Pardonned.com launched a free searchable database of US presidential pardons on April 11, 2026. The tool uncovers patterns in cybercrime and financial clemency. Victims worldwide now search by name, offense, or president.
Maria Santos, a nurse from Manila, Philippines, lost $45,000 USD to a US-based cyberfraud ring in 2023. The scammer, Ethan Carver, received a pardon in January 2026. Santos found this detail on Pardonned.com.
She shared her story with uchatoo.com. Pardonned.com aggregates data from Federal Register notices, cross-verified against court dockets.
Global Victims Track US Cybercrime Clemency
Santos fell victim to phishing attacks from Carver's California operation. He targeted Southeast Asian bank accounts. Federal prosecutors convicted him of wire fraud and identity theft.
US Department of Justice records show Carver stole $2.1 million USD total. He served 18 months before pardon. Users filter Pardonned.com results by crime type to spot similar cases.
Kenyan entrepreneur Jamal Kipchoge lost $120,000 USD to another US-pardoned scammer. He accessed the database on launch day.
Pardonned.com's Secure Database Technology
Pardonned.com stores data in PostgreSQL (a robust relational database) and powers searches with Elasticsearch. AES-256 encryption secures data at rest. Developers open-sourced the codebase on GitHub.
Searches return results in milliseconds. Filters include administration, offense category, and demographics. Third-party auditors confirmed clean vulnerability scans.
The platform blocks API scraping to protect integrity. Future updates may integrate Ethereum for decentralized verification.
Cybercrime Clemency Patterns Emerge
Pardonned.com data shows 47 cyber-related pardons since 2021. President Biden issued 23, based on Federal Register analysis. President Trump granted 12 during his term.
White-collar cyber offenses dominate. Ransomware hackers received clemency at twice the rate of violent crimes. The database flags 18 financial data breach cases.
Lila Torres gained pardon in March 2025 for insider trading via hacked accounts. Victims lost $8.7 million USD, per DOJ records. She now consults on cybersecurity.
Financial Fraud Links to Pardoned Offenders
Crypto scams tie to 12 pardons. Fraudsters promoted fake tokens on platforms like XRP Ledger. These cases erode blockchain trust in emerging markets.
African diaspora groups report heavy impacts. A Lagos fintech firm documented $5.2 million USD losses to pardoned US fraudsters, according to an internal audit shared with uchatoo.com.
Pardonned.com visualizations reveal demographic patterns. Black recipients claimed 28 percent of Biden-era cyber pardons. Hispanic groups received 15 percent.
In Nigeria, mobile money volumes hit $500 billion USD in 2025 (Central Bank of Nigeria data). Pardons fuel fears over cross-border fraud in these systems.
Voices from Affected Global Communities
Kipchoge told uchatoo.com: "US pardons hit African startups hard. This database lets us connect and advocate."
Brazilian lawyer Ana Costa identified seven pardons for hacks targeting Latin America. "Transparency builds accountability," she said.
Indian tech analyst Raj Patel praised the API endpoints. "Cybersecurity pros can now study pardon risks," he stated.
Nigeria's Cybercrime Unit investigator Ngozi Eze added: "It exposes biases we suspected."
The database recorded 5,000 searches on April 11, 2026. Developers plan donation-funded mobile apps.
Presidential Pardons: Systemic Insights
Pardonned.com catalogs 2,400 pardons since 1789. Cyber and finance crimes surged 300 percent post-2020.
Biden's DOJ touted strict cyber enforcement. Yet pardons exceeded convictions in some years, per site metrics.
Congresswoman Elena Vasquez told uchatoo.com: "This tool demands clemency review." Her office eyes hearings.
Tech Fuels Cross-Border Accountability
Platforms like Pardonned.com empower global citizens. Developers plan machine learning for pardon predictions, following ethical AI standards.
Cybersecurity firm Chainalysis analyzed crypto links. Their report flags $15 million USD in unrecovered funds from pardoned schemes.
Santos pursues a class-action suit with international plaintiffs, using Carver's database entry. Pardonned.com advances justice and inspires worldwide reforms.




