Bush Pardon cost over 1/2 million in
donations
Fox News
December 23, 2005
WASHINGTON — President Bush has granted 11 pardons, bringing to 69
the number of clemency orders he has issued since taking office five years ago,
the Justice Department said.
Three moonshiners and a bank robber are among those pardoned, as is a Denver
attorney with Republican political ties. The pardons were issued Tuesday, in
keeping with a tradition of granting clemency during the holiday season.
One of those pardoned, Wendy St. Charles, is a lawyer for a Denver
homebuilder, MDC Holdings, parent of Richmond American Homes, The Denver Post
reported. St. Charles was convicted on drug charges in 1984 and sentenced to
four years in prison.
MDC's chairman, Larry Mizel, has contributed more than half a million
dollars to Republican campaigns along with his wife, Carol, according to the
Center for Responsive Politics. A company spokeswoman did not immediately
return a phone call from The Associated Press.
One of the moonshiners, Carl E. Cantrell of Monteagle, Tenn., said he was
arrested at his still without ever selling a drop. He was convicted of federal
liquor law violations in 1967 and sentenced to three years' probation.
"I wasn't trying to cause nobody no harm," he told The Knoxville News
Sentinel. "I was just trying to make a living."
Also pardoned was Donald Lee Pendergrass of Ramona, Calif., who was
convicted of bank robbery with a dangerous weapon in 1964.
The other pardons were for offenses such as drug possession or making false
statements on loan applications.
"These are individuals who all applied for clemency, and their applications
were reviewed by the Office of the Pardon Attorney and forwarded to the
president, who makes the final decision on whether to grant clemency," said
Justice Department spokesman John Nowacki.
The Constitution provides the president with the power to grant clemency. A
presidential pardon can't expunge a conviction, but it can help regain rights
such as voting and owning guns.
Those granted pardons are:
—Cantrell. Sentenced in 1967 to three years' probation for violation
of IRS liquor laws.
—Charles Winston Carter of Hanna City, Ill. Sentenced in 1964 to two
years' probation for conspiracy to steal U.S. property.
—Harper James Finucan of Charleston, S.C. Sentenced in 1980 to 39
months' imprisonment and five years' special parole for possession with intent
to distribute marijuana.
—Bobby Frank Kay Sr. of Suffolk, Va. Sentenced in 1959 to two years'
incarceration and a $1,003 fine for operation of an illegal distillery.
—Melvin L. McKee of Surprise, Ariz. Sentenced in 1982 to five years'
probation conditioned upon 400 hours of community service and a $2,500 fine for
conspiracy to make and cause the making of false statements in loan
applications and aiding and abetting the making of a materially false statement
in a loan application.
—Charles Ellis McKinley of Pall Mall, Tennessee. Sentenced in 1950 to
two years' probation for violation of IRS liquor laws.
—Pendergrass. Sentenced in 1964 to 12 years' imprisonment for bank
robbery.
—Charles Blurford Power of Fort Pierce, Fla. Sentenced in 1948 to one
year and one day in prison for interstate transportation of a stolen motor
vehicle.
—John Gregory Schillace of Hammond, La. Sentenced in 1988; sentence
amended in 1989 to 20 months' imprisonment and three years of supervised
release for conspiracy to possess cocaine with intent to distribute.
—St. Charles. Sentenced in 1984 to four years imprisonment, four years
of special parole and four years of probation, consecutively, for conspiracy to
conduct a narcotics enterprise and distribution of cocaine.
—Jimmy Lee Williams of Mesquite, Texas. Sentenced to five years
probation and a $5,000 fine for making a false statement on a loan
application.
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