A Post-Clemency Prosecution Shines a Light on a Broken System
Donald Trump commuted Philip Esformes' sentence, but the Justice Department is bent on sending him back to prison.

A month before he left office, then-President Donald Trump freed Philip Esformes, a Florida nursing home operator who had served nearly five years of a 20-year sentence for bilking Medicare and Medicaid. Despite that commutation, the Justice Department plans to retry Esformes for the same conduct that sent him to prison in the first place.
Critics of that unprecedented move say it undermines the pardon power and violates the Fifth Amendment's ban on double jeopardy. As witnesses at a recent congressional hearing emphasized, the case also illustrates the sorry state of the federal clemency system, which in recent decades has become increasingly stingy, inefficient, and haphazard.
Esformes was arrested in 2016 and charged with numerous crimes related to a scheme that prosecutors said involved bribes, kickbacks, and medically unnecessary treatments, all of which helped fund a "lavish lifestyle." After an eight-week trial in 2019, U.S. District Judge Robert N. Scola Jr. directed the jury to acquit Esformes of six charges, including two counts of health care fraud, deeming the evidence underlying them insufficient as a matter of law.
The jury convicted Esformes of 20 other charges, including conspiracy to defraud the United States, money laundering, payment and receipt of kickbacks, and obstruction of justice. But it failed to reach verdicts on six counts, including the central charge of conspiring to commit health care fraud.
Based on the 20 convictions, Right on Crime Executive Director Brett Tolman noted in his congressional testimony, "Mr. Esformes was facing 5 years in prison." But prosecutors successfully urged Scola to sentence Esformes as if he had been convicted of health care fraud, which "increased Mr. Esformes' sentence by 15 years."
Although it defies conventional notions of justice, federal judges are allowed to punish defendants for crimes that have not been proven beyond a reasonable doubt. In this case, Scola explicitly said he considered the six undecided counts in determining Esformes' sentence.
The Justice Department nevertheless wants to take another stab at convicting Esformes of those crimes. It argues that the commutation Esformes received does not preclude another prosecution, because it says nothing about the unresolved counts.
Trump explicitly left in place three years of post-release supervision, plus restitution and forfeiture totaling about $44 million. But it is hard to believe he thought he was leaving the door open to a trial that could send Esformes back to prison. That prospect instead seems to be the result of a mistake that could have been avoided if Trump had been better advised.
"A good system would have made him aware of the hung counts and the fact they could be retried," University of St. Thomas law professor Mark Osler notes. Then Trump could have pardoned those counts, which would have prevented a retrial.
As Osler sees it, that oversight is emblematic of a broken clemency process that is highly bureaucratic, needlessly complicated, painfully slow, and maddeningly opaque. The current system involves seven sequential layers of review and effectively empowers prosecutors to block mercy for defendants they put away.
Presidents frustrated by that process often have been tempted to take shortcuts, Osler notes, resulting in "hasty clemency grants in the last days of an administration." Trump, for example, granted 78 of his 94 commutations during his last 31 days in office.
Although Americans might assume that pattern is traditional, it did not emerge until the Clinton administration. And as acts of clemency became increasingly concentrated toward the end of a president's time in office, they also became much rarer: Trump granted 2 percent of petitions, for instance, down from 12 percent under Ronald Reagan and 36 percent under Richard Nixon.
It seems unlikely that Joe Biden, who currently has a backlog of nearly 17,000 petitions, will make a substantially bigger dent in them than his recent predecessors did. Meanwhile, his administration's vindictive pursuit of Esformes casts doubt on the finality of clemency, sending exactly the wrong signal about an important but woefully underused remedy for injustice.
© Copyright 2023 by Creators Syndicate Inc.
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You know who else keep getting hounded by prosecutors?
Not emilyrichard7, unfortunately.
Mob bosses. typically.
Yet, they let Hunter off with a slap on the wrist and the Big Guy still hasn’t faced impeachment.
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""A good system would have made him aware of the hung counts and the fact they could be retried,""
Um, maybe he was aware?
I don't know anything about this case except what is in this article, but if I read it correctly, a guy had a raft of charges against him and the government got guilty verdicts on some, and a hung jury on the others.
Again, this is where some competent editing is necessary to make these articles more clear and concise. Because the clemency part is just a side show of this entire ordeal. Whether this defendant had been granted clemency or not; whether he had been convicted of these lesser charges or not; whether Trump or Biden were being advised wrong or not- irrespective of all these things, the real story is that the government is allowed to try you again when their previous prosecution resulted in a hung jury.
That's it. Everything else is not germane to the argument. I think it is noteworthy- and wrong- that the government could sentence a person for crimes it could not convict. That certainly should be changed, but it was also fixed via the clemency awarded by Trump. But that, again, is just a distraction from the argument that the government should not be allowed to engage in double jeopardy when the first trial ended in a hung jury. That is an issue that affects far, far more than this weird case.
As usual, it seems that the editorial (and Sullum) policy of trying to work Trump into every article has led to an article that doesn't actually address the root causes, and actually detracts from the argument being made. This is how Trump broke the media world. Editors and Journalists have become so addicted to Trump-induced-clicks that they can't help but to ram that square peg of subject matter into every round hole issue.
Well said.
Yes, Well said.
I opened the comments section to say just this ... well, I wasn't going to do as good a job.
Jacob, this is on you and the other TDS zealots. There is no lie you will not tell, no corruption of justice you will not commit in the quest to tear down the orangeman
Trump also commuted the sentence of ex Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick after being sentenced to 28 years for corruption. Kilpatrick had served only seven years.
The disgrace that Kilpatrick brought to Detroit as if things weren't bad enough, highlighted much of the city's problems.
Again, was there in fact a "speedy trial" after the hung jury, as the 6th Amendment requires?
It seems the trial was 2016 and is being revived 2023. What circumstances make the trial speedy? I'm genuinely interested, there may be some loophole I'm not aware of.
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Sullum doesn't bother to ask the obvious question here. Why is Biden's DOJ wasting resources in a unprecedented prosecution? If this guy had his sentence commuted by Clinton or Obama or Biden would they ne fucking with this guy? No. This is another political prosecution to diminish Trump's presidency in any way they can. Fuck off Jacob.
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Somehow I'm having a little trouble feeling much sorrow for a guy who managed to get himself convicted of 20 counts of fraud, laundering money, and accepting kickbacks.
Were there actual victims?
Yes.
You figure fraud, money laundering, and bribery are victimless crimes?
That's the thing: we need to make sure that we apply our rights to the bad guys, because if we don't, then there won't be any room for us to defend ourselves when we're good guys persecuted by the government.
A Post-Clemency Prosecution Shines a Light on a "Rogue Administration" That Thinks It Can Violate the Constitution and Bill Of Rights With Impunity Because This President is a Dictator Wannabe
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Were either of you granted a presidential pardon?
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