Judge recognizes 'real possibility' of Trump pardons as he delays trial for January 6 riot defendant
Source: CNN Politics
Published 1:44 PM EST, Thu November 14, 2024
Washington CNN A federal judge on Thursday agreed to delay a trial set for next month for a US Capitol riot defendant, saying there is a real possibility that President-elect Donald Trump could pardon him after taking office next year.
William Pope had been set to go on trial early next month for several misdemeanor charges stemming from his involvement in the January 6, 2021, Capitol attack, but days after Trumps reelection last week, he asked the judge to postpone the trial until after Trump takes office, citing his campaign pledge to pardon some people who took part in the attack.
US District Judge Rudolph Contreras, a Barack Obama appointee, said during a hearing Thursday that there is a real possibility Trump will eventually pardon Pope. Contreras said that the conservation of resources warranted holding off on the impending trial since going through jury selection would be a significant burdenon the public as well as the court if a trial began only for Trump to later pardon Pope.
When a Justice Department attorney argued that the possibility of a pardon is not a significant reason to put off the trial and brought up the fact that other judges in Washington, DC, have recently been denying requests by January 6 defendants to delay proceedings in their cases, Contreras said a multi-day trial is much different than sentencing hearings, which have continued in the wake of Trumps win. No new trial date has been set and the parties are planning to reconvene in mid-December to search for a new date for next year.
Read more: https://www.cnn.com/2024/11/14/politics/william-pope-january-6-pardon-possibility/index.html
riversedge
(73,185 posts)breaking furniture, and scaring the crap out of the guards, staff and US Reps and Senators and the VP at the time. WRF is our Justice system become??
BumRushDaShow
(142,935 posts)but so far the rest have been continuing their cases (and they're not just doing "sentencing hearings" ).
mdbl
(5,488 posts)Last edited Sat Nov 16, 2024, 02:07 PM - Edit history (1)
There is no justice in the U.S.A. anymore.