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Haley Barbour Pardons Go Before Mississippi Supreme Court

Haley Barbour Pardons Challenged

EMILY WAGSTER PETTUS   02/ 9/12 06:22 PM ET  AP

JACKSON, Miss. — Feuding attorneys asked the Mississippi Supreme Court on Thursday to determine the validity of pardons that Haley Barbour gave to convicted killers and other convicts during his final days as governor.

Chief Justice Bill Waller Jr. said the court would not rule Thursday, but he didn't say when a decision would come.

"We want them to take enough time to do it right," said Randy Walker, who objects to the pardons. Walker was shot in the head in 1993 by one of the men Barbour set free last month. That former inmate, David Gatlin, also fatally shot his own estranged wife as she held the couple's baby.

At the heart of the dispute is Section 124 of the Mississippi Constitution, which says "no pardon shall be granted" by the governor until the convicted felon applying for the pardon publishes notice of that application for 30 days in a newspaper in or near the county where the crime was committed.

Justices could uphold the pardons, as requested by a private attorney representing Republican Barbour. Or they could declare the pardons invalid, as requested by Democratic Attorney General Jim Hood. If they agree with Hood that the 30-day publication is a must, they could send the pardons back to a lower court, where a circuit judge could hold a trial to determine whether the pardons met those requirements.

Hood contends that if ads weren't run in daily papers every day for 30 days, or weekly newspapers once a week for five weeks, the pardons aren't valid.

"It's a constitutional right of the people to have that notice," Hood told the nine justices Thursday during more than three hours of oral arguments.

Barbour, who once considered a 2012 White House run, was limited to two terms as governor. He pardoned 198 people before finishing his second term Jan. 10, including four convicted murderers and a robber who worked as trusties at the Governor's Mansion. His actions outraged victims' families.

Most of the people he pardoned were already out of prison, and some had finished serving their sentences decades ago. The five trusties were released from custody before Hood filed a lawsuit challenging the pardons. A circuit judge granted Hood's request for a temporary restraining order that blocked the release of five other convicted felons who received pardons, and they remain in prison pending the outcome of the legal battle.

Barbour was not in the courtroom during Thursday's arguments, nor were the five former trusties, one of whom has gone to Wyoming.

Several relatives of people killed by the pardoned trusties were in the courtroom. Mary McAbee, whose brother was slain, said afterward that she's praying that the justices "will listen and have their hearts open" to God.

Waller admonished attorneys at the beginning of the hearing to focus their arguments narrowly on the legal questions at hand.

"I don't want any political sound bites. I don't want any jury arguments. No grandstanding. No sniping. Everybody understand?" Waller said. The nine justices are elected in nonpartisan contests.

Attorney Thomas Fortner, who represents four of the former trusties, said past cases suggest pardons are not reviewable by the courts.

"The governor, as the chief executive, is granted the power to pardon and is the judge of the propriety of the publication," Fortner said. "The constitution does not give the power to anybody to review that."

Charles Griffin, an attorney for Barbour, also said the pardons are not reviewable.

"This case is not about Haley Barbour. This case is not about General Hood. And this case is not about the individuals who have received pardons. This case is about the separation of powers under the Mississippi Constitution," Griffin said.

By intervening, the court would be "getting into the deliberative process that the constitution gives to the governor," Griffin said.

Barbour has said he's at peace with the pardons because his Christian faith teaches about redemption. He has accused Hood of challenging the pardons for partisan political reasons.

Although the arguments Thursday were only about the 10 inmates who were in custody when pardoned, those who received pardons after being out for years could lose their chance to have their rights restored, including their rights to vote and to buy firearms.

Hood has said the proper public notice was provided in the cases of only about two dozen of those pardoned. None of the former Governor's Mansion trusties met the requirement, he said.

Barbour also granted medical release and conditional clemency to some inmates, but they weren't required to give public notice of their release.

Waller asked Hood whether people pardoned by past governors had met the 30 days' publication requirement. Hood said he didn't know the history of every governor, but he had a document showing the actions of Bill Waller Sr., the chief justice's father, who served as governor from 1972 to 1976.

A document provided by Hood's office shows Gov. Waller on May 28, 1974, issued a document to correct the paperwork on a pardon originally issued by his predecessor, Gov. John Bell Williams, in 1967. The document from Gov. Waller notes that under Williams, the person seeking the pardon did not give 30 days' notice. It says that by May 1974: "Subject has complied with the provisions of Section 124, Article 5, Mississippi Constitution of 1890 by publishing his petition for the pardon for the time and manner provided thereby."

The justices questioned Hood about the role that one of his staff attorneys had in advising Barbour's staff about the pardons. The question is whether that role disqualifies Hood from arguing against the pardons.

Hood said Barbour's legal filings are "trying to mislead the court" about the role of assistant attorney general David Scott, who is assigned to do legal work for the state Department of Corrections. Barbour has included text messages in court records between Scott and a Barbour assistant in which they discuss the publication statute.

"The governor can't shirk the duty and blame it on someone else no matter who it is," Hood said.

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JACKSON, Miss. — Feuding attorneys asked the Mississippi Supreme Court on Thursday to determine the validity of pardons that Haley Barbour gave to convicted killers and other convicts during his...
JACKSON, Miss. — Feuding attorneys asked the Mississippi Supreme Court on Thursday to determine the validity of pardons that Haley Barbour gave to convicted killers and other convicts during his...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bordway
Our grandchildren will pay for our failure to
08:07 AM on 02/11/2012
GOP Governors are above such thing as adhering to the law or state's constitutions, ala Rick Snyder, Scott Walker, Rick Scott...this list is getting extensive.

The oddest part is that slimy Santorum, Mittless and Leroy claim the President is a dictator. Well boys, take a look within your own party and see what is really going on. Then, if you can be honest for just one moment in your pitiful political careers, you can also call these representatives out for being the dictators they clearly are.
05:17 PM on 02/10/2012
It will be interesting to see how the Supreme Court rules!
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Feesister
You've got to give to get back
02:30 PM on 02/10/2012
Apparently, Governor Barbour didn't really want to be president, after all.
Paul1965
righties if we agreed with you we'd all be wrong
12:17 PM on 02/10/2012
didn't Mike Huckabee get four cops killed in Washington using the same flawed Christian-redemption logic?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Schmice
01:19 PM on 02/10/2012
I remember that. Does he?
02:46 PM on 02/10/2012
Wasn't it Dukakis that did the same thing?
Paul1965
righties if we agreed with you we'd all be wrong
03:17 PM on 02/10/2012
no, actually, review your Willie Horton history. Also, there was no "He's a redeemed Christian so I guess I'll let him go" aspect to it. Nice try, though!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
westcoastsc
Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhe
10:55 AM on 02/10/2012
In the past when a governor starts pardoning people left and right, it means he is under serious investigation. I hope this is the case again.
10:55 AM on 02/10/2012
Arrogance breeds contempt and Barbour has been contemptible forever.
Every action has a re-action and in what he just did people will suffer
"forever". Good riddance Gov.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Randolph Greer
I am a Poet .
10:52 AM on 02/10/2012
The pardon power of a Governor must be absolute. However, just as the Constitution grants the Governor this "absolute power" of the pardon, if it also prescribes a procedure to be followed, then the Governor must follow that procedure in order to exercise his pardon power. If he fails to do this, he forfeits the use of this power. This is not a difficult case to decide. Simple decide with respect to each case whether the Governor followed the procedure set forth in the Constitution.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bordway
Our grandchildren will pay for our failure to
08:09 AM on 02/11/2012
In that case it is the law which must be absolute.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Randolph Greer
I am a Poet .
12:54 PM on 02/11/2012
If the Constitution has a "procdure for exercising a power," the answer is yes.
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Barbara DeZan
Knowledge is Power
10:49 AM on 02/10/2012
And......this man was once a candidate for President......

The best Mississippi has to offer.
03:02 PM on 02/10/2012
And Obama the flip flopper, the best Illinois had to offer. Shameful what we have to choose from these days isn't it?
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Barbara DeZan
Knowledge is Power
09:08 PM on 02/10/2012
Obama Derangement Syndrome....again.

Attempting to divert from the subject at hand is a sure sign the person has no knowldege of the subject.

That's all you low-information can do....

Bash Obama, bash Obama, bash Obama....

Never an original thought or idea......typcal.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bordway
Our grandchildren will pay for our failure to
08:14 AM on 02/11/2012
If Thomas Barchfield has his way, Romney, Santorum, and likely Gingrich and Paul as well would be ineligible for the presidency. Your choices are narrowing
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Shredder628
Silence Gives Consent...
10:41 AM on 02/10/2012
I've seen this story before.
He needs to let one of the murderers off because of some deal.
He lets a hundred go so no one knows which one he needed to pardon.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Schmice
01:22 PM on 02/10/2012
How did those convicted murderers get to be trustees working in the governor's mansion in the first place? This deal started long ago. The investigation should look into that first.
02:54 PM on 02/10/2012
I live in Mississippi. I have read every article every day so I will answer your question. First a little backround. The head of the Dept. of Corrections in this state has served several gov.s both Democrat and Republican. The reason he has served under Reps and Dems is he is so good at what he does. He has been superb. The Dept. of Corrections chooses the trusties that work at the mansion. They choose people that they feel are not a threat to society. I think that is a VERY important point. The gov does not choose his trusties. They are there when he and his family arrive. It has been a tradition forever (be it right or wrong) that the trusties get pardoned at the end of the term. Haley is NOT the first one to do this. Like I said the head of the Dept. of Corrections was directly involved in choosing the men. He is a great guy that happens to be African American (race card out the window). And FYI, the word is trusty not trustee. Two different words.
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DickTater
American Livestock
09:13 AM on 02/10/2012
I wonder if Barbour is "at peace" with his Christianity over his many billion dollar swindles, pulled with his rich cronies.

That is the state we are in. Somebody who is a well known corrupt and money-changing fat cat just says he is a Christian and walks off without a scratch. No follow-ups. Like saying Christian is this magical shield for most of America, and every media outlet.

If I were Jefferson or Franklin, etc....I never would have seen this coming. A decades long collusion between Corporations, Media, Religion, and ill-informed ignoramuses (about 60% of the populace). Penn Gillette has a really good spiel on the BigThink video (http://bigthink.com/ideas/41033)

Our media now enables religion more than reality. Gillette is saying that the different Christian sects were too fractured to fight on one front, from the time of the revolution to the 60's.

"The only reason that Bachman and Rick Perry are able to say this stuff is because of a magic word. And this magic word is, “Christian.” And if you look back in history, the word “Christian” doesn’t really appear in the way we use it today until the anti-abortion debate in the ‘60’s. When you had 1890, end of the 19th century, you’re top three highest paid speakers; the highest paid speakers were atheists speaking about atheism." (Ingersoll, Twain, Huxley)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DARK STAR
One small step for Man...
08:29 AM on 02/10/2012
Here you go:

"Hood has said the proper public notice was provided in the cases of only about two dozen of those pardoned. None of the former Governor's Mansion trusties met the requirement, he said."

There it is, some met the notice requirement, pardon granted, others did not, pardon rescinded.
02:56 PM on 02/10/2012
Of course, you DO know Hood's office was working directly with the gov.s office to get the publications in the paper don't you? I didn't think you did. Hood didn't seem too worried about it til the families started complaining and all of a sudden he saw the chance to be center of attention.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DARK STAR
One small step for Man...
03:53 PM on 02/10/2012
Use the press? Amazing!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
johnfkennedyjr
Look to my left & to my right, I'm in the Center!
08:08 AM on 02/10/2012
Look what this country has become, its as if the Devil's Advocate came to life in the form of Haley Barbour.

Proud to be American? Just another example of what should be our collective shame in putting such people in power. Where is the Republican Party in all this, they should be condemning this man from every pulpit. Where are the Democrats as well? CNN and the media outlets seem to be the only one's who give a damn if only in the name of ratings.

It is a national disgrace and an immeasurable injustice to the victims, to their families and to every law citizen in this country for one of our highest officials to release hundreds of felons onto our streets.

Wrap yourself up in the flag, sing the national anthem, send your kids to war to die for nothing, borrow from the Communist Chinese to finance it all, and drink the kool-aid that this country is gong down the right road. Stupidity is bliss, I guess...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Thomas Minot
07:56 AM on 02/10/2012
No surprise for me, I never liked Haley Barbour anyway (though I seemed to be the only one, lol) .
07:45 AM on 02/10/2012
While the Miss Supreme Court is investigating Barbour and his pardons maybe they can take look at his lying to the Selective Service n 968 (which is a federal crime) about his status in the draft!
Wonder why he flunked 2 pre-induction physicals?
Barbours another yellow-backboned, Republican chickenhawk, in a very long line of "to important to serve, Republican's!

http://mediamatters.org/mmtv/201011050052
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enterhere
Held hostage by Domestic Terrorists...Republicans.
11:21 AM on 02/10/2012
There are a ton of those around. Their ilk have cost this country much in blood and money.
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PublicCitizen21044
The truth will set you free!
06:25 AM on 02/10/2012
This article is proof that religion is now used by politicians as a tool to manipulate the masses and now they are trying to use it manipulate the justice system and to dupe the victims of grave injustices of their rights as victims. These politicians seem to be playing god with peoples lives as an ego trip. This literal interpretation of the Bible without the spiritual understanding of its essence is robbing many of their enjoyment of life and liberty as free citizens of the United States of America and elsewhere in the World.