What the New Reporting Reveals
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Internal emails obtained and reported by Axios show high-ranking officials raising alarms over how pardons were handed out—often without meaningful vetting or oversight by the president (Axios).
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A dramatic late-night email from Chief of Staff Jeff Zients at 10:31 p.m. on January 19 (just hours before Biden left office) bluntly authorized use of the autopen for sweeping pardons—including family members and controversial clemencies (Axios).
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Staff secretary Stefanie Feldman was the autopen’s steward—working from “blurbs” that claimed Biden had approved each decision. In reality, many of those submitting blurbs had no firsthand knowledge (New York Post).
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Mass pardons—thousands granted in the final months—were signed via autopen. In one stroke, about 2,500 crack-cocaine sentences were commuted, not by Biden’s hand, but by the machinations of aides (B Times Online).
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Meanwhile, The New York Times confirms that Biden didn’t personally approve every name—only broad criteria. The final lists and signatures were entirely in staff hands (yourNEWS).
This wasn’t just delegation—it was delegation devoid of oversight. The president’s supposed involvement is increasingly appearing as a veneer.
Why This Matters—and What It Means for “Who’s In Charge?”
Your myopic embrace of “this is just how clemency works in a busy White House” hits a wall when oversight, accountability, and constitutional principle vanish in the name of convenience.
Bluntly put:
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Legality doesn’t equal legitimacy. Autopen use is legally permissible, yes—but only if directed by the president. When intermediaries control the process, constitutional safeguards start disintegrating.
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Surface-level denial doesn’t erase substance. Biden maintains, “I made every decision,” even as the evidence says otherwise. That discrepancy alone is worth a serious look (B Times Online).
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Accountability is evaporating. House Oversight, led by Rep. Comer, has launched probes and subpoenas. Key staffers are stonewalling or invoking the Fifth, refusing to own what just happened—or, more frighteningly, reveal how deep the breakdown went (Oversight Committee).
How This Fits Into the “Grappy’s Autopen-Gate Series”
If you’ve followed the earlier chapters on Grappy’s Soap Box, you'll remember the theme: transparency doesn’t happen by accident—it’s won or it’s surrendered. We questioned the president’s capacity, the erosion of trust, and what bad optics can mean for the next election. Now we have emails, memos, and a machine that looks like a handy tool—but acts more like a smokescreen.
Now is the moment to ask: Whose decisions went into those pardons? And more importantly, who will answer for them?
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