The president is given the authority under the Constitution to "grant reprieves and pardons for offenses against the United States, except in cases of impeachment." ("The President's Enumerated Powers”). This stipulates that the president may award a full pardon to a person indicted or convicted of a federal crime, thus liberating the person from any castigation and refurbishing his or hers Constitutional rights. The president may also issue conditional pardons that exonerate the convicted person in portion, diminish a penalty a quantified number of years, or modify a penalty with conditions. A pardon is generally a cloistered deal between the president and an individual. One renowned individual, who was pardoned-was President Richard Nixon by Gerald R. Ford. Needless to say, Richard Nixon had to resign from office, so he could elude impeachment and verdict, for the reason that not even Ford would have been able to protect him if he wouldn’t have resigned in time. One might ask why President Nixon would ever step down from office. One of the much-publicized hullabaloos during Nixon administration would be the-Watergate scandal. In addition Nixon’s …show more content…
Watergate takes its name from “the break-in at the Democratic National Committee (DNC) headquarters in the Watergate apartment and office complex in Washington, D.C., in June 1972, but the scandal spread, as other illegal activities were made public”.(Korasick, John. Watergate Scandal) Countless people believe Nixon got charged for mischievousness of an affair. This misapprehension is just a deception by the news media on its audiences .The real matter on hand was five men who broke into the headquarters of the democratic national committee at the Watergate complex in Washington DC. (Lanny J. Scandal : How 'Gotcha' Politics Is Destroying America).This side of the story is the reality many people don’t know