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    Mississippi ex-governor says pardons were misrepresented

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Former Mississippi Governor Haley Barbour on Sunday blamed political opponents for much of the uproar set off after he pardoned more than 200 criminals.

    State leaders often issue pardons in their waning days in office but the number of pardons by Barbour as he finished his term as governor on January 10 was unusually high.

    The pardons, which included some convicted murderers, set off a firestorm of criticism.

    State Attorney General Jim Hood, the only Democrat serving in statewide office in Mississippi, argued that more than three-quarters of those pardoned did not meet state criteria and others questioned the racial makeup of the group.

    Barbour's successor, Phil Bryant, proposed changes in the pardon process and a state judge has blocked release of pardoned prisoners, issuing an injunction at Hood's request. A hearing on the issue is scheduled for Monday.

    In an appearance on CBS's "Face the Nation" program Sunday, Barbour, a Republican, said his pardons had been misrepresented.

    "Sure, we could have done it better because we had no idea that the reporting of it, in particular some of the misstatements by political opponents, would let the public think we were letting 200 some people out of the penitentiary," he said. "We let 26 out of the penitentiary ... half of them for health reasons.

    "Most of them had been out for years and years and years. They're no more a threat to the people of Mississippi now than they were the week before they got their pardon."

    In response to the pardons, Hood filed a complaint alleging that 156 of them were unconstitutional because not enough public notice had been given.

    Barbour cited Hood in the controversy over the pardons.

    "It is becoming public now that the attorney general's office was very involved in this," he said.

    Barbour, a former Republican National Committee chairman, visited early primary states, but said in April 2011 that he would not run for U.S. president in the 2012 election.

    Barbour granted 222 acts of clemency in his tenure to 221 individuals: one convict's sentence was initially suspended in 2008 and he then received a full pardon. All but eight came in the final days of his tenure.

    The pardons also have come under scrutiny on racial grounds.

    About two-thirds of the pardons went to current or former white prisoners, while Mississippi's population is about 59 percent white and two-thirds of its prison population is black. Barbour has said through a spokesperson that race played no factor in the decisions.

    (Writing by Bill Trott and David Bailey; Editing by Jackie Frank and Tim Gaynor)

     

    34 comments

    • NA  •  1 mth 1 day ago
      It really weren't a pahdon, but total absolution from crimes against humanity. You know, boys being boys and all
    • Caren  •  1 mth 1 day ago
      Haley you were wrong....period.....murderers & rapists?...come on...you didn't think anyone would notice & you got caught...own up & stop blaming someone else...you did the pardons ..the blueberry pie is all over your face
    • ItsAllSoGoofy  •  1 mth 1 day ago
      Look, either you pardoned a guy who shot his wife while she was holding their six-week-old infant, or you didn't pardon a guy who shot his wife while she was holding their six-week-old infant. How is THAT the fault of your political enemies?
    • i  •  Enola, Pennsylvania  •  25 days ago
      I thought Republicans were tough on crime.
    • Zot  •  Tampa, Florida  •  1 mth 1 day ago
      Convicted murderers should never be pardoned. Let them serve out their sentences.
    • Xj  •  1 mth 1 day ago
      It doesn't matter if they were in prison or not - they still MURDERED people - what possible justification is there to wipe the record clean? Ridiculous.
    • Egg Nash 3  •  Sacramento, California  •  1 mth 1 day ago
      Instead of blaming himself, this ex-governor is now pointing his fingers to everybody else for the fiasco he committed.
    • Paladin  •  Middlesboro, Kentucky  •  1 mth 1 day ago
      How much does a pardon cost in Mississippi?
    • sooner  •  1 mth 1 day ago
      if these people were tried and convicted in a court of law, they should serve out their entire sentence, not be pardoned. Period, don't care how "good" they behave in jail or while serving drinks in his home.
    • NM Reality  •  1 mth 1 day ago
      POS. Period.
    • Kenneth Cameron  •  Watervliet, New York  •  1 mth 1 day ago
      This goonball opened wide the prison gates - let rapists and murderers walk, and then has the balls to tell Americans that we don't understand. You're not talking to Mississippi whenyou're talking to America, Guvnah...
    • Mark  •  1 mth 1 day ago
      No song and dance is going to impress the public. 200 white criminals were released by a racist white southern governor. Why the uproar?
    • hollander  •  1 mth 1 day ago
      You have got to love this fat, arrogant, Caucasian drunk, don't cha? And he wanted to run for President. Holy cow! What a mess this nation is turning in to! Gingrich leading the polls now, for GOP at least, too. We have gone mad!
    • VerityBrown  •  1 mth 1 day ago
      What's the point of pardoning people WHO ARE OUT OF JAIL ALREADY????
    • Michael  •  Houston, Texas  •  1 mth 1 day ago
      Like lynching people has been misrepresented for years in Mississippi?
    • Michael  •  St Louis, Missouri  •  1 mth 1 day ago
      Have they checked his finances yet, and will he claim the bribes on his taxes? It's actually listed in the IRS Codes to report all income, including "bribes and graft", check it out! I guess that was put in specifically for the politicians!
    • chris m  •  Belleville, Michigan  •  1 mth 1 day ago
      convicted murderers belong in jail, if they were in jail, that is where they should stay. this is not a "misrepresentation" of the facts, the fact is that this governor issued pardons to convicted murderers. why not release prisoners that were convicted of non-violent crimes... or even better, leave the prisoners in jail where they belong, the state of miss should demand that this guy personally re-imburse the state for the cost of each trial, as well as the entire cost of housing and care for each prisoner, im guessing there would be less pardons.
    • Suzanne  •  London, United Kingdom  •  1 mth 1 day ago
      would Jesus have done it?
    • JonG  •  1 mth 1 day ago
      Something tells me he didn't do one thing to help a veteran or to keep a family in a home, but we gotta show love for our criminals.The statistics don't make any sense either. 59% of the state is white, while 60% of the prison pop. is black; #$%$ do those numbers have to do with each other?
    • MEB  •  New York, New York  •  1 mth 1 day ago
      This #$%$ must be related to obama and the clintons! Pardon me while I kill someone. Oh by the way I'm white so I get out before any black people.........crock of caca
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