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Before you leave, Mr. President, a few more pardons

Examiner Editorial
-
January 14, 2009

During his farewell news conference, President George W. Bush pointed to several policy miscues, mistaken decisions, and faulty assumptions that marred his presidency. Something he neglected to mention was the deplorable treatment of U.S. Border Patrol agents Ignacio Ramos and Jose Compean, who were each sentenced to more than 10 years in prison for trying to apprehend a Mexican drug smuggler.

On Feb. 17, 2005, Osvaldo Aldrete-Davila was spotted smuggling 743 pounds of marijuana across the Texas border. After a high-speed chase, the unarmed Aldrete-Davila resisted arrest and tried to escape back to Mexico on foot. Both agents fired at him, hitting him once in the buttocks. For reasons they later acknowledged were imprudent, the agents did not tell their superiors about the shooting. Even so, an official investigation was launched after Aldrete-Davila’s mother-in-law complained (about the shooting, not the drugs).

Ramos and Compean were charged with using a firearm in the commission of a violent crime and violating Aldrete-Davila’s civil rights. The agents refused to admit guilt or agree to a plea bargain offered by U.S. Attorney Johnny Sutton. When Aldrete-Davila was again caught smuggling drugs during the agents’ trials, Sutton withheld the information from jurors. Ramos and Compean were convicted and sentenced to more than a decade each behind bars, based in part on testimony by Aldrete-Davila, who had been granted federal immunity.

A reprimand for not reporting the shooting was in order, but sending Ramos and Compean to prison for trying to stop a drug smuggler seeking to flee justice was excessive. Too often, a pathological sense of “compassion” makes us coddle criminals like Aldrete-Davila, but throw the book at law enforcement officers whenever they err. The public eventually pays the price for such misguided policies.

Ramos and Compean have already served nearly two years, mostly in solitary confinement to protect them from other prisoners.  Even Sen. Diane Feinstein, D-Calif., has asked President Bush to at least commute their sentences. Pardoning them before he leaves the White House next week would be even better.

Bush should also extend clemency to former vice-presidential aide Scooter Libby, convicted of perjury for lying about a CIA leak that State Department official Richard Armitage – who wasn’t punished - publicly admitted he made. And how about pardoning the three Americans who were each sentenced to eight years in federal prison for violating a Honduran regulation regarding packaging of  lobsters. Presidential pardons were made for cases like these.



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Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

did libby do it

Jan 14, 2009

I agree with the border patrol. It sounds like they were doing their job. However, Libby is protecting someone higher. He knew what he was doing when he perjured. Armitage should be punished too. I can't imagine the complaining and asking for the heads of people if this was a democratic administration that exposed Plaime. Just imagine if it was Clinton or Gore. How would this paper react?

 

Karen

Jan 14, 2009

I fully agree that Ramos and Compean need to be pardoned. Their sentence is outrageously harsh and, despite errors they made, the consequence for them is excessive. Bush needs to pardon them and pardon them now--not a minute later.

 

Missionnotacomplie

Jan 14, 2009

This is why GW will have a terrible legacy. Jailing any servant who was protecting Americans, is not American Besides Bush pardoned the Wall St crooks withg a phony bailout

 

Jan 16, 2009

Bush himself admitted to making so called difficult decision in the best interest of our country, and he gets to go home at night, what about Ramos and Compean, were they not doing the same, so they to should be allowed to go home as well.

 

Daniel Miller

Jan 16, 2009

In the name of decency: Mr. President if you are any kind of compassionate person you will pardon those patriotic border patrol agents Ramos and Compean before you leave office.

 


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