From Hearst to Clinton Who Got a Pardon?
This week was all  about the pardon. Florida governor Charlie Crist revealed that he's considering a posthumous pardon for Jim Morrison,  lead singer of the Doors, before he vacates office in December. The  pardon would wipe away an indecent exposure conviction from a wild 1969  concert in Miami.
Meanwhile, George W.  Bush told the TODAY show that former Vice President Dick Cheney  was angry with him for failing to pardon I. Lewis  "Scooter" Libby. We take a look back at some of the most memorable  pardons of all time.Patty Hearst: Heiress-turned-bank  robber pardoned
The granddaughter of publishing magnate  William Randolph Hearst made headlines in 1974 when an urban guerilla  group known as the Symbionese Liberation Army (SLA) kidnapped her from  her Berkeley, Calif., apartment. Two months later the 19-year-old Hearst  was 
photographed  robbing a San Francisco bank while toting an assault rifle. Though  Hearst's defense lawyer argued that her involvement was the result of  pervasive brainwashing, she was convicted of bank robbery. After two  years in jail, President Jimmy Carter commuted Hearst's seven-year sentence, but it wasn't  until the last day of President Bill Clinton's presidency in 2001 that 
she was granted a full  pardon.No pardon for I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby 
The  former chief of staff for Vice President Dick Cheney was convicted of  lying during the investigation of the leaked identity of CIA operative Valerie  Plame. George W. Bush chose not to pardon the vice presidential  aide due to his involvement in the leak, opting only to 
commute his sentence. 
Richard Nixon's Watergate pardon
Just a little over a  year after he resigned in the wake of the Watergate scandal, Richard  Nixon received a highly controversial pardon from then-President Gerald  Ford. 
George Steinbrenner's illegal  campaign donations forgiven
Indicted  on 14 criminal counts in 1974, the owner of the New York Yankees pled  guilty to obstruction of justice and conspiring to make illegal  contributions to President Richard Nixon's reelection campaign.  Then-President 
Ronald  Reagan agreed to pardon Steinbrenner only if he admitted to the crimeIva Toguri D'Aquino aka "Tokyo Rose"  pardoned after serving time
Toguri  D'Aquino, known as Tokyo Rose, was one of several women who read  Japanese propaganda on Radio Tokyo's "Zero Hour" program during World  War II. After World War II she was convicted of treason and served 
ten years in prison.  Decades later it was exposed that the charges against her  were largely  false and she was pardoned by President Gerald Ford.Roger Clinton's big bro excuses his  cocaine distribution
On his final day as president, Bill Clinton  issued pardons to more than 100 people, including his half brother,  Roger. In 1985 Roger pled guilty to distributing  cocaine in Arkansas. We guess having a brother who's president 
has its perks!
Confederate General Robert E. Lee  pardoned 110 years later
After the Civil War ended, any Confederate  soldier could apply for a pardon and have his citizenship restored.  Famed Confederate General Robert E. Lee applied for the pardon, but his  oath of allegiance (the required 
document) never made  its way to the desk of then-President Andrew Johnson. In 1974, some 110  years after Lee applied for his pardon, a researcher at the National  Archives discovered the officer's amnesty oath. In 1975 Lee's full  rights of citizenship were posthumously  restored when President Gerald Ford signed his official pardon.Jimmy Hoffa: Head  of Teamsters pardoned 
Hoffa, the notorious head of the Teamsters,  had been serving a 15-year prison sentence for jury tampering and fraud  when President Richard Nixon pardoned him in 1971. Nixon's pardon came  with one condition, which Hoffa agreed to: "not [to]  engage in direct or indirect 
management of any labor organization" until at least March  1980. Some believe that Hoffa was attempting to reassert his power over  the Teamsters when he mysteriously disappeared in 1975.Eugene V. Debs: "espionage" excused
Eugene  V. Debs, a famed American Socialist who ran for president five times,  was convicted of treasonous speech under the Espionage Act for speaking  out against the American involvement in World War I. He was sentenced to  ten years in prison in 1918 for his crime. Debs was 
released after just  three years when President Warren Harding issued a blanket pardon to anyone convicted under the  Espionage Act. Harding then asked Debs to drop by the White House so the  two could meet.Caspar Weinberger's missile transfer  pardoned
Former Defense Secretary Weinberger was involved in the  transfer of U.S. anti-tank missiles to Iran in what became known as the  Iran-Contra Affair. Following his resignation in 1987, Weinberger was  charged with lying to the independent counsel. However, George H.W. Bush 
pardoned Weinberger and in the process, halted the  legal proceedings against him. 
Vietnam Draft Dodgers forgiven
On his first day as  president, Jimmy Carter issued a pardon to those who avoided serving in  the Vietnam War by fleeing the U.S. or not registering. However, some  groups, such as deserters, were not included in the terms of the pardon.











