Trump’s Justice Department examining pardons issued by Biden
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The investigation will look into whether former US president Joe Biden “was competent” when he issued the pardons.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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WASHINGTON - A senior official in Republican US President Donald Trump’s Justice Department told staff on June 2 that he has been directed to investigate clemency granted by Democrat former president Joe Biden in the waning days of his presidency to members of his family and death row inmates.
Mr Ed Martin, the Justice Department’s pardon attorney, wrote in an e-mail seen by Reuters that the investigation involves whether Mr Biden “was competent and whether others were taking advantage of him through use of autopen or other means”.
An autopen is a device used to automatically affix a signature to a document.
Mr Trump and his supporters have made a variety of unfounded claims that Mr Biden’s use of the device while he was president invalidated his actions, or suggested that he was not fully aware of these actions.
It is not known whether Mr Biden used autopen on pardons.
The e-mail stated that Mr Martin’s investigation is focused on pre-emptive pardons Mr Biden issued to several members of his family and clemency that spared 37 federal inmates from the death penalty, converting their sentences to life in prison.
Just before he relinquished the presidency to Mr Trump on Jan 20, Mr Biden pardoned five members of his family, saying he wanted to protect them from future politically motivated investigations.
The pardons went to his siblings James Biden, Frank Biden and Valerie Biden Owens, as well as their spouses, Mr John Owens and Mrs Sara Biden.
Mr Biden on Dec 1 pardoned his son Hunter Biden
Mr Martin’s e-mail did not specify which pardons of Mr Biden’s family members were being investigated.
It also did not make clear who had directed Mr Martin to launch the investigation.
A Justice Department spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment. A Biden spokesperson did not immediately provide comment.
The US Constitution gives the president broad power to issue pardons to wipe away federal criminal convictions, or commutations to modify sentences.
Mr Trump himself has made extensive use of executive clemency.
For instance, he granted clemency on Jan 20 to all of the nearly 1,600 of his supporters
Mr Martin previously served as the interim US attorney in Washington before his nomination for that post foundered in the Senate.
He told reporters in May that he viewed the presidential pardon power as “plenary”, meaning it is absolute.
“If you use the autopen for pardon power, I don’t think that that’s necessarily a problem,” Mr Martin said during a press conference on May 13, adding that he still felt the Biden pardons warranted scrutiny.
The investigation appears designed to use the Justice Department to amplify questions about Mr Biden’s health and mental acuity, a conversation that has intensified in recent weeks following his cancer diagnosis
Mr Biden, who is 82, in 2024 dropped his re-election bid amid questions about his mental acuity, after a disastrous presidential debate performance.
He was the oldest person to serve as US president, and Mr Trump is the second-oldest.
Mr Biden’s closest aides have dismissed those concerns, saying he was fully capable of making important decisions.
No evidence has emerged to suggest that Mr Biden did not intend to issue the pardons.
In addition, a Justice Department memo from 2005 found it was legitimate for a subordinate to use an autopen for the president’s signature. REUTERS

