Bush’s 2007 Pardon List

Pardoned

* James Albert Bodendieck Sr., of New Athens, Ill., convicted in 1959 of interstate transportation of a stolen vehicle.
* Jeffrey James Bruce, of Chandler, Okla., convicted in 1994 of possession of stolen mail.
* Charles Wayne Bryant, of Sautee, Ga., convicted in 1962 of theft of United States mail matter by employee.
* Carleton Gregory Carpenter, of Wayland, Mass., convicted in 1981 of making a false representation with respect to information required to be kept in the records of a person holding a federal firearms license.
* John Edward Casto, of Ripley, W.Va., convicted in 1990 of distribution of cocaine.
* Jackie Ray Clayborn, of Deer, Ark., convicted in 1993 of manufacturing marijuana.
* Debbie Sue Conklin, formerly known as Debbie Sue McAlevy, of Douglas, Wyo., convicted in 1990 of conspiracy to distribute methamphetamine.
* Charles Richard Fennell, of Valencia, Calif., convicted in 1995 of false statement to a federally insured financial institution.
* John Fornaby, of Boynton Beach, Fla., convicted in 1991 of conspiracy to distribute cocaine.
* Daniel Ray Freeman, of Douglas, Ga., convicted in 1963 of violation of Internal Revenue liquor laws.
* Thomas Dee Gandy, of Wichita, Kan., convicted in 1996 of mail fraud affecting a financial institution.
* Melton Harrell, of Cairo, Ga., convicted in 1976 of theft of government property and receiving stolen government property.
* Paul Dwight Hawkins, of Lafayette, La., convicted in 1990 of conspiracy to import marijuana.
* Roger Paul Ingram, of Round Rock, Texas, convicted in 1987 of conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute an analogue of a Schedule I controlled substance, Ecstasy.
* William Lucius Jones Jr., of Birmingham, Ala., convicted in 1972 of illegal possession of an unregistered firearm.
* William Charles Jordan, Jr., of Dover, Pa., convicted in 2000 of managing and conducting an illegal gambling business.
* Saul Kaplan, of Scranton, Pa., convicted in 1992 of violation of the Federal Election Campaign Act.
* Billy Joe LaForce, of San Antonio, convicted in 1991 of conspiracy to possess marijuana with intent to distribute.
* Rudolph J. Macejak, of Morton Grove, Ill., convicted in 1986 of possession of an unregistered firearm.
* John F. McDermott, of Moretown, Vt., convicted in 1995 of receiving kickbacks in defense procurement contracts.
* William James Norman, of Tallahassee, Fla., convicted in 1970 of possession of an unregistered distillery, carrying on the business of a distiller without giving the required bond, possession and custody of a still without the required sign outside the premises, working at a distillery without the required sign outside the premises and unlawfully producing distilled spirits from mash and similar material.
* Glanus Terrell Osborne, of Dallas, Ga., convicted in 1990 of possession of a stolen motor vehicle.
* John Gordon Smith, of Littleton, Colo., convicted in 1988 of false statement to a federal agency.
* Walter J. Sweeney, III, of Cincinnati, Ohio, convicted in 1993 of attempting to evade income taxes.
* Nancy Lynn Thompson, of Bainbridge, Ga., convicted in 1997 of embezzlement by a bank employee.
* Daryl Toney, of Montgomery, Ala., convicted in 1993 of misdemeanor theft within the special maritime and territorial jurisdiction of the United States.
* Charles Eddie Trobaugh, of Whitleyville, Tenn., convicted in 1965 of liquor law violations.
* Samuel Lewis Whisel, of Boiling Springs, Pa., convicted in 1989 of aiding and abetting the interstate transportation of stolen goods.
* Steven Wayne Whitlock, of Sarasota, Fla., convicted in 1990 of conspiracy to import marijuana.

Commuted sentence

* Michael Dwayne Short, of Hyattsville, Md., convicted in 1992 of aiding and abetting the distribution of cocaine base.

4 comments to Bush’s 2007 Pardon List

  • DAD

    Shows how it pays to write those letters to Santa.

  • It took 5 years, 3 FBI interviews, 4 years of college and doing the right thing.

  • Joshua Rosenstock

    Steve,

    Congratulations on finally being pardoned. It sounds like you have really turned yourself around. You are a role model for other Americans who think that one mistake will cost them forever.

    Love the artwork too. Hope all is well.

  • The is very useful to the sounds like you have really turned yourself around. You are a role model for other Americans who think that one mistake will cost them forever.

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