The Judicial branch
She did not commit any crimes.
ForgeryFraud
There are no records to indicate that he was ever guilty of such crimes.
Nottingham is famous for Robin Hood and lace makingi hate to say it but all its famous for is robin hood and having the most knife crimes and gun crimes in englan and most teenage pregnancies in Europe
Anything by Damien Rice! Cannonball, The Blower's Daughter, 9 Crimes :)
The President of the US can grant pardons for Federal Crimes.
The executive branch appoints federal judges subject to Senate confirmation. Therefore, the President can try to choose people that share his judicial philosophy. The president can also grant pardons for federal crimes.
no one its the president of the untied statesAdded; The first answer applies ONLY to federal offenses. The Governor of the state can issue them to persons convicted of state crimes.
The president has the power to give a pardon with the help of other officials. The president has the power to give a pardon with the help of other officials.
The power to pardon individuals for federal crimes (whether charged, prosecuted, or convicted, or not) belongs to the President of the United States.
The President has the power to pardon people from federal crimes. He also nominates judges for federal courts, including the Supreme Court. These nominations have to be ratified by the US Senate in order to take effect. (Federal courts belong to the judicial department which is independent of the President.)
In the United States, it is the executive branch of government that can pardon a convicted criminal. By issuing a pardon, the executive is overruling the decision of the judicial branch (the court system). Federal crimes can be pardoned by the President. Crimes tried and sentenced in state courts can be pardoned by the governor of that state. The only time a federal or state executive cannot grant a pardon is in cases of impeachment.
I believe that is the Judicial Branch.
Executive Branch (:
President
I am pretty sure it would be the Supreme Court.
The Judicial Branch checks the power of Executive Branch through the use of judicial review. This allows the Article III federal courts (US District Courts, US Court of Appeals Circuit Courts, and the Supreme Court of the United States) to declare an Executive Order that is relevant to a case before the court unconstitutional and unenforceable.