UNBIASED - December 23, 2024: President Biden Commutes 37 of 40 Federal Death Sentences and House Ethics Committee Releases Gaetz Report. Here's What You Need to Know.
Episode Date: December 23, 2024Welcome back to UNBIASED. In today's episode: President Biden Commutes 37 of 40 Federal Death Row Sentences (0:30) House Ethics Committee Releases Gaetz Findings (6:42) Listen/Watch this episode A...D-FREE on Patreon. Watch this episode on YouTube. Follow Jordan on Instagram and TikTok. All sources for this episode can be found here. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Welcome back to Unbiased, your favorite source of unbiased news and legal analysis.
Welcome back to Unbiased.
Today is Monday, December 23rd and this is your unexpected daily news rundown.
I know I told you Thursday it was going to be the last episode of season 3 and I thought
it was but it turns out today was kind of a big day in the news and I had some free
time on the plane so let's do it.
Today's episode is going to be a quick one, just two stories.
But without further ado, let's get into today's stories.
President Biden has commuted the sentences of all but three
federal death row inmates.
Let's talk about what this means. If you listened to my 1212
episodes of my December 12th episode about Biden granting
clemency to roughly 1500 people,
then you know there's a difference between commutations and pardons, but let's go over
it again just in case some of you weren't able to catch that episode.
When we talk about clemency, we're talking about the president or sometimes a state governor
granting leniency to a certain person, but there are varying types or different types
of leniencies,
mainly pardons and commutations.
There are a few different types of pardons too.
So full pardons wipe away a conviction entirely, and if you're serving a sentence, you get
to go home.
A full pardon will also restore any rights that might have been stripped due to the conviction,
maybe the right to vote, maybe the right to hold public office, etc.
The rights that are taken away upon conviction really depend on whether it's a federal conviction or a state conviction.
And then you have partial pardons and conditional pardons.
So partial pardons offer limited relief. Conditional pardons come with some sort of condition or conditions.
Now, a commutation is much different than a pardon in that it doesn't wipe away
your conviction and it doesn't mean you get to stop serving your sentence and go home.
It can in certain instances, but it's not typical. Usually, commutations just offer
a lesser sentence and the conviction remains. A commutation is what Biden just granted to
the death row inmates. So Biden granted commutations to 37 of the 40 federal death row inmates.
And if you're like me, one of your first questions was, hmm, I wonder who the three are that
were not granted a commutation.
And I'll tell you, but first let me tell you a little something about federal death row.
A federal death penalty sentence is rare, much more rare than a state death penalty
sentence.
The federal death penalty applies in all 50 states, unlike the state death penalty, right?
Some states don't have the death penalty, but the federal death penalty can apply in
any of the 50 states.
It's just rarely ever sought.
There are about 60 eligible federal offenses, and if someone is charged with one of those
eligible offenses, the federal government has to decide whether they are going to seek
the death penalty.
But not only are federal death penalty sentences rare, so are the actual executions.
To show you just how rare federal executions are, let's go through the last five to six
decades. Between 1963 and 2001, there were no federal executions.
And this is in large part because the federal death penalty
was actually deemed unconstitutional in 1972,
and it was overturned in 1988.
But between 1972 and 1988,
the federal death penalty was unconstitutional
and there could be no federal executions. After 1988, when the death penalty was unconstitutional and there could be no federal executions.
After 1988, when the death penalty was reinstated
on a federal level, the next execution that took place
was in 2001 and there were two federal executions
that year.
Then there was one execution in 2003,
no executions though between 2003 and 2020.
When Trump took office, he resumed executions.
13 federal executions were carried out between July 2020 and January 2021
in a seven month span. Then Biden took office, executions stopped again.
In fact, President Biden announced a pause
on federal capital punishment to study the protocols that were being used.
So since the federal death penalty was reinstated in 1988,
there have only been 16 executions and 13 of those took place in a seven-month span.
Now, I'll tell you this. Biden commuting the sentences of all but three people on death row
means that, yes, 37 inmates will now serve life without parole sentences and will not be put to death.
But those three that were left out
have a much higher likelihood of being executed
much quicker than they otherwise would have been.
Executions typically take place in the order
in which inmates were put on death row.
And the three that didn't get their sentences commuted today
are the three most recent death
penalty sentences. So with 40 inmates on death row prior to today's commutations and at the rate
at which the government was carrying out these executions, it would have been a very, very long
time until these three were executed. We're talking decades. But now that those three are
the only three in line and with Trump taking office in January, decades. But now that those three are the only three in line,
and with Trump taking office in January, there's a chance that those three are executed in the next
one to two years. I mean, they still have to have their appeals play out because every defendant is
entitled to certain post-conviction appeals, but still it'll happen at a much quicker rate than it otherwise would have.
So who are the three?
The Boston Marathon bomber, a man who killed nine people at a church in South Carolina
in 2015, and a man who killed 11 people at a synagogue in 2018.
Those are the three that remain on death row.
In a statement announcing the commutations, President Biden said, quote, I have dedicated
my career to reducing violent crime and ensuring a fair and effective
justice system.
Today, I am commuting the sentences of 37 of the 40 individuals on federal death row
to life sentences without the possibility of parole.
These commutations are consistent with the moratorium my administration has imposed on
federal executions in cases other than terrorism and hate-motivated mass
murder. Make no mistake, I condemn these murders, grieve for the victims of their
despicable acts, and ache for all the families who have suffered unimaginable
and irreparable loss. But guided by my conscience and my experience as a public
defender, chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, vice president, and
now president, I am more convinced than ever that we must stop the use of the Senate Judiciary Committee, Vice President and now President, I am more convinced than ever
that we must stop the use of the death penalty at the federal level. In good conscience, I cannot
stand back and let a new administration resume executions that I halted." End quote. So that is
what you need to know there. Now let's talk about the Gates Ethics Report. The House Ethics Committee's
findings in their investigation into former representative
Matt Gates were leaked today
and then subsequently released by the committee.
And Gates, between the time that the report was leaked
and the time it was released, Gates filed a lawsuit
seeking to block the actual release of the report
by the committee.
We'll briefly talk about the role of the ethics committee.
Then we'll go over some of the findings,
six findings to be exact.
We'll talk about the dissenting views
and the lawsuit that Gates filed this morning.
And like I said, this discussion is going to be
fairly brief, but I do have the full report
from the House Ethics Committee and Gates's lawsuit
linked for you in the sources section of this episode.
Before we get into the allegations, I just want to make a quick note about the House
Ethics Committee because I'm sure some of you are wondering what this committee does.
It essentially oversees anything ethics related in the House.
So it's a bipartisan group of lawmakers, five Republicans, five Democrats, and they
administer disclosures, they issue advisory opinions, they advise members and staff, and
they investigate any potential ethics violations.
Now, as far as this particular investigation
into Matt Gaetz, I'm not really going to do
a lengthy history because I have talked about it
many times in past episodes.
So what I'll say is that Gaetz was being investigated
by the House Ethics Committee for illicit drug use,
misusing campaign funds, and having sex with a minor back
in 2017. The committee was conflicted as to whether it was going to release its findings
after Gates stepped down from his lawmaker position a few weeks back, but then just last week,
the committee said that it would release the report. So let's talk about some of the findings
now that we have that report. I'm just going to kind of bullet point it.
Number one, the committee found substantial evidence that Gates paid 12 women between
2017 and 2020 for sex.
Gates has actually admitted to paying various women for things over the years.
He hasn't specifically said that he paid them for sex, but he has admitted to paying them
for various things.
One of the women interviewed by the committee
reportedly said, quote,
"'Matt Gaetz paid me for sex.
"'That was the extent of our interaction,' end quote.
Two, the report found substantial evidence
that Gaetz had sex with a 17-year-old in 2017,
but that she never told Gaetz she was underage.
She was unaware that she was under 18.
Three, the report found substantial evidence
that he used cocaine and ecstasy on multiple occasions
between 2017 and 2019.
Four, the report alleges that Gates accepted improper gifts,
misused official resources, lied to the State Department
to help a sexual partner obtain a passport,
and obstructed the committee's investigation.
Five, the report found no substantial evidence
that Gates violated federal sex trafficking laws,
but accuses Gates of violating other federal laws,
like laws prohibiting obstruction
and making false statements to Congress.
The reason the committee did not find sufficient evidence
to conclude that he violated federal sex trafficking laws
is because although he
transported women across state lines, there was no evidence that the women were underage at the
time that they were transported, and no sufficient evidence to conclude that those sex acts were
induced by force, fraud, or coercion. In other words, all of the sexual acts which required the
transport of women across state lines seemed to be consensual. As far as the obstruction goes, the committee said that Gates provided minimal
documentation to the committee during this investigation, did not agree to the voluntary
interview, and did not appear to testify after the committee had issued a subpoena for him to do so.
And then six, the report did allege violations of state laws, specifically state
laws which prohibit prostitution and sex with a minor. So Florida's statutory rape law says that
it is a felony for a person 24 years or older to have sex with a 16 or 17 year old. And under that
law, a person cannot claim ignorance or misrepresentation of the minor's age as a defense. Now this doesn't
mean that he'll be charged
with violating this law.
It just means that the committee found sufficient evidence
to support a charge.
Remember this House Ethics Committee is completely different
than a prosecutor's office, whether it's a federal
prosecutor or a state prosecutor.
So although the House Committee can say,
we found sufficient evidence
to support a charge, it doesn't mean that a charge will be brought. It's an entirely different body
that would bring a charge. The last page of the report includes the views of the dissenting
committee members, those that did not want the report released. And they wrote in part, quote,
we believe and remain steadfast in the position that the House Committee on Ethics lost jurisdiction
to release to the public any substantive work product regarding Mr. Gates after his resignation
from the House on November 14, 2024. While we do not challenge the Committee's findings,
we take great exception that the majority deviated from the Committee's well-established
standards and voted to release a report on an individual no longer under the committee's jurisdiction,
an action the committee has not taken since 2006. Representative Gates resigned from Congress,
withdrew from consideration to serve in the next administration, and declared that he would not
seek to be seated in the 119th Congress. The decision to publish a report after his resignation
breaks from the committee's longstanding practice,
opens the committee to undo criticism,
and will be viewed by some as an attempt
to weaponize the committee's process.
We believe that operating outside the jurisdictional bounds
set forth by House rules and committee standards,
especially when making public disclosures,
is a dangerous departure
with potentially catastrophic consequences."
End quote.
Gates himself has denied any wrongdoing.
He released a statement last week, which you can hear in last Wednesday's episode.
I read that full statement.
It's also worth noting he was previously also investigated by the DOJ.
So the DOJ is separate from the House Ethics Committee.
He faced an investigation by the DOJ for paying women for
sex and the DOJ declined to bring charges against him. As for Gates's lawsuit against the House
Ethics Committee, he's essentially alleging that the release of the report would violate the
Constitution, violate the Privacy Act, and constitute defamation. The complaint reads in part,
quote, the anticipated statements and release of information by defendants is expected to include
reference and make conclusions that plaintiff engaged in conduct
Amounting to misconduct or was otherwise unethical the anticipated statements and information is false
Factually incorrect and untrue because plaintiff did not violate any criminal code or other standard of ethics within the jurisdiction of
defendants and quote so the alleged
constitutional violation stems from the idea that the dissenting members
wrote about, which is that the House Ethics Committee no longer has jurisdiction over
the matter.
Once Gates stepped down from Congress, the Ethics Committee no longer had jurisdiction
to investigate, and at that point is when it voted whether it would release this report.
But Gates argues that that lack of jurisdiction means not only can they no longer investigate,
but they also no longer have jurisdiction
to release the report.
He says doing so would exceed their constitutional authority
and violate his Fifth Amendment rights to due process.
The Privacy Act claim is a little different
in that it's based on federal law, not the Constitution.
The Privacy Act prohibits federal agencies
from disclosing records about people
without proper authorization and notice. Gates says that they did not get proper authorization
and notice and therefore releasing the report would violate federal law. And then finally
defamation. Defamation is the third claim in the lawsuit. As we all know, defamation is the
publication of a false statement that harms the reputation of another. So Gates is basically saying
that the report
contains false statements that are going to hurt his reputation and therefore constitute
defamation. So that is the quick rundown and the sort of need to know information. But
like I said, I do have the report and Gates' lawsuit that he filed in the sources section.
So if you are interested in reading or learning more, definitely head there. That is what I have for you today.
I can confidently say that this will be the last episode
until the new year.
Thank you for being here
for this quick unexpected last minute episode.
Have a very happy holiday
and I will talk to you in the new year.