This is territory I thought I would never have to think about but something stinks lately to say the least.

  • Fermion@mander.xyz
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    1 day ago

    Right, they would be subject to new prosecution for new crimes because of their recidivism. The pardoned crimes are no longer relevant to whether they end up incarcerated again. My point is that we have already seen high rates of recidivism in those pardoned by Trump, and a reformed Attorney General’s office or states can prosecute crimes that haven’t been pardoned. This doesn’t provide justice for the corruption of bad pardons, but if the end result is incarceration just the same, then that might be close enough to justice.

    I think we are in agreement, I guess I didn’t phrase my initial comment particularly well.

    • bitjunkie@lemmy.world
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      22 hours ago

      I took OP’s wording to mean re-incarcerating them for the same crime, although it’s not explicit in that either now that I’m looking at it again. Anyway yeah let them rot, idgaf what for. They got Capone on tax evasion. 🤷‍♂️