USA Today
U.S. pardon attorney to resign amid Obama’s last-year clemency push:
U.S. Pardon Attorney Deborah Leff has given her notice and plans to pull the plug in January with two years remaining on her job. She is one of the Last of the Mohegians; not many stand-up people like this lady are still around.
There is some speculation that she is getting her bonnet (men get a hat – ladies get a bonnet) because she is not happy with the way Obama is totally disregarding the punishments some criminal were given when they went through due process and were found guilty. It appears that the president has little to no respect for the judicial system and it’s findings.

Obama feels that some of the sentences the inmates received were out of line and too harsh for the crime they committed. His answer to the courts, is to thumb his nose at them.
Some but not all of the people he is releasing are hardened criminals and will be a threat to society. You know; just like the terrorists he is releasing from Gitmo, for what rational, no one really knows.
I guess that Mr. O has a soft spot for people that sell cocaine and feels they have been unjustly sentenced. What if the sale involved a family member?
I am trying my best to figure out why laws are written and sentences are established if they can be erased with the swipe of a presidential pencil?
It is not just Obama that has used this unreasonable authority; he just used it better than his predecessors.
It may not be that the initial act of selling that deadly stuff is real the issue. The question should be; what were the end result of the sales, that should be the issue.
indepthprogram.com
Cocaine comes from the coca plant found in South America. This is not to be confused with the cocoa plant from which chocolate is made. Cocaine is illegal, very addictive and extremely dangerous. Cocaine can be eaten, injected, snorted or smoked. Cocaine kills about 10,000 people in the U.S. each year.
If a person is charges with DUI and it resulted in killing someone; are they responsible for the person death? We all know the answer. The same thing applies only on a grander scale when it comes to hard core drugs. The person that sells the drug to someone that dies as a result of taking the drugs should be responsible for their death.
How in good conscience can Obama release anyone from prison that has directly or indirectly been responsible for the death someone who bought their deadly substance?
I think that is a very logical question. It can be that Deborah Leff shares the same views I have.
