| Biden officials raised concerns with how he issued pardons, used autopen 
 axios.com
 
 High-ranking  Biden administration officials repeatedly questioned and criticized how  the president's team decided on controversial pardons and allowed the  frequent use of an autopen to sign measures late in his term, internal  emails obtained by Axios show.
 
 Why it matters: The  messages are the latest signs of the chaos surrounding the 82-year-old  former president during the final weeks of his administration, in two  areas that are now being investigated by the Republican-led House  Oversight Committee.
 
 President Trump has cited Biden's process in  issuing pardons to try to justify many of his own controversial pardons  or commutations on behalf of donor-connected supporters and others who  were imprisoned for trying to overturn the 2020 election.
 
 How it happened: After  the political backlash to President Biden pardoning his son Hunter last  Dec. 1, the White House began pushing to find more people to grant  clemency to, according to people familiar with the internal dynamics.
 
 "There was a mad dash to find groups of people that he could then  pardon — and then they largely didn't run it by the Justice Department  to vet them," a person familiar with the process told Axios.  Biden  granted clemency to more people than any president in U.S. history —  4,245 people. More than 95% of those actions occurred in the final 3½  months of his presidency, according to Pew Research.  Many of those  actions, including pardoning other members of his family on his last day  in office, were signed using an autopen — a computerized version of the  president's signature that didn't require him to physically sign the  document.
 
 The intrigue: Biden's pardon of his family members went through a unique process.
 
 Near  the beginning of his presidency in 2021, incoming staff secretary Jess  Hertz wrote a memo to Biden, citing precedent from the Obama  administration to argue his original signature should still be used for  "pardon letters."
 
 By 2025, Biden had opted for the autopen to  pardon five members of his family — including his brother and sister,  who had been accused of leveraging the Biden family name for financial  benefit. The decision to do so was made in a meeting that included First  Lady Jill Biden's top aide Anthony Bernal, according to internal  emails.
 
 An email from Biden's chief of staff, Jeff Zients, at  10:31pm the night of Jan. 19 — less than 14 hours before Biden was to  leave office — confirmed the use of the presidential autopen for those  pardons.
 
 "I approve the use of the autopen for the execution  of all the following pardons. Thanks, JZ," the email from Zients'  account said.
 
 The order came from Zients' email address, but he didn't personally send it.
 
 Zients'  aide Rosa Po, who had access to Zients' email account, wrote and sent  the authorization of the president's autopen to senior White House  officials on Zients' behalf.
 
 "He spoke to Rosa at the time, and  he authorized her to send that email, which she sometimes did, but only  with his permission," according to a person close to Zients.
 
 Several senior Justice Department officials raised objections about the clemency process with the White House Counsel's office,  which was led by Ed Siskel. He helped steer the clemency process in the  administration's final months and did not respond to a request for  comment.
 
 On Jan. 17, just three days before leaving office, Biden  granted 2,490 commutations — the most ever by a president on a single  day. Biden said they were for people "convicted of nonviolent drug  offenses who are serving disproportionately long sentences."
 
 Biden boasted: "With this action, I have now issued more individual  pardons and commutations than any president in U.S. history."
 
 The  next day, senior Justice Department ethics attorney Bradley Weinsheimer  penned a scathing memo stating that calling the clemency recipients  nonviolent was "untrue, or at least misleading."
 
 Weinsheimer  continued: "Unfortunately and despite repeated requests and warnings,  we were not afforded a reasonable opportunity to vet and provide input  on those you were considering."
 
 
 He proceeded to  list some of those with violent crime records to whom Biden had given  clemency — including a man who had pleaded guilty to charges related to  murder after killing a woman and her 2-year-old daughter, after the  mother threatened to reveal his drug-dealing business to law  enforcement.
 
 Weinsheimer said the DOJ had marked the man  as "problematic," but Biden commuted his sentence anyway. "I have no  idea if the president was aware of these backgrounds when making  clemency decisions," Weinsheimer wrote.
 
 Weinsheimer, who worked  at DOJ for 34 years, resigned in protest in February after Trump's  appointees reassigned him from his ethics-focused post.
 
 Other DOJ officials also objected to processes the Biden White House used during his final months in office.
 
 Liz Oyer, a Justice Department pardon attorney, expressed anger about the White House's interference with death row inmates.
 
 She  wrote that Biden's White House lawyers asked DOJ not to request the  views of the murder victims' families if the department hadn't already  done so. That included 10 death row inmates who hadn't filed for  clemency before Biden considered it.
 
 After the extent of Biden's  clemency actions became clear, Oyer wrote an apologetic email to U.S.  attorney offices, according to multiple people who have seen the email.
 
 The Trump administration dismissed Oyer after she raised concerns  about the Trump team's pardon process, according to her own account.
 
 What they're saying: Asked about the process for clemency, Biden told The New York Times in July: "I made every decision."
 
 Biden  said he used the autopen only for the thousands of commutations and  pardons because "we're talking about a whole lot of people."
 
 
 That explanation is undermined by records that indicate Biden only  had to sign a few documents for every large group of people he granted  clemency.
 
 Zoom out: Internally, some senior Biden White House officials pushed back on the frequent requests to use the autopen.
 
 Biden  White House staff secretary Stef Feldman, who was in charge of the West  Wing paper flow, repeatedly asked for more details and confirmation of  the president's intentions with the autopen — including when it came to  clemency, according to several emails Axios obtained.
 
 "When did we get [Biden's] approval of this?" she asked on Jan. 7, after being asked to use the autopen for an executive order.
 
 On Jan. 16, when told to use the autopen to commute several cases  related to crack-cocaine sentences, Feldman wrote back: "I'm going to  need email from [Rosa Po] on original chain confirming [Biden] signs off  on the specific documents when they are ready."
 
 Tom
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