Trump likely to pardon pollution violators as he privately weighs clemency for Diddy, other high-profile figures: sources

President Trump is poised to pardon a slate of people convicted of emissions and clean air-related violations, and is still discussing other potential acts of clemency, including for Sean “Diddy” Combs or several other well-known figures, according to sources familiar with his plans.

The president was scheduled to have a meeting Friday afternoon on the topic of pardons and planned to decide based on recommendations from advisers, two of the sources said. 

Lobbying for pardons for people in legal trouble has reached a fever pitch in recent weeks.

But neither Combs nor other high-profile cases were expected to be on the recommendations list from the pardons team, one of the sources said. 

Combs is serving a sentence of just over four years in the federal prison in Fort Dix, New Jersey, after he was convicted last year of two counts of transportation to engage in prostitution. He was acquitted on charges of sex trafficking and racketeering conspiracy, which were the more serious charges against him.

Mr. Trump hadn’t committed on Friday morning to a firm number of people who will receive clemency. He has been privately discussing whether to grant requests, including from Combs, one of the sources said. 

“President Trump is the ultimate decider on any clemency related actions,” a White House official told CBS News in a statement. 

The president told the New York Times in January that Combs had written a letter to him to ask for a pardon but said he was not considering the request.

Another person who has been seeking a pardon is Grammy Award-winning rapper Prakazrel “Pras” Michel of The Fugees hip-hop group. Michel is currently in federal prison serving a 14-year sentence, after he was convicted of criminal charges that he conspired with Malaysian financier Jho Low to orchestrate a series of foreign lobbying campaigns aimed at influencing the U.S. government under two presidents.

Low is also accused by the U.S. of embezzling $4.5 billion from Malaysia’s 1MDB sovereign wealth fund. Several sources familiar with the matter told CBS News Low is also seeking a pardon. 

Mr. Trump had not yet decided whether Michel or Low should receive clemency, one of the sources said.

Friday’s list from the pardons team was expected to be exclusively related to Clean Air Act violations. 

Last year, Mr. Trump pardoned Wyoming mechanic Troy Lake, who served seven months in prison for violating federal emissions laws for disabling air pollution-control equipment on diesel engines.

Earlier this year, CBS News was the first to report that the Justice Department had ordered federal prosecutors to drop all remaining prosecutions and investigations targeting others like Lake in connection with the sale of illicit “defeat devices” that are used to tamper with pollution control systems in diesel-powered vehicles.

The edict, issued by then-Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche, marked the first time that the Justice Department formally took steps to scale back environmental criminal enforcement since Mr. Trump took office in 2025. Blanche said at the time he was dismissing the cases “to ensure consistent and fair prosecution under the law, as well as to ensure the best use of Department resources.”

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