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in addition to those convicted of manslaughter and murder Mississippi Governor Haley Barbour, pictured, also gave early release to people convicted of DUI deaths, burglary, kidnapping and drug crimes. The outraged families of the victims have slammed the decision as unfair but the governor, whose mansion some of the inmates worked at, refused to comment on their feelings. Clockwise from top left: Joseph Ozment; Jennifer Wilder; Charles Hooker; Anthony Sansing; Anthony McCray; Rheon Mcshepard; Larry Roby; Aaron Brown; Larry Harper; and David Gatlin.
THE FULL LIST: ALL 226 PARDONS OR EARLY RELEASES BARBOUR GRANTED
Paul Joseph Warnock
Murder
Michael Graham
Murder
Bobby Hayes Clark
Manslaughter
Clarence Jones
Murder
Willie James Kimble
Murder
Jamie Scott
Robbery with Deadly Weapon
Gladys Scott
Robbery with Deadly Weapon
Michael J. Jones
Sale of a Controlled Substance
Nathan Kern
Robbery
David Gatlin
Murder, Aggravated Assault, Burglary
Charles Hooker
Murder
Anthony McCray
Murder
Joseph Ozment
Murder, Conspiracy and Armed Robbery
Michael Davie Graham
Murder
Victor C. Collins
Murder
Larry Darnel Roby
Murder, Racketeering
Booker T. Barnes
Murder
Anthony Sansing
Murder
Jimmy Lee Avera
Murder
Steven Charles Adams
Grand Larceny and Possession of Cocaine
Donald Dwight Adcock
Arson
Thomas Ailes
Unlawful Sale of Controlled Substance
Mark Hubbard Allen
Vehicular Homicide
Patricia Amacker
False Pretense, Felony & Misdemeanor
Michael Clinton Armstrong
Attempted Enticement of a Child for Sexual Purposes
William Antoin Bardwell
Sale of Marijuana, Less Than One Ounce
Robert King Barq
Possession of a Controlled Substance
Thomas Holt Beasley
Sale of Marijuana, Sale of Cocaine
Melanie Suzanne Beelond
Possession of Cocaine
Larry Bell
Escape from Custody, Charge of Felonuy
Vincent Cardell Bell
Murder, Accessory After the Fact
Frank Delomme Borders Jr.
Burglary
Harry Russ Bostick
DUI 3rd offense
Lee Brackeen Jr.
Shooting a Firearm into a Dwelling, Poss. Of Chemicals with Attempt to Manufacture/Distribute
Karlton Lee Bradley
Possession of Cocaine/Sale with Intent
Dwight E. Breland
Possession of Controlled Substance
Bobby Neal Brown
Burglary
Douglas Duane Burcham
Auto Burglary & Grand Larceny
Aaron Clay Butler
Conspiracy to Sell Marijuana
Henry Preston Byrd
Robbery
John Springer Buchanan
Sale of Controlled Substance
Jeanette Walker Cain
Uttering Forgery
Buster Caldwell
Rape and Armed Robbery
Bobby Ray Camp
Burglary and Larceny of a Building
Daniel Caleb Campbell
Conspiracy to Distribute Cocaine
Gerald Calhoun
Possession of a Controlled Substance
Kenneth Carver
Burglary
Perry Lee Cauthen
Conspiracy to Commit Larceny & Grand Larceny
Jess Cessna
Burglary of an Occupied Dwelling; Aggravated Assault
Andrew Camphor
Robbery
Michael Lawrence Collum
House Burglary
Ryan Jeremiah Cooper
Prescription Forgery
James Richard Chenault
Possession of Marijuana with Intent to Sell
Nathaniel Cunningham Jr.
Felony False Pretense
Allison Bernadette Dazet
Burglary
Stanley Duncan
Grand Larceny
Peggy Sue Eiland
Forgery
Earnest Scott Favre
DUI Causing Death
Russell Glen Ferguson
Aggravated Assault
Mark Steven Ford
Burglary
Jamie Donald Franks
Aggravated DUI
Aubrey Orlando Fratesi
Obtaining Controlled Substance By Deception;
Prescription Fraud
Randy Scott Fortenberry
Manslaughter
Rock Allen Gerald
Sale of Marijuana
Gregg Patrick Gibbes
Aggravated DUI Death
Latisha R. Gilbert
Embezzlement
Mabrie C. Gilmer
Manslaughter
Norman Dwayne Givens
Burglary of a House
Matthew Nelson Godfrey
Conspiracy to Commit Grand Larceny
Sharrion Patrice Grant
Aggravated Assault
James Leslie Grantham
Possession of Precursor Chemicals
Thomas Anthony Graziousi
Auto Burglary; Grand Larceny
Robert Brian Gregg
Manslaughter (Culpable Negligence); DUI Injury
Louis Edwin Griffin Jr.
Homicide
Ashley Seymour Gunter
Burglary of an Automobile
Jeffery Lee Haire
Possession of a Controlled Substance
Barbara Hamilton
Burglary of a Residence and Robbery
James Larry Hankins
Armed Robbery
Wayne Thurman Harris
Sale of Marijuana
Kevin Jerome Hatches
Possession of Cocaine
Daniel Wayne Hendon
Robbery
Kimario Kuhron Hentz
Armed Robbery
William Eric Henderson
Kidnapping
Sim Collins Holifield
Grand Larceny
Hunter Olin Hope
Sale of 20 MM of Testosterone
Jesse Octavia Houston
Embezzlement
Joshua L. Howard
Statutory Rape
Benjamin Earl Hussey
Sale of a Controlled Substance
John D. Jackson
Strong Arm Robbery
Jerome Francis Jackson
Burglary and Larceny of an Automobile
Pamela Yvette Jackson
Strong Armed Robbery
Phillip Jackson
DUI Homicide
Michael S. James
Possession of a Controlled Substance
April Michelle Johnson
Embezzlement
Shundrell Johnson
Aggravated Assault
Thomas Cole Kendall
Gratification of Lust
Tammy Kay Swanson
Uttering Forgery
Michael Derek Knauss
Possession of Stolen Property
Christopher Clark Kolb
Sale of Hydrocodone
Anon LaDell Jordan
Burglary of a Dwelling
Roy Michael Latham
Manslaughter
Bobby Joe Lee
Sale of Marijuana
Terry James Lee
Burglary & Larceny of a Dwelling
Mary Brower
Forgery
Ernest Carl Lowery Jr.
House Burglary; Uttering a Forgery
Herbert Lowery
Possession of Marijuana with Intent to Deliver
Amy Douglas Love
Uttering Forgery; Burglary of an Automobile
Kevin Bandouglas
McCullough
Unlawful Sale of Marijuana
John Earl McCool
Felony Crime of Possession of Precursor Chemicals with Intent to Manufacture Methamphetamine
Jimmy McNeese
Possession of Precursor Chemicals
Martin Miller Jack
Felony Bad Check
Michael Arlen Matthew
Burglary
Clinton Jason Moffitt
Conspiracy to Commit Voter Fraud
John Becket Monaghan
Sale of Controlled Substance
Charles Wesley Newby
Possession of a Firearm by Convicted Felon; Grand Larceny; Aggravated Assault
David Willard Newcomb
Possession of Crystal Meth with Intent Within 1500 Feet of a Church; Manufacture of Crystal Meth Within 1500 Feet of a Church
Justin Wade Nunnery
Possession of Methamphetamine
Perry Tyson Owen
Possession of a Controlled Substance with Intent to Sell, Transfer or Distribute
Danny Lamar Peacock
Burglary of an Automobile
Shirley Peters
Sale of a Controlled Substance
Zachary Kane Polk
Sale of a Controlled Substance
Corey Powell
Burglary of a Business
Richard Earl Price
Aggravated Assault
Constance Renee Pruitt
Aggravated Assault
Lisa Ralston Brogdon
Conspiracy and Burglary of Dwelling
Kenneth Bernard Ratliff
Sale of Cocaine
Shelly Ann Ray (Self)
Manufacturing Methamphetamine & Possession of Methamphetamine
Norman Lee Redo
Possession of Controlled Substance
Samuel Wade Reid
Burglary of a Dwelling
Katherine Robertson
Aggravated Assault
Roslyn Murray Robertson
Conspiracy to Commit a False Pretense; False Pretense
Everett Franklin Rodgers
Murder and Aggravated Assault
John Montrell Rose
Possession of Marijuana with Intent to Distribute
Barry James Sanderson Jr.
Kidnapping
Demetries Andre Sanford
Armed Robbery
Dawn Renee Schaefer
Embezzlement; Shoplifting; Conspiracy to Commit Crime of Felony Shoplifting
Jason Todd Shivers
Sale of LSD
Perry Lee Sims
Grand Larceny
Justin O'Keefe Smith
DUI Death
Linda Gale Smith
Forgery
Leslie Carlton Smith
Robbery with a Deadly Weapon
Patricia Diane Southerland
Embezzlement
Billy Ray Sims
Possession of Marijuana
Scott McLean Smith
Sale of Amphetamine
Shirley Ann Smith
Embezzlement
Robert Edward Stanfield
Sale of a Controlled Substance
Robert D. Stakley
Uttering Forgery
Tyrone Steele
Sale of Marijuana
Clemmie Rogers Stewart Jr.
Embezzlement
Thomas Stewart
Receiving Stolen Property
Neil Fowler Strickland
Burglary and Larceny of an Automobile; Burglary and Larceny
Wesley Dwayne Spears
Burglary of a Storehouse
Robin Creel Speath
Burglary of an Inhabited Dwelling
Emma Stuckey
Manslaughter
Paul James Sullivan
Assault on a Law Enforcement Officer
Kevin Bradley Tabereaux
Sale of Cocaine; DUI Homicide
Mitchell Travis Tanksley
Larceny of Cattle
Kirby Glenn Tate
Possession of Marijuana with Intent; Possession of
Oxycodone; Delivery of Marijuana
Jimmy Lee Thomas
Burglary of a Business
Samuel Tisdale Jr.
Manslaughter
Steven A. Thompson
Bribery and or Attempted Bribery
Alice Triplett
Embezzlement
Clarence Crawford Tyer Jr.
Possession of Stolen Property
Leton Cellious Upchurch
Attempted Enticement of a Child for Prostitution
Marion Lee Upchurch Jr.
Burglary of a Dwelling House; Felony Possession of a Firearm
Joel Warren Vann
DUI Death
Chelley Lee Wade
Manslaughter (2 counts)
Burton Hill Walden
DUI Death
Bobby Gene Wallace
Aggravated Assault
Donna Meshea Walters
DUI Third Offense
Anthony Maxwell West
Embezzlement
Narquita Watson
Conspiracy to Commit Armed Robbery; Accessory After Fact to Capital Murder
Aaron D. Williams
Aggravated Assault
Corey Dean Williams
Sale of Controlled Substance; Possession of
Hydromorphone
Carol Denise Williams
Forged False or Fraudulent Prescription
Shirley Ann Winston
Forgery
Ralph Edward Worthy
Sale of Marijuana
Charles Edward Yates Jr.
Unlawful Possession of Precursor Chemicals; Possession of Methamphetamine
Charles Jerome Young
Receiving Stolen Property
Betty Jean Linston
Sale of Marijuana
Hardy McCormick Jr.
Sale of Marijuana and Receiving Stolen Property
James Lewis Black
Armed Robbery
Edith Watts
Delivery of a Controlled Substance
Curtis Thomas
Statutory Rape
Danny Joe Stapleton
Possession of Controlled Substance with Intent
Johnny Lee Nettles
Aggravated Assault
Annie Pearl Rash
Uttering Forgery
John Davis
Robbery
Travis Orlando Hill
Possession of Marijuana with Intent to Distribute
Tawanda Jackson
Manslaughter, Armed Robbery and Kidnapping
Rheon McShepard
Homicide or Murder
Melissa Ann Cooper
Sale of Controlled Substance
Jesse Buie
Felony DUI
Nichelle Elaine Brandon
Aggravated Assault
Daniel Mac Dobbins
Possession of Marijuana
Karen Irby
Manslaughter (2 Counts)
Judy Lynn Eichelberger
Hawkins
Conspiracy to Commit Forgery
Ellis Ray Mooneyham
Burglary of a Dwelling
Leon Turner
Murder
Derrick Lynn Guiton
Homicide/Murder; Simple Assault
Walter James McKee
Armed Robbery
Eldridge Dean Bonds
Forcible Sexual Battery
Thomas Levi Howell
Sale of Embezzlement; Burglary
Harold L. Miller III
Manslaughter
Reggie Rogers
Felony DUI
John Mitchell
Sale of Controlled Substance
Emily Rebecca Hentz
Conspiracy to Manufacture Methamphetamine; Attempt to Manufacture Methamphetamine
Aaron Brown
Murder; Concealed Weapon; Possession of a
Controlled Substance
Carol Pinkston
Burglary
Guy Blan Newcomb
Sale of Cocaine
Marion Thompson
Armed Robbery
Larry Harper
Homicide; Aggravated Assault; Felony Possession of a Weapon
Kelly Bellapani
Possession of a Controlled Substance
Jennifer Wilder
Sexual Battery
Azikiwe Kambule
Accessory After the Fact to Murder; Armed
Carjacking
Douglas Hunter Heindman
Cyberstalking
Larry Booker
Uttering Forgery
Lindsay Kathryn Welch
Manslaughter (Culpable Negligence)
Steven Todd Thompson
Domestic Violence
Brenda Louise Travis
Felony Shoplifting
Patricia L. Simpson
Manslaughter
Robert Henderson
Receiving Stolen Property; Possession of Cocaine
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-...z1jC4g0Cju
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My head is going to explode. Look at all those murderers. Murderers! How does one get pardoned for murder. That's a rhetorical question.
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yessss!!! will they be able to lock the bastards back up? ( i doubt it. )
edit: shit. now only 21 pardons are blocked.
CNN
A Mississippi judge has issued a temporary injunction that forbids the release of pardoned prisoners, a move that comes after outgoing Gov. Haley Barbour pardoned 199 people.
Of the 199 people that Barbour pardoned on his way out of office, 14 were convicted murderers. Several convicted murderers have already been released.
Attorney General Jim Hood is asking Hinds County Circuit Judge Tomie Green to block the release of inmates pardoned by outgoing Gov. Haley Barbour, saying the state Constitution has been violated in at least some cases.
Under that Constitution, a legal notice of plans to pardon must be published 30 days prior to the pardon.
Hood said his office has discovered that no notice was published in some cases, in other cases not published before 30 days and in some cases, published on time.
“Unfortunately our research has revealed that Gov. Barbour violated the Constitution,” Hood said. “We’re seeking to stop the release of any prisoners.”
Barbour’s pardoning of nearly 200 people has prompted an uproar among victims’ families and others.
Five former inmates, four of them serving life sentences for murder, have already been released.
Hood said he’s asking for the court to serve them notices until a hearing can be held.
boss hogg
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Can someone help me understand this? What does this guy get out of pardoning convicts? Does he get cash from the convicts under the table? Blow jobs? What could it possibly do for him? There has got to be some reason for doing it.....not that any reason would be excusable. WHY?!?!?
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(01-12-2012, 10:52 AM)krystalshores Wrote: Can someone help me understand this?
There is no reasonable explanation.
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Jackson, Mississippi (CNN) -- Mississippi's attorney general said Thursday that the state may have to issue a nationwide manhunt after four pardoned murderers left jail and "hit the road running."
"We'll catch 'em. It's just a matter of time," Attorney General Jim Hood told CNN.
The four were among nearly 200 convicted criminals to whom Gov. Haley Barbour granted clemency or a pardon in a final act before leaving office this week.
The governor's actions have set off a legal firestorm in Mississippi.
A judge issued a temporary injunction Wednesday forbidding the release of any more prisoners. And the process of releasing 21 other inmates has been halted, said Hood, who believes the former governor put people at risk and sought the court order.
The pardons include the four convicted murderers and a convicted armed robber who were released Sunday. The five now must contact prison officials on a daily basis as their fate is adjudicated, but their whereabouts are unknown, Hood said.
A court hearing on the matter will be held January 23.
Hood said the state cannot issue an arrest warrant for the five who were released because they have not committed a crime.
"We have not found any law that will support that," Hood told CNN. "They have a legal document saying they are free to go.
"There are some tough legal issues we are trying to address," he said. "This is such a unique problem that no law has ever had to address yet. We're having to make new law here."
well which is it?? can they haul them back in or not?? yes, they are setting precedent. i hope it overthrows that old good ol' boy bullshit.
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here's a video of one of the murderers.
http://cnn.com/video/?/video/crime/2012/...pardon.cnn
CNN
McCray said he had his own room at the mansion, spending three years there after serving in prison without any disciplinary problems. During his time in Jackson, he said, he did odd jobs like housekeeping, washing cars and cooking and conversed regularly with Barbour.
McCray: "I did housekeeping. Shined door knobs. Washed cars and stuff like that. I cooked with the chef. That's it."
He added that it was understood that trusties had a much higher chance of getting pardons than those in the general prison population, though he insisted that the two never talked about clemency.
"He treated us like we were his children," McCray said.
spoken like a good house nigger.
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i'll be waiting for the outcome of this today:
(CNN) -- Four convicted murderers who were released from prison earlier this month after receiving pardons are among those who could have their fate determined in a Mississippi court Monday.
In his final days in office, Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour pardoned the four convicted murderers -- David Gatlin, Joseph Ozment, Charles Hooker and Anthony McCray.
At the Monday hearing, the judge can void the pardons and send the inmates back to prison, take a ruling under advisement or free them.
JACKSON, Miss. -- The Mississippi attorney general's office says it has not been able to find one of the five former inmates who worked as trusties at the Governor's Mansion and were pardoned by Haley Barbour during his final days as governor.
Hinds County Circuit Judge Tomie Green ordered the five trusties to appear in court Monday, but authorities haven't located Joseph Ozment. He was convicted in 1994 of killing a man during a robbery.
Green scheduled a 3 p.m. CST hearing to consider arguments from Attorney General Jim Hood, who's challenging some of Barbour's pardons on the grounds that they failed to meet the state constitutional requirement of publishing a legal notice for 30 days in a local newspaper.
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the judge continued the case until Feb. 3 because of being slammed with last-minute motions.
the murderers will remain free until then. 3 were in court, 1 is still missing.
you know what...YOU DON'T EXPUNGE THE RECORDS OF MURDERERS!!
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mississippi is offering a reward for ozment.
he has no doubt absconded.
this guy put 2 bullets into a convenience store clerk's head. in cold blood.
but the ex-gov. hogg calls him a "fine man" who he let play with his grandchildren. how sweet.
now the files on all the killers the asshole pardoned are nowhere to be found. this is a damn OUTRAGE! their records may end up sealed, but they are MISSING! how fucking convenient. how fucking corrupt.
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good.
Attorney general: Pardoned murderer found in Wyoming
[Updated at 2:17 p.m. ET] Joseph Ozment, a convicted murderer who was pardoned this month in a controversial move by outgoing Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour, has been found in Wyoming, Mississippi Attorney General Jim Hood announced Monday.
Ozment was served at a hotel in Laramie, Wyoming, where he had been staying under another name, his office said.
"As our officers attempted service, Mr. Ozment fled in his girlfriend's vehicle but not before the vehicle made contact with one of our investigators," Hood said in a press release. "That is when our officers asked for the assistance of the Laramie Police Department. Mr. Ozment returned to the hotel on foot and ended up signing receipt of service in the presence of our two officers and two with the Laramie Police Department."
Ozment is one of four convicted murderers Barbour pardoned early this month. He did not appear at a court hearing in a case challenging the pardons. Hood said previously officials wanted to serve Ozment with a document telling him to appear in court.
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not surprising, and he's probably headed for mexico anyway.
(CNN) -- A Wyoming attorney representing a convicted murderer recently pardoned by Mississippi's outgoing governor says his client will not attend a Mississippi Supreme Court hearing this week on the constitutionality of his and some 200 other pardons.
"He's not going to go," Cheyenne, Wyoming, attorney Robert Moxley said of his client, Joseph Ozment.
"He's not a fugitive and there's no valid order that says he needs to appear," Moxley told CNN.
On Thursday, the Mississippi Supreme Court will hear arguments brought by Mississippi Attorney General Jim Hood challenging the legality of scores of pardons issued by outgoing Gov. Haley Barbour.
thankyou gov. barbour
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another bunch of senile good-old-boy assclowns:
(CNN) -- Mississippi's Supreme Court on Thursday upheld the controversial pardons of more than 200 convicts that former Gov. Haley Barbour granted on his way out of office, rejecting a challenge by the state's attorney general.
In a 77-page, 6-3 ruling Thursday afternoon, the court found the pardons "may not be set aside or voided by the judicial branch." Attorney General Jim Hood had argued that no proper notice had been posted in newspapers, but the court found the final decision rested "solely with the governor."
"We are mindful that the victims and their families are entitled to be interested in the subject matter of this case, and they are undoubtedly -- and understandably -- concerned with its outcome," Justice Jess Dickinson wrote for the majority. But in the cases before them, "It fell to the governor alone to decide whether the Constitution's publication requirement was met."
Randy Walker, who survived a shooting by one of the men who was freed, told CNN sister network HLN that he was "totally in shock."
Gov. Barbour pardons upheld by court
"I thought it was pretty clear-cut that the constitution pretty clearly says one thing, and the justices went another way, as did Barbour," Walker said.
In a statement issued Thursday afternoon, Barbour said the court "reaffirmed more than a century of settled law in our state," but acknowledged that his decision "has been difficult" for many of the inmates' victims.
But in a dissenting opinion, Justice Michael Randolph called the decision "a stunning victory for some lawless convicted felons, and an immeasurable loss for the law-abiding citizens of our state."
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good job governor...the chickens are coming back to bite you in the ass.
(CNN) -- One of the men controversially pardoned earlier this year by Mississippi's outgoing governor could land back behind bars after being charged with driving drunk and causing an accident that killed an 18-year-old woman.
A Pontotoc County, Mississippi, grand jury has charged Harry Bostick with drunken driving leading to a death, felony drunken driving and fleeing the scene of an accident where a death occurred, according to the indictment filed on Thursday and obtained Monday by CNN. The accident happened in October.
If convicted, Bostick could be sentenced to at least 30 years in prison.
His attorney did not respond immediately to a call on Monday for comment.
After the charges were handed up, Bostick turned himself in and a judge set bail at $50,000, Paul Howell from the Pontotoc County prosecuting attorney's office said. The 56-year-old posted bond on Friday and was released, according to official online records.
This isn't Bostick's first-run in with the law in Mississippi. He was convicted of felony drunken driving in March 2009, soon after having been convicted in July 2008 and November 2008 for drunken driving.
The former Internal Revenue Service investigator was one of nearly 200 convicted criminals, including four murderers, whom Gov. Haley Barbour pardoned shortly before leaving office earlier this year. The pardons elicited an uproar, with Attorney General Jim Hood leading a charge to overturn them. But after legal challenges, they were upheld.
Bostick was still going through a court-mandated drug rehab program when he applied for his pardon last summer. On September 30, the Mississippi Parole Board sent its review of Bostick's application to Barbour, recommending a full pardon in a 3-2 vote.
A week later, on October 7, Bostick was driving under the influence again, according to the Mississippi Highway Patrol. Charity Smith attempted to pull out onto a highway just outside Tupelo when Bostick's truck slammed into the side of her car, the patrol says.
Smith was killed, and her older sister suffered serious injuries. Bostick was jailed for violating his probation from his previous DUI cases.
In the grand jury indictment, Bostick is accused of "willfully, unlawfully and feloniously" driving while intoxicated; refusing to immediately stop or give his name, address or registration; and having "negligently" caused Smith's death.
When he received the pardon in January, the convicted DUI felon still sat in an Oxford, Mississippi, jail cell, awaiting formal charges for the arrest tied to that case.
Barbour had said that he wasn't aware of Bostick's October 2011 DUI arrest when he chose to pardon him.
But e-mails obtained by CNN show that the governor's office did, in fact, know about it.
more of story:
http://www.cnn.com/2012/05/14/justice/mi...?hpt=hp_t3
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