Published by TrenBuzz.com | July 4, 2026 | BREAKING
Key Points at a Glance – Trump Pardons 11 People on America’s 250th Birthday
- Trump pardoned 11 people on July 3, 2026, with most having been convicted of violating the Clean Air Act by modifying or disabling emissions controls on diesel trucks.
- Trump posted on Truth Social that the six were “persecuted by the Biden Administration” for “fixing their car,” calling it “weaponization and stupidity” by federal prosecutors.
- The 11 people pardoned for Clean Air Act tampering include Ryan and Wade Lalone, Matt Geouge, Tim Clancy, Mackenzie Spurlock, Joshua Davis, Barry Pierce, Aaron Rudolf, Adam Kidan, Jack Harvard, and Jonathan Achtemeier.
- The Trump pardons came one day after Trump signed a June 29 executive order calling on the EPA to stop enforcing civil violations of emissions tampering too.
- One of the pardoned men, Jonathan Achtemeier, had pleaded guilty to tampering with monitoring devices on hundreds of vehicles nationwide so trucks would not detect that their owners removed pollution control hardware.
- The pardon of Adam Kidan also stood out as he was sentenced to prison in 2006 alongside Washington lobbyist Jack Abramoff for wire fraud.
Trump Emissions Pardons: What the Clean Air Act Actually Prohibits
The Clean Air Act, enforced by the EPA, bans the sale, installation, or use of devices that bypass, defeat, or disable emission control systems in vehicles. These systems are designed to reduce harmful pollutants like nitrogen oxides and particulates that cause respiratory disease.
The aftermarket “defeat devices” that the pardoned individuals sold, installed, or tampered with allowed diesel trucks to spew pollution at many times the legal limit while evading federal monitors.
Why Trump Called It “Fixing Their Car”
Trump framed the pardons as standing up for ordinary mechanics being treated like criminals. “It is my Great Honor to have just signed Pardons for six people who were persecuted by the Biden Administration, and were in, or being sent to, prison, for ‘fixing their car,'” Trump posted on Truth Social.
Environmental groups immediately pushed back, with attorneys noting that the devices were not personal modifications but commercial operations selling illegal pollution bypass kits to thousands of customers.
The Pattern Behind the Trump Pardons
The pardons came after Trump last fall granted clemency to Troy Lake, a Wyoming mechanic who served seven months in prison for violating federal emissions laws for disabling air pollution-control equipment on diesel engines. Earlier this year, the Justice Department ordered prosecutors to drop all pending prosecutions and investigations related to so-called aftermarket defeat devices.
The pattern is clear: Trump is systematically eliminating enforcement of vehicle emissions laws at every level, from dropping prosecutions to signing executive orders to issuing pardons.
What It Means for Air Quality Going Forward
Trump’s administration in February repealed a scientific finding that greenhouse gas emissions endanger human health, and eliminated federal tailpipe emissions standards for cars and trucks.
Combined with the pardons, the EPA enforcement rollback, and the dropped prosecutions, the Trump administration has effectively signaled to the industry that selling emissions defeat devices carries no legal risk.
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Disclaimer: This article is for general informational and news reporting purposes only. All pardon details, names, and quotes are sourced from CNN, CBS News, Reuters, AOL, Alaska’s News Source, and KRDO as of July 3, 2026. TrenBuzz.com does not represent any government, environmental, or legal body. Readers are encouraged to follow the official White House pardons announcements and credible news sources for the latest updates.