Arkansas governor to pardon son on criminal charges

Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker (L), Delaware Governor Jack Markell (C), Chair of the National Governors Association's Executive Committee, and Arkansas Governor Mike Beebe, listen to questions from reporters after a meeting at the White House Decemb



LITTLE ROCK -- Arkansas Gov. Mike Beebe plans to pardon his son for a felony drug charge from more than a decade ago.

"It will probably be in the next few weeks," said Matt DeCample, a spokesman for the governor.

"For any pardons the governor does the person has to have finished all terms of their sentence ... and then had a period of time where they've shown they have straightened their lives out."

Kyle Beebe, who is now 34, was charged in 2003 with possession of a controlled substance -- marijuana -- with intent to deliver. He was fined and sentenced to three years supervised probation, according to CNN affiliate KATV.

The Arkansas Parole Board recommended the pardon last month. It came after Kyle Beebe wrote a lengthy letter to the governor in his pardon application.

"Mr. Governor, I am asking for a second chance at life. I am asking for a second chance to be the man that I know that I can be," Kyle Beebe said.

"At the time of my arrest I was living in a fantasy world, not reality. I was young and dumb. At that time in my life I felt like I was missing something and I tried to fill that emptiness by selling drugs."

The governor said his son has grown up a lot since those days.

"I would have done it a long time ago if he'd have asked, but he took his sweet time about asking," Mike Beebe said. "He was embarrassed. He's still embarrassed, and frankly, I was embarrassed and his mother was embarrassed.

"All of the families that go through that, it's tough on the families, but hopefully the kids learn," the governor said.

Mike Beebe told KATV that he's done more than 700 pardons, mostly for nonviolent offenders.