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1. Spooky+(OP)[view] [source] 2025-01-22 02:52:56
Pardons are forgiveness. They don’t roll back the clock, although the Supreme Court ruled in 2021 that acceptance of a pardon is not an assumption of guilt.
replies(1): >>ajcp+h2
2. ajcp+h2[view] [source] 2025-01-22 03:13:08
>>Spooky+(OP)
Was acceptance of a pardon an "assumption" by the court? Is it not "admission* of guilt", which I believe itself was never the case as this was based on a judge's aside that people didn't accept pardons because it was *percieved* as "an admission of guilt", i.e. the "percieved" part was not actually articulated in court but rather the judge was completing a thought before it was fully articulated.
replies(2): >>Spooky+j5 >>bb88+m6
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3. Spooky+j5[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-01-22 03:40:14
>>ajcp+h2
My apologies I made a mistake. The Burdick SCOTUS case from 1915 said “carries an imputation of guilt and acceptance of a confession of it”

In 2021, an appeals court opined that: “not every acceptance of a pardon constitutes a confession of guilt.”

I thought the 2021 case was a Supreme Court case, and I was incorrect. I think in the public eye the pardon is viewed differently based on however the story is told.

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4. bb88+m6[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-01-22 03:49:11
>>ajcp+h2
What I find interesting is that the 5th amendment no longer applies after a pardon. The pardoned can no longer claim that protection for the crime he was convicted of.
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