Jake Tapper Raises Eyebrows With Suggestion Biden May Have Issued a Secret Pardon in Final Days As POTUS
CNN anchor Jake Tapper is raising some eyebrows by speculating that there is a possibility former President Joe Biden may have issued a pardon no one knows about.
Haberman stated that Trump isn't alone in his outrage over Biden's slew of last-minute pardons saying that she'd spoken to some "former Biden officials," who were not especially happy the pardons included those that are pre-emptive for some individuals who haven't been charged with anything yet-- and others that have been backdated years to cover potential previous crimes.
"Although it is possible, we don’t know, but it is always possible for a president to pardon somebody and not announce it," Tapper said, hypothesizing.
Haberman replied, "That’s true. That’s true."
"I mean, so it's possible Joe Biden pardoned himself, and we just don’t know about it," Tapper said, while concluding the segment. "Who knows? Joe Biden set a lot of precedents on his way out the door."
Trump focused attention on the issue when, during his mid-week "Hannity" interview, he appeared to suggest his predecessor may have left himself vulnerable to investigation or prosecution based on his actions.
“And if you look at it, it all had to do with him,” Trump mused.
The odds that Biden issued a secret pardon to himself after giving his other family members pardons quite publicly in the days before he left the White House seem slim to none. Biden doesn't have 4-D chess moves in him like that.
Tapper also correctly pointed out that the Supreme Court ruling on presidential immunity offers him the same protections that Trump has been granted.
That said, here are a couple of interesting points. Haberman suggested that Trump isn't referencing any actions taken by Biden as president but rather, some of his alleged nefarious activity prior to becoming the 46th president.
"Trump seemed to be, unless I was misunderstanding him, talking about activities that were taken before Biden was in office," she surmised.
Hence, the preemptive pardons on a "full and unconditional" basis for his family members - James B. Biden, Sara Jones Biden, Valerie Biden Owens, John T. Owens, and Francis W. Biden - backdated to 2014.
"Trump can pardon himself & his family and keep that secret until they are charged with federal crimes," posited MSNBC's Lawrence O'Donnell in 2021.
That never happened.
As for precedent, late President Ronald Reagan issued pardons for two former FBI officials in March of 1981 that didn't become public immediately. Reagan had issued those pardons just days before he became the victim of an assassination attempt, but the White House at the time did not offer a reason as to why they weren't made public until mid-April.
Again, it seems far-fetched that Biden would pardon himself and then keep it secret. Biden pardoning himself and then forgetting he had done so altogether, however? Now that's possible.
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