He's Going Back on Trial After Trump Commuted His Sentence. Is That Justice?
At a recent congressional hearing, Republicans and Democrats sparred over clemency. But they share more common ground than they'd like to admit.

At a congressional hearing last week dedicated to clemency, both sides of the political aisle repeatedly agreed that the U.S. has a "two-tiered system of justice." But the makeup of that hierarchy is decidedly different depending on who you're listening to. In Republicans' telling, it is a system corrupted and fractured by political bias; in Democrats' view, it is poor people and people of color who are relegated to the bottom.
My response: Yes. Both parties and both positions are, in many ways, correct—which should be the starting point for the conversation about how to improve a clemency process that has been polluted and gone stale in modern times.
The hearing was pinned to the case of Philip Esformes, whose sentence was commuted by former President Donald Trump and who the Department of Justice is now seeking to reprosecute. Esformes was arrested in 2016 and served four and a half years out of a 20-year sentence for money laundering and related charges, with prosecutors alleging he paid doctors under the table to send patients to his nursing and assisted living facilities, where he would charge Medicare and Medicaid for unnecessary services.
But Esformes was already sentenced, and had that sentence commuted, for the charges the DOJ wants to retry. At his first trial, the jury hung on the most significant counts. The judge then explicitly sentenced Esformes for those charges anyway, a little-known practice that is legal in federal court. If a defendant opts for a jury trial and the jury acquits him or declines to deliver a verdict on certain counts, the judge can disregard that conclusion if he or she decides the panel got it wrong.
The use of acquitted, hung, and uncharged conduct at sentencing has elicited rebuke and skepticism from unlikely bedfellows across the political spectrum, from former Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg to Justice Brett Kavanaugh. This makes Esformes' story an interesting case study through which to view the discussion around clemency and the justice system in general.
Democrats are typically first in line to argue for a more robust clemency process and fair sentencing practices—both of which are at stake in Esformes' case.
And yet, it is congressional Democrats making the "tough on crime" argument here, defending Esformes' reprosecution during the hearing and, in a sense, seeking to reverse the previous administration's clemency grant. One wonders how this would play out had that grant come from a Democratic president, not a Republican one, although the probable answer doesn't require an active imagination.
The allegations against Esformes are loathsome. And he represents what many Democrats dislike about the justice system, in that wealthy people sometimes get a better fortune. But a party that claims to stand for criminal justice reform cannot only apply that principle to the "right" defendants. The Democrats' stance last week likely serves as confirmation to Republicans that this iteration of the DOJ cares more about political football than it does justice.
And while the word "unprecedented" is overused, it is notable that there is genuinely no precedent with which to compare this case. During the hearing, no witness was able to furnish a prior prosecution where someone had been put back on trial after receiving a commutation.
Democrats are correct, though, that there are many poor people and people of color sitting in prison who deserve to have their clemency petitions taken seriously. The two aren't mutually exclusive, no matter how much certain Republicans and Democrats may paint that picture for the sake of an adversarial narrative. President Joe Biden, a Democrat, could listen to his colleagues in Congress and review more petitions before him instead of waiting for the 11th hour, which has become typical of leaders from both parties.
It is possible to live in a world where we don't countermand the previous president's clemency decisions, where we don't reprosecute people on charges for which they've already been sentenced, and where more people receive mercy. A robust clemency process requires all three.
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Pssst. Weaponization of the DoJ is real.
No kidding. The only people who should be facing criminal prosecution in this matter are the persecutors.
Didn't this happen with some Branch Davidians? The jury didn't find them guilty and the judge overruled them?
Probably so, it has happened in other cases I have heard of. But that's still the same trial.
Jury acquitting the defendant of some of the charges, and the judge basing the sentence for the charges they were convicted of on the acquitted conduct? Yeah, that’s a horrifyingly common abuse. That's what happened to the Davidians.
A President then commuting the sentence back to just the part that was based on convicted conduct, and the DOJ trying to retry on the charges that didn’t result in a conviction in order to reimpose the original sentence? Basically unheard of. (In part because such commutations are remarkably rare themselves.)
I suppose Trump could have pardoned the guy for the things he wasn’t convicted of, but why would he have thought he’d need to?
I forget, if the judge can overrule a jury ... why the expletive have them there in the first place ?
How is this not a blatant violation of the double jeopardy clause?
Because a retrial after a hung jury doesn't count as double jeopardy - the initial state of jeopardy had not expired.
But he got a commutation. That does make it double jeopardy to any peasant.
You have to understand shrike. He supports all leftist abuses.
Nominally someone would think a commutation covers the entirety of the charges. But if you think politically the hung charges can ignore that thought.
You have to understand JessAZ, who is a lying and ignorant right-wing POS, who is sufficiently ignorant of the law that he stopped posting on the Volokh comment pages because his ignorance was too exposed.
You will note that nowhere in my prior reply did I express any opinion on the justice of the situation, nor of the commutation. But in JesseAZ's spirochaete-ridden brain that translates to leftism.
The commutation was for the offences for which he was convicted. The offence where the jury hung was not included. The injustice in the situation is that absurd idea - that I note JesseAZ neglected to condemn, possibly because when it's not a Trump guy, he doesn't care - that a judge can sentence you on the basis of a crime for which you were not convicted. The article clearly mentions this.
Hence IMO:
a) he should never have been sentenced on the basis of the "hung" crime
b) he certainly did not deserve commutation
c) nonetheless given that Trump would in all likelihood have commuted his sentence had he been convicted of that last offence - and it's basically a weird loophole in the US system, he should not be retried.
Meanwhile, JesseAZ, you can fuck right off
Lol. No. I stopped posting there because when they moved to WaPo ignorant leftist shits like you and sarcastro took over pushing ignorant views of the law. The left flooded his site at that stop and made the comments worthless. Just like yourself.
B) shows your ignorance. The prosecution in that trial was abusive and violated many of the rights of the defense. It should have been tossed due to misconduct.
C) this shows your thoughts on A. You applaud this decision when you combine B and C. So my comment was accurate.
You push whatever leftist narrative about a case there is. His commutation was centered on those abuses and you are again okay with more abuses.
So you admit you were there long before you started this sock shrike. Interesting. This sock is under a year old. Hmmm….
So you admit you were there long before you started this sock shrike. Interesting. This sock is under a year old. Hmmm….
Nope. Sometimes Reason/Volokh suggests related articles that are more than a year or two old, and the comments are still there.
Try again, you lying fuckwit.
JesseAz's shtick is to accuse you of things you never said nor did in an effort to goad you into defending yourself from his lies. Then he tries to gaslight you by insisting his lies are true while calling you names. He will never admit to his lies, nor will he ever say anything truthful.
ML is just as bad because he'll defend anything his buddy JesseAz says while adding more lies of his own.
It's best to just put the fuckers on mute and never respond. Anything else is rolling in the mud with a pig. You just get dirty while the pig enjoys it.
Sarc's schtick is to shitpost and troll until everyone tells him to fuck off, and then he acts all aggrieved and claims to be a bullying victim.
"It’s best to just put the fuckers on mute and never respond. Anything else is rolling in the mud with a pig. You just get dirty while the pig enjoys it."
Chumby thought so.
sarcasmic
November.2.2021 at 10:19 am
Chumby does. Pretty sure he's a Mainer. But he's got me on mute.
You know, virtue signaling to Ken. Can't listen to someone who takes people's words to their logical conclusion. Only a progressive would do that, right?
"he stopped posting on the Volokh comment pages because his ignorance was too exposed."
SRG is a notable Oxfordian law student who would spend every free second he had pottering around the Bodleian. That's why he knows this.
It would be "Oxonian". But it was quite clear that JesseAZ's demonstrated ignorance of the law didn't serve him well on Volokh, where bigotry is no substitute for knowledge. Here, it's not merely a reasonable substitute, it's actually applauded.
Here, it’s not merely a reasonable substitute, it’s actually applauded.
Only by a half a dozen trolls, including ML. Once you have them muted the conversations become mostly reasonable.
Sarc, you hypocritical fuck, after Shrike you're the biggest shitposting troll here. I've said it before but self-awareness is definitely not your superpower.
You got so bad even Ken and Chumby had to resort to muting you (Which you raged about for days).
"It would be “Oxonian”
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxfordian
It's both.
Not to Oxonians. While people on occasional may use "Oxfordian" to mean "someone from the University of Oxford, Oxonians themselves do not, and the term "Oxfordian" is reserved for either the general inhabitants of Oxford (so "Oxonian" serves to distinguish "gown" from 'town") or advocates for the Oxfordian hypothesis, that Shakespeare's plays were in fact written by the Earl of Oxford.
"Not to Oxonians..."
Wonder why people hate you on site, obnoxiously arrogant piece of shit?
Well, take a look right there.
Stuff it up your ass.
he stopped posting on the Volokh comment pages because his ignorance was too exposed.
Ha ha. Now if enough people in these comments will stop entertaining his lies and false accusations, he might find another group of people to harass.
We've all been hoping that about you, but here you still are, shitposting and trolling away.
And how does allowing sentencing after a hung jury or being acquitted in federal court count as “trial by jury” as guaranteed in the constitution? If the juries verdict means fuck all than it isn’t trial by jury.
The courts, in their drive to minimize the role of juries as much as possible, treat the jury clauses as not applying to the sentencing, just the finding of guilt. As long as the jury convicts on any charge at all, the judge is, according to this doctrine, free to sentence on the basis of stuff the jury found the defendant innocent of.
I presume the sentence does still have to be within the legally allowable range of sentences for the crime(s) of which the defendant was convicted, but not necessarily in the recommended range. Correct?
Yes. Where the legally allowable range is huge, of course.
Thanks for the explanation. I still think it is fked up.
The only issue for the D's seems to be that the defendant is not black. If he were black there would be no problem, it's simply the D's being racist. Remember, the D's were the party of racism against blacks, now they're the party of racism against whites.
No - he got a commutation of the offences for which he was convicted, not the offence where the jury was hung.
How the fuck do you commute a hung jury?
By pardoning, instead. Apparently you can issue pardons without a conviction first. But since they'd literally never done this before, why would a President think he needed to, to make the commutation stick?
Recall Ford pardoned Nixon without even a charge.
And how is a blatant violation something unusual?
Yeah, I know, the FYTW Clause.
Still, I swear, they didn't used to be quite this blatant about shit.
The US legal system is a farce built to keep the elites in control and prevent the peasants from getting uppity. §230 is a prime example of mollifying peasants with trinkets. The real problem is big companies not being accountable for violating their own terms of service. The fig leaf is letting the peasants mouth off to each other, with no remedy when the big companies stomp on their accounts or posts.
* Laws are far too complicated for any more peasant to understand.
* Law schools and bar exams were explicitly instituted to keep down the number of lawyers and jack up their prices.
* The limited supply of lawyers and judges also makes the system incredibly slow. It should not take months and years to hear a case, months and years to appeal, and months and years to appeal again.
Small claims court is another sop to the peasants, and its claim to fame is only taking 1-2 months to come to a hearing, and several months more, if you are lucky, to collect your winnings.
... if you are lucky, to collect your winnings.
The best small claims will do is agree that they owe you money. That's it. If you want to collect you have to hire a collection agency staffed by lawyers who will keep at least 60% of what you are owed, making it pointless.
The real problem is big companies not being accountable for violating their own terms of service.
Yes, and being free to change those TOS at will. Other contracts are not able to be modified at one party’s sole discretion.
Well, like, if Hitler had pardoned one of his henchmen, would you give the henchman a free pass? And Trump is worse than Hitler, so the question answers itself.
He’s even worse then Super Hitler.
MAGA Communism Hitler.
If a defendant opts for a jury trial and the jury acquits him or declines to deliver a verdict on certain counts, the judge can disregard that conclusion if he or she decides the panel got it wrong.
Then why have trials. At the least we should have tribunals that no one person can decide another person’s fate with prejudice. And that would save a lot of money over the farce of a jury trial when the judge can just negate the jury’s decision on a personal whim. The Bolsheviks had better protection than we currently do in the US. This is all because Trump commuted his sentence, if it had been Obama or Biden it would never have happened.
Juries used to be the last defense against tyranny. Through jury nullification the jury can find someone not guilty even if they broke the law, sending the message that the law is unjust.
If a judge can override jury nullification, then there is no defense from tyranny.
What the ever loving fuck?
"Democrats are typically first in line to argue for a more robust clemency process and fair sentencing practices—both of which are at stake in Esformes' case."
Not in evidence.
" And he represents what many Democrats dislike about the justice system, in that wealthy people sometimes get a better fortune. But a party that claims to stand for criminal justice reform cannot only apply that principle to the "right" defendants. "
Hunter Biden says hold my beer.
So yet another unprecedented prosecution by the Biden DOJ against their political enemies but Billy's sympathies lie with the Democrats who have always been reliable defenders of justice. Seriously Fuck Off Billy Binion you insufferable asshole.
Maybe the legal eagles can inform us whether the delay between the hung jury and the retrial was consistent with the right to a speedy trial? I’m asking out of curiosity, though my initial reaction is that they delayed too long. But perhaps there are some factors making it speedy?
I hope it provides solace to Philip Esformes, when he is back in prison (where he belongs), that some of his fellow right-wingers are writing sternly worded comments on his behalf.
Fuck off and die, asshole bigot.
The only real reason for Democrats to be for prosecution a second time after a commutation is they fear a Republican President will pardon Trump.
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