WorldNetDaily, it seems, just can’t quit its favorite felonious ex-congressman, Steve Stockman. Rachel Alexander, the WND columnist who has been obsessively spinning the tale that Stockman’s conviction on multiple fraud charges was a Deep State conspiracy was at it again in a Jan. 20 column that begins: “If you raise money for a nonprofit, but don’t finish all of the projects you were raising it for, you could go to prison for 10 years. This is no exaggeration.”
Given that Stockman was convicted on charges that he spent money earmarked to establish a center for conservative interns in Washington instead on things like spying on political rival and going on dolphin boat rides, that is very much an exaggeration.
Alexander spun anyway, claiming again that Stockman is a “very outspoken conservative congressman who appears to have been targeted by the left through the legal system” and insisting that said diverted money were actually a salary he was being paid from nonprofits that he ran and “how he spent his salary was his own business.” She went on to huff that “Stockman was convicted of merely process crimes, which are meant to pile on, and crimes that normally are handled civilly by correcting a filing,” concluding:
Stockman has an impeccable background with no criminal convictions until now. The Department of Justice is out of control, and it’s unfortunate President Donald Trump has not been able to clean it up yet. Left-wing prosecutors targeted and overly prosecuted Stockman to send a message to outspoken conservative elected officials: Back down or you will pay. Convicted murderers have served less than 10 years in prison. Let’s hope wiser heads at the U.S. Supreme Court agree to take this case. Alternatively, Trump needs to pardon Stockman.
Making a case for Trump to pardon Stockman is the ultimate goal of all this, which WND has lobbied for previously.