Man tries to pardon himself by forging a letter from the West Virginia governor - but it's riddled with grammatical errors, the name of the state is spelled wrong and the phone number is handwritten James Justice II, 49, is accused of forging a letter from West Virginia's governor The fake letter pardoned Justice II for all probation and his past crimes The letter was rife with spelling and grammatical errors and had two fake seals The governor's office said that Justice II had not, in fact, been pardoned Convicted burglar Justice II now faces charges of forgery of public record and forgery of official seals
By Maxine Shen For Dailymail.com
Published: 03:32 GMT, 4 March 2019 | Updated: 03:39 GMT, 4 March 2019
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A West Virginia man is accused of faking a pardon letter from the governor's office, but it was riddled with errors including the misspelling of the state's name.
Authorities issued a warrant for James Justice II, 49, of Nitro, West Virginia, after it was discovered that he allegedly created and sent a fake letter from the West Virginia Governor's Office that pardoned him for all probation and his past crimes, WSAZ reported.
Aside from the fact that the governor's office said that the actual Governor