Can a U.S. President pardon an accessory to murder if the murder occurred in a foreign country?











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If a U.S. citizen conspires to have another U.S. citizen murdered but the actual killing takes place in a foreign country, can the accessory to the murder be pardoned by the President?










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  • 7




    If the person is being charged under foreign law, the President has no power to pardon that person under those laws.
    – Ron Beyer
    Nov 27 at 18:15






  • 1




    @RonBeyer as the answer below indicates, the same is true if the person is being charged under US state law. Jon Allen: welcome to the site, please accept the answer by clicking the check mark below the voting buttons.
    – phoog
    Nov 28 at 22:47















up vote
6
down vote

favorite












If a U.S. citizen conspires to have another U.S. citizen murdered but the actual killing takes place in a foreign country, can the accessory to the murder be pardoned by the President?










share|improve this question




















  • 7




    If the person is being charged under foreign law, the President has no power to pardon that person under those laws.
    – Ron Beyer
    Nov 27 at 18:15






  • 1




    @RonBeyer as the answer below indicates, the same is true if the person is being charged under US state law. Jon Allen: welcome to the site, please accept the answer by clicking the check mark below the voting buttons.
    – phoog
    Nov 28 at 22:47













up vote
6
down vote

favorite









up vote
6
down vote

favorite











If a U.S. citizen conspires to have another U.S. citizen murdered but the actual killing takes place in a foreign country, can the accessory to the murder be pardoned by the President?










share|improve this question















If a U.S. citizen conspires to have another U.S. citizen murdered but the actual killing takes place in a foreign country, can the accessory to the murder be pardoned by the President?







pardon






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edited Nov 28 at 15:29









Community

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1










asked Nov 27 at 17:33









Jon Allen

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3112








  • 7




    If the person is being charged under foreign law, the President has no power to pardon that person under those laws.
    – Ron Beyer
    Nov 27 at 18:15






  • 1




    @RonBeyer as the answer below indicates, the same is true if the person is being charged under US state law. Jon Allen: welcome to the site, please accept the answer by clicking the check mark below the voting buttons.
    – phoog
    Nov 28 at 22:47














  • 7




    If the person is being charged under foreign law, the President has no power to pardon that person under those laws.
    – Ron Beyer
    Nov 27 at 18:15






  • 1




    @RonBeyer as the answer below indicates, the same is true if the person is being charged under US state law. Jon Allen: welcome to the site, please accept the answer by clicking the check mark below the voting buttons.
    – phoog
    Nov 28 at 22:47








7




7




If the person is being charged under foreign law, the President has no power to pardon that person under those laws.
– Ron Beyer
Nov 27 at 18:15




If the person is being charged under foreign law, the President has no power to pardon that person under those laws.
– Ron Beyer
Nov 27 at 18:15




1




1




@RonBeyer as the answer below indicates, the same is true if the person is being charged under US state law. Jon Allen: welcome to the site, please accept the answer by clicking the check mark below the voting buttons.
– phoog
Nov 28 at 22:47




@RonBeyer as the answer below indicates, the same is true if the person is being charged under US state law. Jon Allen: welcome to the site, please accept the answer by clicking the check mark below the voting buttons.
– phoog
Nov 28 at 22:47










1 Answer
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He can, to the extent that there is a federal charge involved. There is no limit to the power to "grant reprieves and pardons for offenses against the United States", but there is no power to grant reprieve or pardon against a US state or foreign country.



In other words, a presidential pardon would prevent the person from being tried or punished by the US federal government. It would not prevent them from being tried or punished by a state or foreign government.






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  • 8




    In other words, a presidential pardon would prevent the person from being tried or punished by the US federal government. It would not prevent them from being tried or punished by a state or foreign government.
    – Nate Eldredge
    Nov 27 at 23:38










  • @NateEldredge I suggested your comment as an additional paragraph for the answer. Without it, I had trouble understanding the answer.
    – Jasper
    Nov 28 at 12:34











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1 Answer
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1 Answer
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active

oldest

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active

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active

oldest

votes








up vote
17
down vote













He can, to the extent that there is a federal charge involved. There is no limit to the power to "grant reprieves and pardons for offenses against the United States", but there is no power to grant reprieve or pardon against a US state or foreign country.



In other words, a presidential pardon would prevent the person from being tried or punished by the US federal government. It would not prevent them from being tried or punished by a state or foreign government.






share|improve this answer



















  • 8




    In other words, a presidential pardon would prevent the person from being tried or punished by the US federal government. It would not prevent them from being tried or punished by a state or foreign government.
    – Nate Eldredge
    Nov 27 at 23:38










  • @NateEldredge I suggested your comment as an additional paragraph for the answer. Without it, I had trouble understanding the answer.
    – Jasper
    Nov 28 at 12:34















up vote
17
down vote













He can, to the extent that there is a federal charge involved. There is no limit to the power to "grant reprieves and pardons for offenses against the United States", but there is no power to grant reprieve or pardon against a US state or foreign country.



In other words, a presidential pardon would prevent the person from being tried or punished by the US federal government. It would not prevent them from being tried or punished by a state or foreign government.






share|improve this answer



















  • 8




    In other words, a presidential pardon would prevent the person from being tried or punished by the US federal government. It would not prevent them from being tried or punished by a state or foreign government.
    – Nate Eldredge
    Nov 27 at 23:38










  • @NateEldredge I suggested your comment as an additional paragraph for the answer. Without it, I had trouble understanding the answer.
    – Jasper
    Nov 28 at 12:34













up vote
17
down vote










up vote
17
down vote









He can, to the extent that there is a federal charge involved. There is no limit to the power to "grant reprieves and pardons for offenses against the United States", but there is no power to grant reprieve or pardon against a US state or foreign country.



In other words, a presidential pardon would prevent the person from being tried or punished by the US federal government. It would not prevent them from being tried or punished by a state or foreign government.






share|improve this answer














He can, to the extent that there is a federal charge involved. There is no limit to the power to "grant reprieves and pardons for offenses against the United States", but there is no power to grant reprieve or pardon against a US state or foreign country.



In other words, a presidential pardon would prevent the person from being tried or punished by the US federal government. It would not prevent them from being tried or punished by a state or foreign government.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Nov 28 at 15:29









Jasper

1031




1031










answered Nov 27 at 18:07









user6726

55.8k44694




55.8k44694








  • 8




    In other words, a presidential pardon would prevent the person from being tried or punished by the US federal government. It would not prevent them from being tried or punished by a state or foreign government.
    – Nate Eldredge
    Nov 27 at 23:38










  • @NateEldredge I suggested your comment as an additional paragraph for the answer. Without it, I had trouble understanding the answer.
    – Jasper
    Nov 28 at 12:34














  • 8




    In other words, a presidential pardon would prevent the person from being tried or punished by the US federal government. It would not prevent them from being tried or punished by a state or foreign government.
    – Nate Eldredge
    Nov 27 at 23:38










  • @NateEldredge I suggested your comment as an additional paragraph for the answer. Without it, I had trouble understanding the answer.
    – Jasper
    Nov 28 at 12:34








8




8




In other words, a presidential pardon would prevent the person from being tried or punished by the US federal government. It would not prevent them from being tried or punished by a state or foreign government.
– Nate Eldredge
Nov 27 at 23:38




In other words, a presidential pardon would prevent the person from being tried or punished by the US federal government. It would not prevent them from being tried or punished by a state or foreign government.
– Nate Eldredge
Nov 27 at 23:38












@NateEldredge I suggested your comment as an additional paragraph for the answer. Without it, I had trouble understanding the answer.
– Jasper
Nov 28 at 12:34




@NateEldredge I suggested your comment as an additional paragraph for the answer. Without it, I had trouble understanding the answer.
– Jasper
Nov 28 at 12:34


















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