Clinton under fire for pardonees’ donations

After months of steering clear of substantive controversies, Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign has hit a few speed bumps in recent weeks. Some of the flaps are silly (the alleged missed gratuity at an Iowa diner), some are rhetorical (the senator’s hedging on driver’s licenses for undocumented immigrants), and some are just sloppy (planted questions at public events).

The cumulative effect of these mishaps is that political reporters are inclined to try to pile on, looking for any opportunity to add to a slow-moving frenzy. It leads to manufactured controversies like this one, which don’t make a lot of sense.

Three recipients of controversial 11th-hour pardons issued by former President Bill Clinton in January 2001 have donated thousands of dollars to the presidential campaign of his wife, Democratic front-runner Sen. Hillary Clinton, D-N.Y., according to campaign finance records examined by ABC News, in what some good government groups said created an appearance of impropriety. […]

One of the pardonees who has become a donor to Sen. Clinton is David Herdlinger, a former prosecutor in Springdale, Ark., who, according to press accounts at the time of his pardon pleaded guilty in 1986 to mail fraud after taking bribes to reduce or drop charges against defendants charged with drunken driving offenses. Now a life and business coach in Georgia, Herdlinger was pardoned by President Clinton in January 2001; he donated $1,000 to Sen. Clinton’s presidential campaign in August.

Insurance agent Alfredo Regalado, who gave Hillary Clinton $2,000, was pardoned by her husband for failing to “report the transportation of currency in excess of $10,000 into the United States,” according to the Department of Justice.

John Deutch is a different case, having served as President Clinton’s CIA director. Pardoned by President Clinton for charges he had mishandled government secrets — but before the Department of Justice could file the proper paperwork against him — Deutch, now a professor at MIT, gave Sen. Clinton the maximum allowable donation, $2,300.

“It’s not illegal,” Melanie Sloan, executive director of Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, told ABC News. “But, of course, it’s inappropriate and she should return the money. It does raise the appearance that this is payback. One can only hope that she wasn’t yet aware of who made the donations.”

I have a lot of respect for Sloan and CREW, but I have no idea why these contributions are even remotely controversial. There’s just nothing here.

To be sure, some of Bill Clinton’s 11th-hour pardons in 2000 were controversial, and with good cause. But that was seven years ago. Hillary Clinton was running for the Senate at the time and played no role in the clemency process.

I’m trying to find the “appearance of impropriety ” with these contributions and don’t see anything. Many years ago — in one instance, a couple of decades ago — three people committed crimes and got caught. They were held accountable for their actions. Eventually, they received presidential pardons.

Now, years later, they’ve decided to participate in the democratic process and contribute, legally, to a political campaign. ABC News considers this controversial, why?

The issue here seems to be that these pardonees might be engaged in some kind of bizarre quid pro quo — Bill Clinton pardoned them, so they are in turn contributing to Hillary Clinton’s campaign seven years later.

But that’s ridiculous. If they gave money and then sought a pardon, that might be a story. If they promised to make a contribution in exchange for a pardon, that also might be a story. But neither is the case here — not even close. What do these three pardonees have to gain from donating now? Not a thing.

A story like this makes ABC News look worse than the Clinton campaign. There’s just no there there.

It stinks. That’s all I got.

  • The “appearance of impropriety” would be people confusing this for situations such as if it was a quid pro quo. While there probably is no impropriety here this could hurt Clinton if people assume the worst, even without evidence.

    One question might be whether these people had any ties to the Clintons before the pardons. If Clinton was pardoning people on the merits of the cases, and these people turned out to be grateful to the Clintons and later contribute, there’s nothing wrong. The problem for Hillary is that people will speculate that those pardoned were people who were already in the Clinton camp and might have receive special favors.

  • If ABC’s Jake Tapper hadn’t grabbed onto it, this wouldn’t be an issue since nobody would know about it. I agree that it isn’t unlawful for someone pardoned to contribute to political candidates, even the wife of the pardoner, but I also agree that it looks bad and CREW is probably right about the perception.

    …she should return the money. It does raise the appearance that this is payback.

    Now, will Jake Tepper apply himself to the status of those contributing to the Republican candidates, just to even out the playing field?

  • Simple solution.

    Get rid of the Presidential pardon.

    What a joke it is anyway. And we pretend they aren’t above the law.

  • Remind me again why the Clinton camp doesn’t trust today’s legacy media and tries to tightly control its message?

  • Gotta disagree on this one. Technically it might be nothing, but IMO if a criminal gets a reduced sentence, they shouldn’t be allowed to give anything of value to the person who reduced their sentence, or that person’s family. I don’t care if they do it before or after the sentence reduction.

    And if a progressive like me sees it this way, I can only imagine how the Hillary Hate Squads see it. They’re all going ballistic, I am sure.

  • If Hillary Clinton wants to become president, she’s going to need to anticipate this kind of attack. Of course there’s no “there” there, but that’s not the point. If she is the Democratic nominee, we can look forward to an entire year of this sort of nonsense.

    The Republicans will make any campaign ugly, but with Hillary as the nominee, ugly goes to another order of magnitude. Let’s get used to it.

  • This just proves that Hillary’s people could be a little brighter.

    I’ve been searching for recent contributions by Anthony Franchi, Edwin L. Cox Jr., and Dale Critz — all past GOP donors who’ve been pardoned by one Bush or the other — and none seems to have given to a current presidential candidate. That just tells me the Republicans are smarter about the potential embarrassment this kind of thing can cause than Hillary is.

    (Which is odd — Republicans probably wouldn’t be pilloried in the press for this kind of thing, yet they’re still smart enough to avoid it; Democrats, especially Hillary, should know they’ll get slammed for it, yet they do it anyway, or at least she does.)

  • I love this blog, but this giving Hillary a pass has got to stop.

    “some are just sloppy (planted questions at public events).”-cb
    This isn’t sloppy it’s deceit.

    “some of Bill Clinton’s 11th-hour pardons in 2000 were controversial”-cb
    So thank you cash to the spouse isn’t controversial ? Really ?

    If we aren’t going to hold our candidates up to a higher level, who in the fuck is ?

    You are splitting hair between ‘controversial’ and ‘impropriety’ and all liberal blogs that have been fighting ‘power at all costs’ need to quit being Hillary apologists. Crap like this makes us no better.

  • I agree that there’s no there there, yet they also got one unrelated fact wrong. Rich – who DIDN’T contribute a thing. It was not his tax cheating that was so controversial but via the BCCI scandal, his ties to UAE funds and a certain terrorist named Abu Nidal.

    I think the GOP is poised to raise that point in the general election, which is a cause for concern if she emerges as the nominee.

  • I love this blog, but this giving Hillary a pass has got to stop.

    The funny thing is, earlier this week I got a couple of emails suggesting I’ve been too hard on Hillary lately. I try to just call ’em like I see ’em….

  • I agree with Carpetbagger that there’s no legal or ethical problem here. However, I also agree that it would be wise politics to return the money. It’s not that much, and would look good, and could let the Clinton camp hammer on analogous Republican contributions a little harder.

  • doubtful

    I agree that “presidential pardon” is really a bad idea when people are pardoned for crimes committed on behalf of a government administration. But unfortunately, the authority to pardon crimes “except for impeachment” is given to a president by the Constitution.

  • She needs to give the money back. Although the person who received the money probably had no clue where it really came from. She is responsible and needs to be responsible and return it.

    I am not a big Hillary fan but I think the press will pick on her more than anyone else.
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  • David Herdlinger, a former prosecutor in Springdale, Ark., who, according to press accounts at the time of his pardon pleaded guilty in 1986 to mail fraud after taking bribes to reduce or drop charges against defendants charged with drunken driving offenses. Now a life and business coach in Georgia…

    A life coach? This is what a corrupt former prosecutor/convict ends up doing for a living, and people actually pay him for his advice on how to live their lives? And I thought I’d heard everything!

  • But unfortunately, the authority to pardon crimes “except for impeachment” is given to a president by the Constitution. -anney

    Well, I never said it would be easy, just simple. And really, we’ve thrown out so much of the rest of the Constitution already…

    I’m sure that there exists a situation where it is a valuable tool, and that’s what the founders were thinking of, but the way it’s used these days makes one wonder if they had their heads on straight.

  • They gave THOUSANDS.
    How many 11th hour paroles did Bill manage for people who don’t have RothIRAs and Beemers?

    If Hilary wants to boast about how great it’ll be to have a former prez as first gentleman, she gets the shadow of a man who has had poor judgment on numerous occasions who will be the devil on her other shoulder.

    Having Bill back has its pluses and minuses. The ABC piece is a reminder of the less sanguine side of having him around.

  • Y’know, Obama has raised about as much money as InevitaBillary. Yet with the exception of the one developer from Chicago, he hasn’t had scandals around it. She’s had:

    –Norman Hsu and his bundled max-givers
    –the defense contractors fundraiser
    –the donations of the pardoned

    Whenever one of us points out the overwhelming stylistic similarities–not just around the constant and shameless moneygrubbing, which was a specialty of Bill’s, but the planted questions, the tight media control, and the agnonizing, endless ambiguity and triangulation–between Clinton 2008 and Bush 2000, we’re called absurd and hyperbolic. Will it take a new war launched under President Empress to get people to acknowlege a “there” there? And will supposedly principled progressives, at that point, stop apologizing or rationalizing things that they would rightly deplore from a Republican?

  • I’m a big fan of CREW too, but there is such a thing as going off the deep end. I mean, this would be kind of a long time to wait for $3300 worth of quid pro quo, wouldn’t it? CREW is aware, one assumes, that these pardons happened 7 years ago… Maybe Santa will bring them a calendar for Christmas.

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