Trump
tells 37 people on death row with commuted sentences to ‘go to hell’
On Truth
Social, president-elect also lashes out at Chinese troops in Panama Canal and
Canadian PM Justin Trudeau
Robert Tait
Thu 26 Dec
2024 19.33 CET
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2024/dec/26/trump-biden-death-penalty-commuted
Donald Trump
has told 37 people on death row who had their sentences commuted by Joe Biden
to “go to hell” in a lacerating Christmas Day social media post.
The
president-elect – long a vocal advocate of capital punishment – lashed out at
Biden’s decision on his Truth Social platform, after wishing a merry Christmas
to political opponents he addressed as “Radical Left Lunatics”.
He then
turned to those shown clemency by Biden in a decision announced on Monday: “ …
to the 37 most violent criminals, who killed, raped, and plundered like
virtually no one before them, but were just given, incredibly, a pardon by
Sleepy Joe Biden. I refuse to wish a Merry Christmas to those lucky ‘souls’
but, instead, will say, GO TO HELL!”
Biden’s move
reduced the death sentences of 37 out of 40 prisoners on federal death row to
life imprisonment without parole and followed pressure from campaigners who
warned that they were likely to be executed on Trump’s return to the White
House.
The
exceptions applied to three men who had been convicted of offences regarded as
terrorism or hate crimes, including Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, who was found guilty of
carrying out the 2013 Boston marathon bombing attack.
Biden – a
one-time adherent of capital punishment – said in a statement that “guided by
my conscience … I am more convinced than ever that we must stop the use of the
death penalty at the federal level. I cannot stand back and let a new
administration resume executions that I halted.”
During his
first presidency, Trump restarted federal executions after a 17-year gap,
eventually presiding over more than the previous 10 presidents combined.
Biden’s
commutation order won the praise of campaigners, including Martin Luther King
III, the son of the murdered civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr.
The majority
of those whose sentences were commuted are people of colour, and 38% are Black,
according to the Death Penalty Information Center.
One of
Trump’s earliest forays into the political arena was a full-page advert calling
for the reinstatement of the death penalty after the rape of a jogger in New
York City’s Central Park in 1989 and the subsequent arrests of five Black and
Latino teenagers, who were charged and eventually convicted of the crime. All
five, who denied involvement, were ultimately exonerated and released from
prison after another man belatedly made a confession that was confirmed by DNA
evidence.
The men, now
in their 50s, sued Trump for defamation after he falsely said during a
presidential debate with Kamala Harris in Philadelphia in September that they
had admitted guilt and that the victim had been killed.
In another
segment of his Christmas Day post, Trump sarcastically offered season’s
greetings to Chinese troops serving in the Panama Canal, which he has publicly
mused be returned to the US, and to the Canadian prime minister, Justin
Trudeau, whom he taunted with the title “governor” in the latest of several
demeaning provocations since winning November’s presidential election.
“Merry
Christmas to all, including to the wonderful soldiers of China, who are
lovingly, but illegally, operating the Panama Canal (where we lost 38,000
people in its building 110 years ago), always making certain that the United
States puts in Billions of Dollars in ‘repair’ money, but will have absolutely
nothing to say about ‘anything’,” he wrote.
“Also, to
Governor Justin Trudeau of Canada, whose Citizens’ Taxes are far too high, but
if Canada was to become our 51st State, their Taxes would be cut by more than
60%, their businesses would immediately double in size, and they would be
militarily protected like no other Country anywhere in the World.”
Christmas
wishes were also extended to the residents of Greenland, “which is needed by
the United States for National Security purposes and, who want the US to be
there, and we will”. This was a reference to his call, initially made during
his first presidency, that Denmark – which has sovereignty over the territory –
sell it to the US. Both Denmark and Greenland’s autonomous administration have
said that it is not for sale.
In a later
unrelated post, Trump wrote that he had met the retired Canadian ice hockey
star Wayne Gretzky and asked him to run for the prime minister’s office, “soon
to be known as the Governor of Canada”.
“He had no
interest, but I think the people of Canada should start a DRAFT WAYNE GRETZKY
Movement,” Trump wrote. “It would be so much fun to watch!”
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