In his final days as Mississippi governor, Republican Haley Barbour
gave pardons or early release to nearly 200 people, including more than
two dozen whose crimes were listed as murder, manslaughter or homicide,
state records show.
A list released by the Mississippi Secretary of State's
office on Tuesday showed some of the convicted killers were pardoned,
while others were given medical or conditional releases. He had released
five other convicted killers in 2008. One of them had been granted a
conditional release earlier and was pardoned this time.
Relatives
of crime victims had voiced outrage Monday after it was revealed that
Barbour had pardoned four convicted murderers. Those men had worked at
the Governor's Mansion as part of a prison trusty program.
A complete list was disclosed Tuesday, the day that Barbour's successor, Republican Phil Bryant, was sworn in at the state Capitol. Barbour had served two terms and couldn't run again due to term limits.
In
addition to those convicted of manslaughter and murder, Barbour gave
early release to people convicted of drug crimes, DUI deaths, burglary
and kidnapping. Many of the people were already out of prison or
otherwise free.
Among those getting full pardons was the brother of former NFL quarterback and Southern Miss standout Bret Favre. Earnest Scott Favre
had his record cleared in the 1996 death of his best friend, Mark
Haverty. Favre had driven in front of a train in Pass Christian while
drunk, pleaded guilty in 1997, and was sentenced to a year of house
arrest followed by two years' probation.
Barbour is a conservative who
considered running for president in this year's GOP primary, before
deciding against it. Like many Republicans, Barbour has taken a tough
stance on crime at times. But he also signed legislation in 2008 that
made thousands of nonviolent inmates eligible to be considered for
parole after serving a portion of their sentence. That legislation was
aimed at easing crowded conditions in the state's prisons and saving
money.
The men and women on
death row have not benefited from the governor's clemency power under
Barbour. Nine men were executed during his time in office. He spared
none on death row.
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