ASHLAND, Ky. (AP) – Pounding away on a prison typewriter, Chad Scott seemed worlds apart from President Donald Trump. But when the disgraced narcotics agent wrote the White House seeking clemency for his corruption conviction, Scott sought to draw Trump’s attention to what they have in common.
Pardon applications are being carefully crafted with one man in mind: Donald Trump
ASHLAND, Ky. (AP) – Pounding away on a prison typewriter, Chad Scott seemed worlds apart from President Donald Trump.
But when the disgraced narcotics agent wrote the White House seeking clemency for his corruption conviction, Scott sought to draw Trump’s attention to what they have in common.
Both men had survived a bullet wound to the ear, Scott wrote, and had been convicted of falsifying records. They were also each a victim of “political persecution,” the type of catchphrase the former agent hoped would resonate with a man who has long complained of witch hunts.
By helping him, Scott argued, Trump would be showing he had “the back of law enforcement.”