950


Richard W. Leche – former Governor of Louisiana, convicted of mail fraud in 1940; pardoned in 1947


Andrew J. May – former Congressman convicted of accepting bribes in 1947; pardoned in 1952.


Seymour Weiss – hotel executive and Democratic Party campaign financier, convicted of tax evasion and mail fraud in 1940, released in 1942; pardoned in 1947


1523 people convicted of violating the Selective Training and Service Act of 1940; full pardon


Dwight D. Eisenhower


Republican president Dwight D. Eisenhower pardoned, commuted or rescinded the convictions of 1,157 people. Among them is:


Maurice L. Schick – military court-martial for brutal murder; death sentence commuted to life imprisonment, with the condition that he would never be released. Legal challenge went to the Supreme Court, questioning the constitutionality of the punishment "Life Imprisonment Without Parole". Decided in Schick v. Reed that to be so sentenced was constitutional.


It is important to note that "until the Eisenhower Administration, each pardon grant was evidenced by its own separate warrant signed by the president. President Eisenhower began the practice of granting pardons by the batch, through the device of a "master warrant" listing all of the names of those pardoned, which also delegated to the Attorney General (or, later, the Deputy Attorney General or Pardon Attorney) authority to sign individual warrants evidencing the president's action."


John F. Kennedy


Democratic president John F. Kennedy pardoned, commuted, or rescinded the convictions of 575 people. Among them are:


First-time offenders convicted of crimes under the Narcotics Control Act of 1956 – pardoned all, in effect overturning much of the law passed by Congress.


Hank Greenspun – editor and publisher of the Las Vegas Sun, who was convicted in 1950 of violating the neutrality act in shipping arms to Israel during the Israeli War of Independence; was fined but received no prison time. Received a full pardon 1961


John Factor – reputed organized crime member convicted of mail fraud in 1939, released in 1949, scheduled to be deported. Pardoned in 1962 after investigation by Robert F. Kennedy


Hampton Hawes – musician convicted of heroin charges in 1958; Executive Clemency in 1963


Lyndon B. Johnson


Democratic president Lyndon B. Johnson pardoned, commuted, or rescinded the convictions of 1,187 people. Among them are:


Frank W. Boykin – Former Alabama Congressman convicted of bribery in 1963; pardoned in 1965 at the request of departing Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy.


Maurice Hutcheson – former president of the United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America; held in Contempt of Congress in 1957; pardoned


Richard Nixon


Republican president Richard Nixon pardoned, commuted, or rescinded the convictions of 926 people. Among them are:


Jimmy Hoffa – prominent labor union leader convicted of fraud and bribery (tax evasion) in 1964; sentence commuted (with conditions) on December 23, 1971


Angelo DeCarlo – convicted of conspiracy to commit murder and extortion in March 1970; was pardoned in late 1972 due to poor health, died on October 20, 1973.


Gerald Ford


Republican president Gerald Ford pardoned, commuted, or rescinded the convictions of 409 people. Among them are:


Richard Nixon – granted a full and unconditional pardon in 1974 just before he could be indicted in the Watergate scandal. This was the first – and only – time that a U.S. president received a pardon.


Ernest C. Brace – pardoned of his 1961 court-martial from the United States Marine Corps in light of his almost eight years as a POW in Vietnam.

Iva Toguri D'Aquino, aka – "Tokyo Rose" – convicted of treason in 1949, paroled in 1956. She was pardoned on January 19, 1977, Ford's last day in office. The only U.S. citizen convicted of treason during World War II to be pardoned.


Robert E. Lee – Confederate general during the Civil War, full rights of citizenship were posthumously restored


Vietnam war draft resisters – Ford offered conditional amnesty to over 50,000 draft resisters.


Maurice L. Schick – military court-martial for brutal murder; commuted to life with the possibility of parole.


Jimmy Carter


Democratic president Jimmy Carter pardoned, commuted, or rescinded the convictions of 566 people, and in addition to that pardoned over 200,000 Vietnam War draft dodgers. Among them are:


Oscar Collazo – Attempted assassination of President Harry S. Truman in 1950; commuted to time served in 1979


G. Gordon Liddy – Watergate figure. Convicted for 20 years for conspiracy, burglary, and illegal wiretapping; commuted after serving 4½ years in 1977


Peter Yarrow – Singer-songwriter of Peter, Paul and Mary, had pleaded guilty to a morals charge involving a 14-year-old girl in 1970 and served three months in prison, was pardoned in 1980.


Vietnam war draft resisters – Unconditional amnesty issued in the form of a pardon in 1977


Jefferson Davis – President of the Confederate States of America, was arrested and accused of treason in 1865. Charges were brought in 1868 but was absolved of any guilt for participation in the Civil War by President Andrew Johnson's Fourth Amnesty Proclamation on Christmas Day of that year. Posthumously pardoned.


Patty Hearst – Convicted of bank robbery in 1976 after being kidnapped and allegedly brainwashed; sentence commuted in 1979


Lolita Lebrón, Rafael Cancel Miranda, Irving Flores Rodriguez – opened fire in the U.S. House of Representatives and wounding five Congressmen in 1954; clemency


Frederic B. Ingram – Heir from Tennessee, convicted of bribing government officials in Illinois in 1977; jailed for 16 months. His sentence was commuted by Carter in December 1980.


Ronald Reagan


Republican president Ronald Reagan pardoned, commuted, or rescinded the convictions of 406 people. Among them are:


Mark Felt and Edward S. Miller – FBI officials convicted in December 1980 of authorizing illegal break-ins and fined. Pardoned on March 20, 1981. Mark Felt later in life admitted to being Deep Throat, the informant during the Watergate affair.


Marvin Mandel – former Governor of Maryland convicted of mail fraud and racketeering in 1977; granted clemency in 1981; conviction later overturned in U.S. district court.


Junior Johnson – a former NASCAR driver convicted of moonshining in 1956; pardoned in 1986


George Steinbrenner – Convicted of illegal Nixon campaign contributions and obstruction of justice in 1974; pardoned in January 1989


George H. W. Bush


Republican president George H. W. Bush pardoned, commuted, or rescinded the convictions of 77 people. Among them are:


For their roles in the Iran–Contra affair


Elliott Abrams

Duane Clarridge

Clair George

Alan Fiers

Robert McFarlane – National Security Adviser to President Ronald Reagan

Caspar Weinberger – Secretary of Defense under President Ronald Reagan


Armand Hammer – CEO of the Occidental Petroleum Company, contributed $110,000 to the Republican National Committee just before his pardon. Pardoned for illegally contributing $54,000 to Richard Nixon's presidential campaign in 1972.


Myra Soble – 1957 conviction of Conspiracy to Receive and Obtain National Defense Information and transmit same to foreign government in the Rosenberg spy ring; served four years, pardoned in 1991, died one year later.


Bill Clinton


Democratic president Bill Clinton pardoned, commuted, or rescinded the convictions of 459 people.[ Among them are:


Almon Glenn Braswell – Nutritional supplement magnate, convicted of mail fraud and perjury in 1983; pardoned


Henry Cisneros – Clinton's Secretary of Housing and Urban Development. Pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor count for lying to the FBI in 1999 about payments to a mistress, and was fined $10,000.


Roger Clinton, Jr. – brother of Bill Clinton. After serving a year in federal prison (1985–86) for cocaine possession.


John Deutch – Director of Central Intelligence, former Provost and University Professor, MIT. He had agreed to plead guilty to a misdemeanor for mishandling government secrets on January 19, 2001, but President Clinton pardoned him in his last day in office, two days before the Justice Department could file the case against him.


Edward Downe, Jr. – convicted of wire fraud, filing false income tax returns, and securities fraud in 1992; pardoned


Elizam Escobar – Puerto Rican artist and activist, convicted of seditious conspiracy in 1980; pardoned


FALN – commuted the sentences of 16 members of FALN, a Puerto Rican clandestine paramilitary organization operating mostly in Chicago and New York City


Henry O. Flipper – The first black West Point cadet was found guilty of "conduct unbecoming an officer" in 1882. Posthumously pardoned.


Patty Hearst – Convicted of bank robbery in 1976 after being kidnapped and allegedly brainwashed. Prison term commuted by Jimmy Carter and was released from prison in 1979. She was fully pardoned by Clinton in 2001.


Rick Hendrick – NASCAR team owner & champion; convicted of mail fraud in 1997; pardoned


Susan McDougal – business partner with Bill Clinton and Hillary Rodham Clinton in the failed Whitewater land deal. Guilty of contempt of court, she served her entire sentence starting in 1998 and was then pardoned.


Samuel Loring Morison – former Naval intelligence officer, convicted of espionage and theft of government property in 1985; pardoned


Mel Reynolds – Former Democratic member of the United States House of Representatives from Illinois. Convicted of bank fraud and obstruction of justice in 1997; sentence was commuted.


Marc Rich, Pincus Green – business partners; indicted by U.S. Attorney on charges of tax evasion and illegal trading with Iran in 1983 and fled the country that year. Pardoned in 2001 after Rich's ex-wife, Denise Eisenberg Rich, made large donations to the Democratic Party and the Clinton Foundation.


Dan Rostenkowski – Former Democratic member of the US House of Representatives from Illinois, indicted for his role in the Congressional Post Office scandal and pleaded guilty to mail fraud in 1996. Served his entire 17-month sentence, then pardoned in December 2000.


Fife Symington III – Governor of Arizona convicted of bank fraud in 1997, the conviction was overturned in 1999; subsequently pardoned.


Susan Rosenberg - a former radical activist and domestic terrorist of the early 1970s, was convicted of illegal explosives possession in 1984, commuted on January 20, 2001.


George W. Bush


Republican president George W. Bush pardoned, commuted, or rescinded the convictions of 200 people. Among them were:


José Compeán and Ignacio Ramos – Two US Border Patrol agents who wounded drug smuggler


Osvaldo Aldrete Dávila on February 17, 2005, and tried to cover up the incident received commutation in 2009.


John Forté – Hip-hop singer and songwriter sentenced for smuggling cocaine in 2000 was commuted.


Lewis "Scooter" Libby – Assistant to President George W. Bush and Chief of Staff to Dick Cheney was convicted of perjury in connection with the CIA leak scandal involving members of State Department who 'outed' CIA officer Valerie Plame. Was sentenced to 30 months in prison and fined him $250,000 on June 5, 2007. Libby received commutation of his prison sentence, not a full pardon, on July 2, 2007. Libby later received a full pardon from President Donald Trump in 2018.


Issac Robert Toussie – Brooklyn real estate developer, convicted of making false statements to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development in 2001; pardoned in 2008 and the pardon revoked one day later.


Charles Winters – Posthumous pardon for smuggling three B-17 Flying Fortress heavy bombers to Israel in the late 1940s; served 18 months in prison; died in 1984.


Barack Obama


Democratic president Barack Obama pardoned, commuted, or rescinded the conviction of 1,927 people. Among them were:


James Cartwright, retired US Marine Corps four-star general, he pleaded guilty to giving false statements to federal investigators in 2016 and was awaiting sentencing. Pardoned on January 17, 2017.


Dwight J. Loving, U.S. Army private sentenced to death in Texas for murdering two taxi drivers in 1988. Commuted to life without parole on January 17, 2017.


Chelsea Manning, U.S. Army whistleblower convicted by court-martial in July 2013, sentenced to 35 years in prison for providing classified documents to WikiLeaks. Commuted on January 17, 2017.


Willie McCovey, professional baseball player, pleaded guilty to tax evasion in 1995 and received two years probation and a $5,000 fine. Pardoned on January 17, 2017.


Ian Schrager, former co-owner of the famed dance club Studio 54, pleaded guilty to tax evasion in 1979 and received three and a half years in prison and a $20,000 fine. Pardoned on January 17, 2017.


Oscar López Rivera, FALN member sentenced in 1981 to 55 years in prison for seditious conspiracy, use of force to commit robbery, interstate transportation of firearms, and conspiracy to transport explosives with intent to destroy government property, and subsequently to an additional 15 years for attempted escape in 1988. Commuted on January 17, 2017.


Donald Trump


As of February 18, 2020, Republican president Donald Trump has issued 25 pardons and 10 commutations. Among them were:


Joe Arpaio, former Sheriff of Maricopa County, Arizona, was convicted of contempt of court for refusing to end the practice of "immigrant round ups," and was awaiting sentencing. Pardoned on August 25, 2017.


Sholom Rubashkin, an Iowa meatpacking magnate sentenced to 27 years in prison for bank fraud in 2010. Commuted on December 20, 2017.


Kristian Saucier, a former U.S. Navy sailor pleaded guilty to unauthorized possession and retention of national defense information in 2016, released the following year. Pardoned on March 9, 2018.


Lewis "Scooter" Libby, former chief of staff to the vice president of the United States, convicted of perjury and obstruction of justice in connection with the CIA leak scandal. The sentence was already commuted to time served by President George W. Bush in July 2007, shortly after Libby's conviction. Pardoned on April 13, 2018.


Jack Johnson, a champion boxer who was convicted in 1913 while traveling with his white girlfriend for violating the Mann Act, which made it illegal to transport women across state lines for "immoral" purposes, released after one year. Posthumously pardoned on May 24, 2018.


Dinesh D'Souza, author and documentary filmmaker, convicted of campaign finance violations in 2014. Pardoned on May 31, 2018.


Alice Johnson, an unemployed parcel delivery worker and first-time drug offender sentenced to life without parole in 1996 for conspiracy to possess cocaine, attempted possession of cocaine, and money laundering. Commuted on June 6, 2018.


Dwight Hammond and Steven Hammond, Oregon ranchers convicted in 2012 of two counts of arson on federal land. Commuted and pardoned on July 10, 2018.


Michael Behenna, former United States Army First Lieutenant who was convicted in 2009 of murdering an unarmed prisoner during the Iraq War. Sentenced to 25 years in military prison, paroled in 2014. Pardoned on May 7, 2019.


Conrad Black, a British newspaper publisher convicted in 2007 of fraud and obstruction of justice for scheming to siphon off millions of dollars from the sale of newspapers, spent 3-1/2 years in prison and was deported. Pardoned on May 15, 2019.


Pat Nolan, former California state legislator who pleaded guilty to racketeering in 1994, served 2 years and 2 months in prison. Pardoned on May 16, 2019.


Zay Jeffries, a mining engineer and former Vice President of General Electric. He was convicted in 1948 of violating of the Sherman Antitrust Act of 1890 and fined; died in 1965. Posthumously pardoned by Trump on October 10, 2019.


Mathew L. Golsteyn, a US Army officer who served in the War in Afghanistan. He was accused of murder after the 2010 killing of an unarmed Afghan bomb maker who was a prisoner of war, and the U.S. Army had opened an investigation of him in 2016. Pardoned on November 15, 2019.


Clint Lorance, a former first lieutenant with the 4th Brigade Combat Team, 82nd Airborne Division in the U.S. Army and veteran of the War in Afghanistan. He was convicted on two counts of second-degree murder for ordering soldiers in his platoon to open fire at three men approaching at high speed on a motorcycle in southern Afghanistan in July 2012 while his platoon was on combat patrol. He was sentenced to 19 years in prison in August 2013, and sent to Fort Leavenworth. Pardoned on November 15, 2019.


Rod Blagojevich, former Governor of Illinois, was charged with attempting to sell an appointment to the U.S. Senate to succeed President-elect Barack Obama. Was convicted of soliciting bribes, extortion, and wire fraud on June 27, 2011, and sentenced to 14 years in prison. Was commuted to time served on February 18, 2020.


Bernard Kerik, former New York City Police Commissioner, pleaded guilty to tax fraud and perjury in 2010 for concealing apartment renovations paid for by a contractor that the city had blacklisted because of suspected ties to organized crime. Was sentenced to four years in prison in 2010; was released in May 2013. Pardoned on February 18, 2020.

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