TOM FITTON: President Trump can direct his pardon attorney – stop any work on these pardons, now specifically on the January 6 committee pardons. There, there’s a list of names that aren’t present or there’s a group of names that aren’t delineated in terms of specificity.
How is that pardon going to be implemented or delivered? Who’s on the list? And so President Trump should decline to effect that pardon because he’s being asked to effect the pardon effectively by being given, oh you need the pardon, we’re going to pardon everyone who talked to the January 6 committee, all the cops.
Well what does that mean? Who’s the staff, how do we figure out what staff is versus people who weren’t staff? All sorts of legal questions. So my point is that pardons can be revoked and the way in this case to revoke them is to question their level of specificity, blanket pardons are really outside the legal norm, our constitutional norms and the common law of England in which the pardon power arises from. So there’s all sorts of reasons.
And what is the way to test it? General Milley; court martial him.
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STEVE BANNON (HOST): You want to start, by having what the program was, to recall General Milley to active duty, I think first, for step one. And then court martial him in front of a UCMJ tribunal or court martial panel and do that immediately.