Was Huckabee right to grant clemency to Maurice Clemmons, a young offender who grew up inside the criminal justice system, who really only needed someone to give him a second chance? Or was Huckabee too eager to release a violent man because that violent man said he had turned his life around and returned to his good Christian roots?
The facts make it clear: Clemmons, who was shot after killing four officers, didn't need a second chance--he needed to stay in jail. But is that enough to destroy Huckabee's political ambitions? After all, Huckabee had to make a tough decision here, and at the risk of endangering the community, he decided to see the potential good in Maurice Clemmons and give him that second chance.
Which would have been the case if not for these two letters. Without these two letters, the attack by Conservatives would have seemed like yet another Litmus Test attack Conservatives have been in the habit of launching recently. But seeing these two letters, one by an Arkansas Prosecutor asking Huckabee to re-evaluate his clemency procedures, and the other back to the Prosecutor from Huckabee's office, I have to agree with the Free Republic crowd. This is not simply an attack on a Governor who now seems not Conservative enough. This is an attack on someone who should stick to what he knows: bass guitar.
The One Percent Isn’t Happy
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by Stuart Shapiro
Gabriel Sherman wrote an article last week detailing how Wall Street is so
upset at the Obama Administration for financial reform resul...



2 comments:
The letter from the Prosecuting Attorney was quite telling. Huckabee's job was to uphold the decision of jurists, not to indiscriminately turn over their sentences. What he did exceeds all proper bounds and the final outcome was horrific.
I saw Huckabee on The Daily Show last week, and Jon Stewart made this into a partisan bickering over an unfortunate tragedy. I think this letter shows this was a very different issue. This letter and the outcome of Huckabee's actions were actually an Emperor's New Clothes moment.
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