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Haley Barbour Pardons: Mississippi Supreme Court Takes Up Case Challenging Former Governor

Haley Barbour

HOLBROOK MOHR   02/ 1/12 08:40 PM ET  AP

JACKSON, Miss. — The Mississippi Supreme Court said Wednesday it will take up the legal challenge to the pardons ex-Gov. Haley Barbour gave out in his last days in office.

State Attorney General Jim Hood, a Democrat, wants to invalidate dozens of the 198 pardons that Barbour, a Republican, handed out before his second four-year term ended Jan. 10. Ten of the people were still incarcerated when they received reprieves.

Only about two dozen of the people pardoned followed the Mississippi Constitution's requirement to publish a notice about their reprieves in their local newspapers for 30 days, said Hood, who wants the others invalidated. Barbour has said the pardons are valid and that he gave them because he's a Christian and believes in second chances.

Most of the people who could lose their pardons already served their sentences and have been out of prison for years. Some of them were convicted of comparatively minor crimes as far back as the 1960s and 1970s and have never been in trouble again.

Five of the pardoned are being held on a temporary restraining order issued by Hinds County Circuit Judge Tomie Green. The Supreme Court extended that order until it can rule on the matter. It set a hearing for Feb. 9 and said it would try to rule quickly.

Barbour had no comment on the case. Hood was pleased with the court's decision.

"This is a good development that the Supreme Court will decide the seminal issue in this case regarding the 30-day publication," Hood said in a statement Wednesday evening.

Hood said he will present the high court a brief on Tuesday showing that "numerous other courts have ruled consistent with our interpretation."

Five men who worked as Governor's Mansion trusties, four convicted killers and man serving life for robbery, already were released by the time Hood sought the injunction. The judge told the trusties to contact corrections officials every 24 hours, but one of them missed a court hearing before he was served with a summons this week in Laramie, Wyo.

Matt Steffey, a constitutional law professor at Mississippi College, said the high court's decision is not a surprise because it ultimately would be up to the justices to decide the constitutional issue.

"This is a positive development. Fundamentally these are legal arguments, not factual arguments, so there's no reason the Supreme Court should not speak to it," Steffey said. "It has created so much turmoil and attention, so to have a final resolution sooner than later would be welcome by everyone involved, I would think."

The case is unprecedented, Steffey said. It's a civil lawsuit, but five people have been ordered to remain in prison while others have been required to call corrections officials every day. Hood even sent his investigators all the way to Wyoming to serve a summons to convicted murderer Joseph Ozment, one of the former Governor's Mansion trusties.

"It's a core question of separation of powers between the branches of government. It's an important question that the Supreme Court has to answer," Steffey said.

Barbour granted some sort of reprieve to 26 inmates who were in custody – 10 full pardons; 13 medical releases; one suspension of sentence; one conditional, indefinite suspension of sentence; and one conditional clemency. Those being released for medical reasons or who received suspended sentences or conditional clemency did not need to publish notices in newspapers.

The Supreme Court's ruling means a lower court hearing on the matter won't happen Friday. An attorney for some of the people who received pardons requested the Supreme Court to take the case.

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JACKSON, Miss. — The Mississippi Supreme Court said Wednesday it will take up the legal challenge to the pardons ex-Gov. Haley Barbour gave out in his last days in office. State Attorney Genera...
JACKSON, Miss. — The Mississippi Supreme Court said Wednesday it will take up the legal challenge to the pardons ex-Gov. Haley Barbour gave out in his last days in office. State Attorney Genera...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mitsie
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Demarcus Jackson
Community College Psychology Prof in the South
03:33 PM on 02/04/2012
Take a look at this. These pardons are reprehensible: www.cnn.com/2012/02/03/justice/mississippi-pardon-dui/?hpt=ju_c1
02:08 AM on 02/15/2012
Its about the NRA. Barbour was a big NRA supporter and they donated to him. For some reason the NRA was for this.

http://www.nationalreview.com/campaign-spot/55644/barbour-thune-shuler-and-boren-meet-nra
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
l78lancer
Wisdom is the principal thing
12:31 AM on 02/03/2012
When people run government strictly on their ideology and how the feel, then the law and common sense get completely lost.

This kind of conservative think doesn't apply only to Barbour's decision here, but it is prevalent in the mindset of the right that permits them to disregard what is most beneficial to the majority, only what they want matters.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mara Para
02:10 PM on 02/02/2012
The man who murdered my brother received a life-sentence about 20 years ago. At the time of his sentencing, our family was told by victim's servies that he would be eligible for parole in about 13 years. I know that doesn't make any sense at all, but it actually happened. I've been writing letters to Wisconsin's parole board every year to beg they not release the prisoner from his life sentence. At the end of 2011 the board again denied him parole. Phew!

I am terrified Governor Scott Walker may do the same thing as Haley Barbour, incomprehensible since Republicans bill themselves as the law and order party. I'll be working to learn more about Wisconsin's parole policy in order to prevent, if I can, release of the man who killed my brother.

Haley Barbour did a very thoughtless thing when he used his royal prerogative to release murderers from sentences sought by law enforcement, imposed by courts and prayed for by victims and their families.

Haley Barbour, the goverernor from the party that finds empathy antithetical when ordinary law-abiding Americans need help, finds he empathizes most with criminals who commit "crimes of passion." What a topsy-turvy country this has become when an elected Republican governor sides with the criminal over the victim.

Shame on Barbour and all who elected him and support him. A pox on all your houses from a person who can really empathize with the victims of Barbour's capricious, autocratic, thoughtless actions.
02:10 AM on 02/15/2012
Barbour was influenced by the NRA. He's kept quiet on this, refusing reporter questions.
12:16 PM on 02/02/2012
why would he let all the inmates with murder charges set free when he sould had let those be release that dont belong in there
12:19 PM on 02/02/2012
i havea an promble with the judge and the d.a in jones county im not the only one down here feel like they treating these mans wrong
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camelias and sweet tea
Small drinking village with a shrimping problem
08:50 AM on 02/02/2012
And THIS was another guy that they were actually considering running for our President...OMG
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
EvgenyLibek
Always 1 god fewer: opium sobriety for the people.
06:21 AM on 02/02/2012
It's not like he pardoned George Walker Bush, or Richard Bruce "Dick" Cheney.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
afgail
Wise and strong.
04:41 AM on 02/02/2012
Haley Barbour, like all Republicans, has a very warped view of justice.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
HawaiiShira
He that knows & knows he knows is wise.
12:00 AM on 02/02/2012
But he couldn't see fit to grant a full pardon to the two sisters who agreed to the kidney transplant to be paroled, after serving 20 plus years.
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LMPE
I connect the most dissimilar things
11:56 PM on 02/01/2012
Oh, that's Haley Barbour? For a second I thought that it was Mr. Creosote.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
ManwithaParachute
Not Seeking Your Approval
11:56 PM on 02/01/2012
White Republican Criminal Support Network
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ReverendMilo
My micro-bio will not meet your guidelines
10:40 PM on 02/01/2012
This article is woefully lacking. No mention that 8 of the murderers were in for killing their wives, one of which, David Gatlin, shot and killed his wife while she held their two-month-old child, was denied parole twice in 2010. No mention that the pardoned murders records were expunged so they can resume buying guns. No mention that the pardoned sex offenders no longer have to register with the sex offender database. No mentioned of the fact that 2/3rds of the pardons were white in a disportionately black prison population.
these paroles undoubtedly need to come under judicial revue.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SameBoat
Retired cop, educator
01:03 AM on 02/02/2012
I agree. On a case by case basis, not on a technicality such as no 30 day posting. The real question is, should a governor be granted the authority of being judge and jury? There are appeals processes in place to handle these cases. I do understand their authority to delay executions pending further appeal, but no more.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Dosadi
Political agnostic
09:42 PM on 02/01/2012
Can a lawyer help me out? How can they overrule the Governor's pardons? I thought this was a sovereignty issue. Not saying that I agree with them because I don't have any information on why he did it but isn't he allowed to do this?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
modelaford
06:19 AM on 02/02/2012
The state approved a constitutional amendment to their state constitution that when the governor grants pardons, there must be a posting in the newspaper for 30 days, and the victims' families must have a chance to object.

The murderers did not have 30 day posting - so from what I've heard on CNN - legal opinion, the governor violated the state constitution and broke the law. Also, the families of the victims killed by the murderers - they were not given a chance to object. ALso another violation of the constitution - which the state voted on and passed a few years ago.

That's how the state's attorney general was able to get the murderers served with papers for them to check in every day until this is settled.

The governor broke their state law. From what I've read - almost everyone in the state objects to what the ex-governor did.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Dosadi
Political agnostic
05:02 PM on 02/02/2012
Thanks, that explains a lot.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
henrypapillon
Mitt--free up the last 9 years' taxes
09:21 PM on 02/01/2012
Cook me a pounda bacon with gravy!
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Marcusarilius
My Brain Hurts
11:12 PM on 02/01/2012
An appitizer?
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LMPE
I connect the most dissimilar things
11:57 PM on 02/01/2012
And gimme a dozen mint juleps!
edward60
moderate
09:13 PM on 02/01/2012
If the Govenor has the legal right to pardon, why a court case. The right to pardon does not say "only if its popular"
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
henrypapillon
Mitt--free up the last 9 years' taxes
09:22 PM on 02/01/2012
There are constitutional conditions for them-DUH!
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
tacevad
American SS Card Carrying Socialist
09:23 PM on 02/01/2012
Only about two dozen of the people pardoned followed the Mississippi Constitution's requirement to publish a notice about their reprieves in their local newspapers for 30 days