Home United States USA — Science This chart shows why Trump's pardon of Arpaio was so unusual

This chart shows why Trump's pardon of Arpaio was so unusual

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It was an atypical pardon from an atypical president.
Trump’s pardon of Arpaio marks one of the earliest pardons in a president’s term and one of the only pardons granted alone, according to a CNN analysis of Department of Justice data ranging back nearly three decades.
And we turned that data into a chart that shows how, historically, this pardon sticks out in all three major areas: numbers of years into a president’s term, number of pardons issued at once and time since the conviction or sentencing.
The average time since the person in each group was sentenced runs up the left side, while the number of years into each term runs along the bottom. The size of each bubble represents the number of individuals in each group of pardons.
Other unique pardons that stand out in the chart include Barack Obama’s pardon of four people before trial as part of a hostage deal with Iran, Bill Clinton’s pardon of a now-disputed crime in 1881 by the first African-American to graduate from West Point, and George H. W. Bush’s nine pardons that came during August of his first year as president.
“He’s done a great job for the people of Arizona. He’s very strong on borders, very strong on illegal immigration, ” Trump said at a press conference on Monday afternoon, justifying his pardon of the controversial sheriff who was convicted of criminal contempt last month. “He is loved in Arizona. I thought he was treated unbelievably unfairly.”
Republican House Speaker Paul Ryan, as well as both GOP Senators from Arizona, joined Democrats in criticizing Trump’s decision to pardon Arpaio, who was a political ally during his presidential bid.
Trump is just the third president in the last 40 years to use his pardon power during their first nine months. (Data for previous presidents is sparser, but Ronald Reagan pardoned only two people in his first nine months and Jimmy Carter pardoned no one in that span, according to the DOJ.)
More than half of the pardons granted over the last three decades came from outgoing presidents in the final year of their tenures.
Most pardons are granted following a recommendation and rigorous scrutiny from a special office in the Department of Justice. They are typically granted at least five years after conviction — and are based on post-conviction character, the seriousness of the crime and demonstrations of remorse and responsibility, according to DOJ guidelines.

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