Updated
Updated · The New York Times · May 20
Lawyers and Lobbyists Sell Trump Pardon Access for Up to $1 Million
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · May 20

Lawyers and Lobbyists Sell Trump Pardon Access for Up to $1 Million

4 articles · Updated · The New York Times · May 20
  • $1 million in cash was offered up front to one lawyer by a jailed man's family, illustrating the frantic market around clemency in Trump's Washington.
  • Lawyers and lobbyists are pitching themselves as pardon brokers, with one practitioner, Josh Nass, warning that desperate clients are being exploited by operators who promise access and deliver nothing.
  • Nass said demand surged after he helped secure a pardon for nursing-home owner Joseph Schwartz, who had been serving a three-year sentence for a $38 million tax-fraud case.
  • A lobbying disclosure showed Schwartz paid Nass $100,000, underscoring how presidential clemency has become a lucrative business for well-connected intermediaries.
A top pardon broker faces extortion charges. How deep does criminality run in this secretive industry?
When presidential clemency becomes a commodity, what does this mean for the future of equal justice?
With billions in restitution erased by pardons, what recourse is left for victims of financial crime?