Donald Trump, after being sworn in for a second term as President of the United States, has signed numerous executive ordersโsome of which have sparked significant public debate.
Among his actions, he pardoned nearly a dozen pro-life activists convicted under the federal Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances (FACE) Act and โConspiracy Against Rights.โ
โTwenty-three people were prosecuted who should not have been prosecuted. Many of them are elderly people. They should not have been prosecuted,โ Trump stated. โThis is a great honor to sign this.โ
Granting these pardons was a key promise Trump made during his campaign. According to the Thomas More Society, they were issued the day before the March for Life in Washington, D.C.
In their request for clemency, attorneys representing the activists described them as victims of the โweaponization of the Justice Department by the Biden Administration.โ They argued that while Bidenโs prosecutors largely ignored incidents of vandalism and firebombing at pro-life churches and pregnancy centers, they aggressively pursued pro-life protesters.
Marjorie Dannenfelser, president of SBA Pro-Life America, praised Trumpโs decision. โWe thank President Trump for immediately delivering on his promise to free pro-life protesters who [were] targeted and imprisoned by [President Joe] Bidenโs Department of Justice,โ she said. โPro-life moms, grandmothers, and even Eva Edl, a Communist prison camp survivor, were thrown in jail for peacefully protesting abortion.โ
She also highlighted the severe sentences imposed, citing Lauren Handyโs five-year sentence for attempting to expose evidence of late-term and potentially illegal abortions.
While Trumpโs supporters applauded his move as a stand for pro-life advocacy, critics viewed it as a highly controversial use of presidential power.
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