An Obama administration critic pardoned by Donald Trump said Friday that the president told him he was being cleared because the campaign finance charges filed against him were politically motivated.
‘The president said, “Dinesh, you’ve been a great voice for freedom. I got to tell you man-to-man: you’ve been screwed”,’ Dinesh D’Souza told ‘Fox & Friends’ on Friday.
‘He goes, “I have been looking at the case. I knew from the beginning that it was fishy”.’
D’Souza was convicted of using ‘straw donors’ to send illegally large amounts of campaign cash to a U.S. Senate candidate.
But he said his conviction and sentence – including 8 months of overnight confinement in a halfway house – was unprecedented and an act of retribution by Barack Obama and his Justice Department because he had made and released the documentary ‘2016: Obama’s America.’
Dinesh D’Souza said on ‘Fox & Friends’ Friday morning that when Donald Trump called to tell him he would get a full pardon for his campaign finance conviction, the president said the Obama administration had ‘screwed’ him

Trump pardoned D’Souza on Thursday, erasing a conviction that send him to 8 months of nighttime confinement in a halfway house

‘No American in our country’s history has even been indicted, let alone prosecuted, let alone locked up, for doing what I did. There is just not a single case,’ he said Friday, claiming that Obama’s attorney general Eric Holder wanted to ‘make an example out of me.’
‘This was a vindictive political hit that was kind of aimed at putting me out of business,’ D’Souza claimed.
Trump also told reporters on Thursday that he was thinking about issuing orders of clemency for Martha Stewart, former Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich and ‘lots’ of other people.
D’Souza said he was surprised when he got a call at his office from the president.

Using friends as middle-men, D’Souza steered $20,000 to a U.S. Senate candidate whom he had known at Dartmouth College – an amount far in excess of the maximum the law allows

The filmmaker believes his 2016 biopic ‘Obama’s America’ upset the White House and led to his ‘selective’ prosecution
Conservatives rallied around D’Souza, saying he had been singled out in a politically motivated prosecution by President Barack Obama’s Justice Department. D’Souza was also sentenced to five years’ probation in 2014 after pleading guilty to violating federal election law by making illegal contributions to a U.S. Senate campaign in the names of others.
He said Friday that he accepted a plea deal because the Obama Justice Department threatened to file a second criminal charge for the same offense – one that could have carried a five-year prison term.
The D’Souza case is the latest example of Trump using his presidential pardon power to right a perceived wrong. The move makes it ever clearer that, in the Trump administration, the odds of a pardon are better for those with a celebrity backer, those who have become a cause celebre among conservatives and those with a reality TV connection.
Trump has been particularly drawn to cases where he believes there was a political motivation to the prosecutions – a situation that may remind him of his own predicament at the center of special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation into Russian election meddling, which he insists is nothing but a ‘witch hunt.’
Liberal advocacy groups criticized D’Souza’s pardon on Thursday, telling the Associated Press that it signaled contempt for the rule of law.
‘Donald Trump has sent a message to his friends and cronies that if you break laws to protect him or attack our democracy, he’s got your back,’ said David Donnelly, president and CEO of Every Voice.
Trump said he was seriously considering commuting the sentence of Blagojevich, the Democratic former governor serving a 14-year prison sentence on numerous counts of corruption, including trying to sell the U.S. Senate seat that was vacated by Obama.
The president also said he was considering a pardon for Stewart, the celebrity lifestyle guru who served a stint in federal prison after being convicted of charges related to a stock sale.

D’Souza said no one else in history had been indicted and prosecuted for breaking the law that he did

The now-pardoned conservative says Obame’s attorney general, Eric Holder, went out of his way to make an example of him for political purposes
Both had connections to Trump’s ‘Celebrity Apprentice’ reality television show: Blagojevich was a contestant in 2010 and Stewart hosted the 2005 spinoff series, ‘The Apprentice: Martha Stewart.’
Trump also pardoned Jack Johnson, boxing’s first black heavyweight champion, whose case had been brought to his attention by actor Sylvester Stallone.
White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said it was unfair to suggest the only people winning pardons under Trump are those connected to him or with a celebrity backer. ‘The president is making decisions based on the merits of the individual cases and what he thinks is the right thing to do,’ she said.
Trump has issued five pardons as president. In addition to D’Souza and Johnson, Trump has pardoned former Arizona Sheriff Joe Arpaio, a top Trump supporter during the 2016 campaign. Arpaio was spared the prospect of serving jail time after a conviction stemming from his use of racially targeted immigration patrols.
He also has pardoned Navy sailor Kristian Saucier, who had taken photos of classified portions of a submarine. Trump often mentioned Saucier’s case on the campaign trail as he criticized his former Democratic rival, Hillary Clinton, for her use of a private email server. Saucier had claimed his prosecution was driven by sensitivity about classified information driven by Clinton’s case.

Trump said Thursday that he is considering a pardon for Martha Stewart, the lifestyle maven who spent 5 months in prison for felonies related to an insider-trading scheme

Trump also said he is considering commuting the sentence of ex- Gov. Rod Blagojevich, who is serving a 14-year prison sentence for corruption
Also pardoned was former White House aide I. Lewis ‘Scooter’ Libby. A former top aide to Vice President Dick Cheney, Libby was convicted of lying to investigators and obstruction of justice following the 2003 leak of the covert identity of a CIA officer. The Libby case was taken up by conservatives who argued he was the victim of an overly zealous and politically motivated prosecution by a special counsel.
That pardon, especially, was seen as a sign that Trump might be willing to pardon former aides caught up in the Mueller inquiry.
‘The president’s ad hoc use of the pardon power is concerning enough. But the possibility that he may also be sending a message to witnesses in a criminal investigation into his campaign is extremely dangerous,’ tweeted Sen. Mark Warner, a Virginia Democrat.