The state-level charges, formally unveiled late on Monday, also cannot be pardoned by Georgia’s governor under the state’s constitution. Instead, the southern US state has an independent board that issues pardons, but such requests can only be made five years after a sentence is served.

  • NoStressyJessie@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    1 year ago

    So basically you can’t get a pardon for a trumped up life sentence until 5 years after you die?

    Something tells me they were thinking about a VERY SPECIFIC demographic when they wrote those laws and they never imagined THIS PARTICULAR VERY SPECIFIC demographic would be held to the same kind of standard.

    • MisterRoboto@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Up until 2019, South Carolina elected it’s national guard general. They passed that law in 1886, you know, just in case someone from a demographic that’s very specific, was appointed by the governor who could potentially be of the same demographic.

      Being racist sounds like it’s utterly exhausting.

    • Nougat@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      So basically you can’t get a pardon for a trumped up life sentence until 5 years after you die?

      That would have to be correct, although it is the Pardon and Parole Board, so there may be some other definition for “completed all sentence(s)” which would consider having gotten parole as a completion of the prison sentence.

      Still, I remain confused about the purpose of GA laws around pardon. You’ve already served your sentence, receiving a pardon means you admit guilt (does it? in Georgia?) - so what even is the point of a pardon in GA?