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OpenAI’s master builder: Greg Brockman is steering a $1.4 trillion AI infrastructure surge

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In early October, OpenAI president Greg Brockman and AMD CEO Lisa Su made the rounds of TV news shows, smiling ear to ear as they announced a multiyear partnership worth tens of billions of dollars—one that will see OpenAI deploy hundreds of thousands of AMD chips across its Stargate Project data center mega-campuses. The deal represents roughly six gigawatts of computing power, or about three times the amount of electricity the Hoover Dam can generate. 

Su told Fortune that Brockman’s insistence on thinking big was essential to making the deal—which sent AMD’s stock soaring 24% the day it was announced.

“What I love the most about working with Greg is he’s just so clear in his vision that compute is the currency of intelligence, and his just maniacal focus on ensuring there’s enough compute in this world,” Su said. 

She recalled that the negotiations with Brockman were different from any she’s had with other potential partners over the years. Partnerships like this usually unfold in stages, she said. “We start at the first stage of the partnership, and then we do something a little bigger, and then something a little bit bigger.”

However, Brockman wanted to go big or go home. “I think Greg was like, ‘failure is not an option,’” she said. “The infrastructure we’re building is at a very different scale from how normal people build. We’re building gigawatts of compute in a very short amount of time. It’s really about, how do we break the laws of physics?” 

Sam Altman may be OpenAI’s globe-trotting visionary and public face of the company, but it is Brockman, his longtime ally and cofounder, who has become the company’s high-visibility operator. He is the executive leading OpenAI’s aggressive infrastructure buildout, a project to which it has already committed roughly $1.4 trillion to deploying the equivalent of 30 gigawatts of compute capacity. That also makes Brockman the point-person for a high-stakes financial gamble, given that the company is reportedly currently making only about $13 billion a year in revenue. 

All this dealmaking is in service of what Brockman calls “completing the mission”—reaching artificial general intelligence, or AGI, that “benefits all of humanity.” In an interview with Fortune, Brockman described building AGI as an end-to-end engineering challenge, one that spans everything from how the models are designed to the chips, servers, and data centers that power the training and running of models. 

“The fundamental bet is that AGI is possible, and if we are right about that, then it will really change everything,” he said. “In my mind, the real question is, do you believe in continued AI progress?”  Brockman is certainly a believer: “There’s no bend in the scaling laws,” he said of the idea that if you build bigger AI models, feed them more data, and train them on larger clusters of AI-specific chips, their performance improves in predictable, smooth curves. “The thing that’s hard is execution.” 

A remarkable re-emergence

His central role in executing on OpenAI’s infrastructure mission—which he explained includes building and managing the chips, data centers, software, and the actual operations to “deliver intelligence at unprecedented scale” marks a remarkable re-emergence for an executive whose future at the company once seemed uncertain. He had been removed from OpenAI’s nonprofit board at the time of Altman’s firing and later took a months-long sabbatical beginning in August 2024. Media outlets reported that he and Altman had agreed to the sabbatical amid ongoing concerns that his demanding leadership style had created tension within teams. It wasn’t clear he would ever come back to OpenAI, or if he did, what role he would have. 

But these days, Brockman has become ubiquitous. There he is, with President Trump in Tokyo. There he is, dining at the White House. There he is, pouring millions of his own money into Leading the Future, a $100 million political action committee dedicated to lobbying against AI regulation. Behind the scenes, Brockman reportedly helped shape OpenAI’s corporate restructuring into a Public Benefit Corporation, announced last week, a move that enables the company to raise even more capital. And now, OpenAI is, according to news reports, laying the groundwork for an initial public offering that could value the company at up to $1 trillion, in what would be the largest IPO ever and a first for a former nonprofit.

This comeback of sorts puts Brockman at the center of OpenAI’s most consequential shift yet—as it transitions from merely building AI models to building the systems to run and serve them—what is known as inference in the AI field. Brockman is leading the most ambitious (and expensive) infrastructure buildout in tech history, serving as the behind-the-scenes architect translating Altman’s vision into hardware, investment, and political capital.

“Greg is some of the secret sauce…behind actually bringing these [deals] together and making partners want to get to announcements,” said Peter Hoeschele, an OpenAI executive who, as the head of the Stargate team, reports to Brockman.

Still, the story of Brockman’s resurgence isn’t just about one executive’s rebound—it’s about who controls the next industrial revolution. Brockman has become one of the biggest power brokers of the AI era. As OpenAI’s “builder-in-chief,” he sits at the crossroads of AI, energy, and capital, orchestrating deals that will shape how — and where — the world’s computing power is developed and deployed.

Completing the mission

OpenAI’s charter defines AGI as an autonomous system that can outperform humans at most economically valuable work. But at the company’s recent Dev Day, Brockman described AGI as a “continuous process… an important milestone, but not the end.”

Continuous or not, the current route to reaching AGI requires what would be the largest infrastructure build in history. “It really makes programs like the Apollo program almost small in comparison, which is a really wild statement,” Brockman recently told CNBC’s Squawk on the Street, adding that he believes there will be economic returns. “This is really going to be the underpinning of our future economy and is already showing the promise and benefit to people’s lives,” he said. 

But the effort has also become a lightning rod. Building the infrastructure to pursue AGI could ultimately cost trillions of dollars—enough to reshape power markets and test the limits of the electrical grid. The surge in demand is already driving up energy prices and fueling political backlash as sprawling data centers turn into election-season flashpoints in the communities where they are being constructed. Critics also question whether demand will continue to grow at a fast enough pace to justify the investment. 

The financing methods being used to fund the infrastructure build out adds an additional dimension of risk. For example, as part of its agreement with OpenAI, Nvidia has reportedly discussed guaranteeing loans the startup would use to build its own data centers—a move that could leave the chipmaker on the hook for billions in debt if OpenAI can’t repay. Analysts have also raised concerns about the circular nature of the deal: OpenAI pays Nvidia cash for chips, while Nvidia, in turn, takes a non-controlling equity stake in OpenAI and backstops its loans.

OpenAI’s partnership with AMD, while not similarly circular, is symbiotic—OpenAI has an option to acquire up to a 10% stake in AMD. 

Brockman has acknowledged the difficulty of building sufficient computing infrastructure to handle what he calls the “avalanche of demand” for AI, and that creative financing mechanisms would be necessary. Still, analysts are wary of how intertwined the major players have become. “There’s a healthy part and an unhealthy part to the AI ecosystem,” Gil Luria, managing director at D.A. Davidson, told NBC in early October.  “The unhealthy part has become marked by related-party transactions like the ones involving these companies,” he said, which can artificially prop up valuations.

If investors decide those ties are getting too close, Luria warned, “there will be some deflating activity.” In other words, investors might bail on companies such as Nvidia, Oracle, and CoreWeave, whose fates are deemed too closely tied up with OpenAI’s. 

Brockman as builder

Having grown up on what he has called a “hobby farm” in North Dakota, Brockman may seem like an unlikely figure to end up at the heart of one of the biggest technological transformations in modern history. But he has long enjoyed building things—in fact, his own LinkedIn bio reads simply: “I love to build.” 

And the drive to solve complex problems started early. Robert Nishihara, now CEO of software platform Anyscale, first met Brockman when they were teenagers at the Canada/USA Math Camp, an intense five-week program for students who “just love math and are solving problems all day.” Even then, Nishihara said, “Greg was clearly one of the smartest people there,” Years later, when Nishihara was visiting Harvard as a prospective student, Brockman, who was already attending, served as a mentor, showing him around campus and taking him to a notoriously difficult freshman math class.

Ultimately, Brockman spent only a short time at Harvard before transferring to MIT; he then dropped out of university entirely in 2010. That was when he joined Patrick and John Collison as online payment startup Stripe’s fourth employee, serving as its first CTO and building the company’s early engineering systems, often coding through the night. Stripe was one of tech incubator Y Combinator’s breakout companies, and in 2015, Patrick Collison introduced Brockman to Altman, who was president of Y Combinator at the time. That year, he teamed up with Altman, Ilya Sutskever, and others to launch OpenAI, where he was, according to a blog post, excited to have “something impactful to build once again.” 

In the company’s early years, prior to Microsoft’s first $1 billion investment into OpenAI, Brockman essentially served as the AI lab’s CEO, while Altman continued to run Y Combinator. Brockman’s intense work ethic quickly became legend. One former OpenAI engineer recalled a pivotal moment in 2020 when the company needed to prove it could become a viable business. “Greg basically hacked together the first API one weekend, I think over Christmas,” the person said, referring to the launch of OpenAI’s first commercial product — an API, or application programming interface, which let developers plug OpenAI’s language models into their own apps and products.

The former engineer also recalled that when OpenAI was far smaller—around 200 people—Brockman had set his Slack to a mode in which he would get a notification for every single message from anybody in the company, on every channel. “You could be in some random technical thread and Greg would chime in with some incredibly informed and knowledgeable idea,” he explained. That said, it was “effectively impossible” for anyone to match his pace on anything: “So when I was assigning people to work with Greg, I chose very carefully—because you weren’t going to be sleeping.” 

After those sprints, Brockman would disappear for a while. “He’d go super hard, then go off like a bear and hibernate for a few weeks, and then come back,” the colleague said.

While Brockman took on a less public-facing role at the company after Altman became CEO in 2019, to many inside the company, Brockman is both the engine and the metronome of OpenAI. “He’s the heartbeat of OpenAI—the one who sets the pace,” said another former researcher at the company. “He has incredibly high standards and expects results.”

That intensity can also make him impatient. “If something’s not moving fast enough, Greg will take it into his own hands and work around people if necessary,” said another former OpenAI employee. “He’s very much an ends-over-means kind of person.”

His way of working with staffers sometimes caused friction. Keach Hagey, in her 2025 book The Optimist: Sam Altman, OpenAI, and the Race to Invent the Future, suggested that Greg Brockman’s management style at OpenAI drew internal complaints, and that one of two self-deleting documents, emailed by Ilya Sutskever to the OpenAI board before Sam Altman’s firing, laid out concerns about Brockman’s “alleged bullying.” The memo — dubbed the “Brockman memo” — has since become central to Elon Musk’s lawsuit against OpenAI. In an October 1 deposition before a U.S. district court, Sutskever acknowledged its existence, and the judge ordered him to produce it as part of discovery.

In response to Sutskever’s allegations, an OpenAI spokesperson told Fortune that “These claims aren’t true. Ilya signed the petition asking for Greg and Sam to be reinstated, and the Board’s independent review further concluded that he and Sam are the right leaders for OpenAI.”

Today, Brockman says he remains focused on building—whether that means writing software or leading OpenAI’s infrastructure project—which he calls “really the theme of what I do,” even as the balance between technical and strategic work has shifted over time.

Infrastructure from the get-go

From the start, Brockman viewed infrastructure as central to OpenAI’s mission. Back in 2017, he said, the company began writing down hardware projections that suddenly dwarfed its early assumptions. “We started to think, okay, maybe we’ll need $10 billion worth of hardware,” Brockman recalled. “At that point, you need data centers.” 

Today, those physical infrastructure requirements—the chips and the data centers behind them—operate on a staggering scale, with energy needs measured in gigawatts. Each gigawatt represents 1,000 megawatts of power—roughly what it takes to supply 750,000 American homes. “There are very few people in the world who’ve ever thought about building a gigawatt-scale data center and what that requires,” said Hoeschele.

Stargate marks OpenAI’s shift from relying largely on leased cloud compute—mostly from Microsoft— to committing to its own large-scale infrastructure, with data-center builds announced across multiple U.S. states including Texas, New Mexico and, just last week, Michigan. It is also expanding internationally in countries like Norway and the UAE. 

Hoeschele recalled early debates about whether the company should really commit to such an audacious investment. “Three years ago, I kept asking, ‘Okay, how much do you think we are really going to need?’” he said. “Greg has always been the voice, both behind the scenes and when he needs to be public, about the scale of compute that’s required to keep testing and deploying the technology. We are going to continue to make these investments.”

And while critics worry about the environmental and economic toll of AI infrastructure, Brockman insists the long-term benefits will outweigh the costs. “At the end of the day, what this technology is for is to benefit people,” he said. “I think it is worth really looking at the fundamentals, to make sure that we’re looking at the right data – I’ve seen a lot of numbers about data centers and their impacts on communities that are definitely not accurate.” 

However, he added that he knows OpenAI needs to prove its value to local communities. “That is really our focus, to really show that it is actually good for your community, for your life, for there to be a data center nearby. I think that that is something that we will show to people over time.” 

Brockman’s power influence

According to an OpenAI spokesperson, during his 2024 sabbatical Brockman was still in touch with the company and following its developments–which included closing a $6.6 billion funding round that valued the company at around $157 billion. Once Brockman returned in November 2024, he seemed newly energized. In an internal memo, he wrote that he had been working with Altman to create a new role focused on “significant technical challenges.” Within weeks, that mandate had a name: a new group called Scaling, which Brockman told Fortune “merged the deep learning engineering of both our research and applied teams.” Scaling’s job, he explained, “is to make sure we have (and can maximally harness) the computing power we need to train and run our models.”

This team, he continued, “works on everything from how we train our frontier models to how we run ChatGPT for millions of people. It’s where some of the hardest technical challenges live, because as we make new breakthroughs and push the horizons of our current ones, we constantly need to invent new ways to debug, manage, and scale the computing systems that support them.”

Just two months later–the day after President Trump’s inauguration–OpenAI unveiled the Stargate Project, a joint venture announced at the White House alongside President Trump, Oracle and SoftBank—an audacious public-private plan to invest up to $500 billion over four years to build massive data centers and other infrastructure in the United States to power AI. By July, Brockman, known as a top recruiter, had poached four high-profile engineers away from rivals, including Spas Lazarov, former director of data center engineering at Apple; David Lau, former vice president of software engineering at Tesla; Uday Ruddarraju, the former head of infrastructure engineering at xAI and X; Mike Dalton, an infrastructure engineer from xAI; and Angela Fan, an AI researcher from Meta

Stargate showed the sheer scale of OpenAI’s ambition, but it also made clear that the company gets there through the connection between Altman’s vision and Brockman’s execution. “That’s the beauty of their partnership,” Hoeschele added. “When OpenAI is at its best, Sam is laying out our vision and Greg is
making it a reality, leaning on his technical expertise and relationships. He is working closely with people like Lisa Su and Jensen Huang to make these deals happen.”

That combination of technical credibility and dealmaking reach has also made Brockman an increasingly influential political player. In recent months, he has poured millions of his own money into Leading the Future, a $100 million pro-AI super PAC backed by Brockman, venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz, and other tech leaders, which supports candidates favoring deregulation and faster AI deployment.

Brockman was also among a high-powered group of tech executives who attended a White House dinner in September, where he praised Trump for his “optimism” in embracing AI and the massive infrastructure buildout required to support it. The following month, he returned to the White House for a fundraising dinner aimed at raising money for a planned $200 million ballroom addition–though an OpenAI spokesperson emphasized that “he attended the October dinner in his personal capacity, but hasn’t donated to the ballroom effort.” Many view these moves, however, as part of a broader effort to ease regulatory friction around the Stargate build-out OpenAI is leading.

Still, not everyone sees him as fully independent. “My strong sense, based on what I know from close friends who were at OpenAI for years, is that Greg is not super-independent from Sam—even as he makes his own commitments and puts his money in places that Sam might not,” said a Washington-based technology consultant who previously worked with Palantir and the federal government. “When it comes to OpenAI and the business, Greg is his own person, but he does not go sideways with Sam on company strategy—especially partnerships.”

The path forward is to keep building

Even as OpenAI’s ambitions draw scrutiny and criticism—from regulators, rivals, and local communities—Brockman faith in building seems unshaken. In a podcast with Stripe cofounder Patrick Collison, Brockman asked viewers to imagine having one entire Stargate data center think about one problem. “Imagine it just thinking about how to solve a Millennium Problem [one of seven well-known, unsolved complex mathematical problems] or how to cure a specific kind of cancer,” he said. “That level of computational power coupled with the ability to experiment and learn from your ideas, that is going to be something the world has never seen.” 

As for the eye-watering spending commitments recently announced, he recently said they would pay for themselves. “If we had 10 [times] more compute [computing power], I don’t know if we’d have 10 [times] more revenue, but I don’t think we would be that far.”

If Altman remains OpenAI’s evangelist, Brockman is doing some crusading of his own, beating the drum about the need for more computing power across the entire AI industry. “If the market does wake up to the demand that we’re really very loudly trying to say is coming, not just from us but from the whole industry, then great,” he said during OpenAI’s recent Dev Day. “I would love not to have to go and figure out how to build energy ourselves, but we’re here to do the mission.” 

He remains undaunted by that mission, even as skeptics warn that OpenAI’s audacious buildout risks becoming a monument to overreach rather than innovation. Seven years ago, he told Fortune, the part of OpenAI’s mission that required building gigantic data centers would have been just a sketch on paper. Today, those mega facilities are actually rising out of former ranchland in Abilene, Texas, and emerging from the abandoned hulk of an auto assembly plant in Lordstown, Ohio, with others already announced in New Mexico, Wisconsin and Michigan. Whether those vast complexes are ultimately remembered as glory or folly, Brockman’s imprint will be there — in the acres of cables and racks, the engineering ambition, and the unshaken belief that it was worth building at all.



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The day the crosswalk music died: Iconic Buddy Holly Glasses to be lifted from hometown crosswalk on Trump directive

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Fans of the Buddy Holly crosswalk in his hometown of Lubbock, Texas, with a painted depiction of the rock and roll legend’s iconic glasses, will soon have to say goodbye to it. That’ll be a day that will possibly make them cry.

Lubbock City Council members said this week they have no choice but to remove it, to comply with a directive from the Trump administration and Republicans to rid the public roadways of any political messages or artwork.

Laredo, in South Texas, removed a mural in October that protested the border wall along the southern border with Mexico. In August, Florida officials removed a rainbow-colored crosswalk outside the Pulse nightclub where 49 people were gunned down.

Lubbock’s crosswalk was first installed in 2020 and is near the Buddy Holly Center, a downtown museum with exhibits honoring Lubbock’s most famous native son.

“It’s such a tasteful cross section and people like it. But what do you do?” said City Council Member Christy Martinez-Garcia, who was among those questioning why it had to go.

Lubbock received a letter from the Texas Department of Transportation with “some harsh wording” that threatened the possible loss of state or federal funding for road projects if such artwork was not removed, David Bragg, Lubbock’s interim division director of public works, told council members on Tuesday.

“This was very broad letter. I don’t think it was intended to go after, say, the Buddy Holly glasses. Unfortunately it did,” Bragg said.

Mayor Mark McBrayer said the city had no choice but to comply.

“Probably everybody here got some communication from people wanting that not to be the case,” McBrayer said. “But I don’t really feel like we have the wherewithal to do anything about that without trying to litigate it and I don’t think there’s any appetite here anyway.” Bragg said the removal will happen during normal maintenance next year.

On Oct. 8, Abbott directed the department to ensure that all Texas cities and counties are in compliance with federal and state guidelines on roadway safety and that symbols, flags and other markings conveying social or political messages are prohibited, as well as any signage and signals that don’t directly support traffic control or safety.

“Texans expect their taxpayer dollars to be used wisely, not advance political agendas on Texas roadways,” Abbott said in a statement.

Abbott’s office did not immediately respond to an email seeking comment on Friday.

Abbott’s directive came after Trump’s Transportation Secretary Sean P. Duffy sent letters to all U.S. governors in July saying that intersections and crosswalks must be kept free from distractions.

“Roads are for safety, not political messages or artwork,” Duffy’s statement said.

Holly was born and raised in Lubbock, located in northwest Texas. He decided to play rock and roll music after seeing Elvis Presley perform in 1955. His best known songs include “That’ll Be the Day,” ’’Rave On” and “ Peggy Sue.”

Holly was only 22 when he died in a Feb. 3, 1959, plane crash near Clear Lake, Iowa, that also killed Ritchie Valens and J.P. “Big Bopper” Richardson. The three rockers’ deaths were immortalized in Don McLean’s 1971 song “American Pie,” and became known as “the day the music died.”



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Despite AI bubble fears, Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway buys shares of hyperscaler Alphabet

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Wall Street has been consumed for months with fears that the artificial intelligence boom is actually a bubble about to pop, but that didn’t stop Berkshire Hathaway from buying shares of a top AI hyperscaler.

Warren Buffett’s conglomerate revealed in a regulatory filing late Friday that it purchased 17.8 million shares of Google parent Alphabet during the third quarter. The stock jumped 4% in after-hours trading yesterday.

It was the biggest stock addition last quarter and was worth about $4.3 billion at the end of September. Berkshire also bought shares of Chubb, Domino’s Pizza, Sirius XM and Lennar.

Meanwhile, Berkshire maintained its position in Amazon, another AI hyperscaler, in the third quarter.

The addition of Alphabet comes amid a massive rally. Even after the most recent AI-fueled stock market selloff, Alphabet shares are still up 46% this year.

To be sure, Alphabet has been on Berkshire’s radar in the past. In 2019, Buffett’s right-hand man at the time, the late Charlie Munger, admitted that he felt “like a horse’s ass for not identifying Google better. I think Warren feels the same way.”

Back then, Google’s dominance in search piqued Berkshire’s interest. But today, the company is among the tech giants leading the charge into AI.

Alphabet, Amazon, Meta Platforms and Microsoft alone are spending hundreds of billions of dollars a year with no signs of a slowdown.

Morgan Stanley has estimated AI hyperscalers plan to spend about $3 trillion on data centers and other infrastructure through 2028.

The relentless capital expenditures, much of which is coming via debt, have made Wall Street nervous about whether AI companies will be able to translate all those outlays into sustainable revenue and profits.

With Buffett due to step down as Berkshire’s CEO by year’s end, it’s not immediately clear whether he, successor Greg Abel, or another top executive made the call to buy Alphabet stock.

And investors may not hear directly from the “Oracle of Omaha” on the matter. In a letter published Monday, Buffett said he’ll be “going quiet,” and will no longer write Berkshire’s annual report, nor talk “endlessly” at the annual meeting.

Leading up to Buffett’s departure, Berkshire has been taking a cautious stance on the stock market as well as company acquisitions, sending its cash pile to record highs.

Buffett’s closely followed stock portfolio continued to shrink overall, as last quarter marked three straight years of net selling. The most recent round of selling included more shares of Apple, which Berkshire has been steadily offloading for more than a year.



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Trump, who mocked Biden’s use of autopen, caught posting identical signatures on pardons

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The Justice Department posted pardons online bearing identical copies of President Donald Trump’s signature before quietly correcting them this week after what the agency called a “technical error.”

The replacements came after online commenters seized on striking similarities in the president’s signature across a series of pardons dated Nov. 7, including those granted to former New York Mets player Darryl Strawberry, former Tennessee House speaker Glen Casada and former New York police sergeant Michael McMahon. In fact, the signatures on several pardons initially uploaded to the Justice Department’s website were identical, two forensic document experts confirmed to The Associated Press.

Within hours of the online speculation, the administration replaced copies of the pardons with new ones that did not feature identical signatures. It insisted Trump, who mercilessly mocked his predecessor’s use of an autopen, had originally signed all the Nov. 7 pardons himself and blamed “technical” and staffing issues for the error, which has no bearing on the validity of the clemency actions.

The questions about Trump’s signature come amid a new flurry of clemency and weeks after the president claimed to not even know Changpeng Zhao, a crypto billionaire he pardoned last month. He said in an interview with 60 Minutes that the case had been “a Biden witch hunt.”

“A basic axiom of handwriting identification science is that no two signatures are going to bear the exact same design features in every aspect,” said Tom Vastrick, a Florida-based handwriting expert who is president of the American Society of Questioned Document Examiners.

“It’s very straightforward,” said Vastrick, who compared the apparently identical images, now only visible through the online Internet Archive, with the replacements at AP’s request.

Chad Gilmartin, a Justice Department spokesperson, said the “website was updated after a technical error where one of the signatures President Trump personally signed was mistakenly uploaded multiple times due to staffing issues caused by the Democrat shutdown.”

“There is no story here other than the fact that President Trump signed seven pardons by hand and DOJ posted those same seven pardons with seven unique signatures to our website,” Gilmartin said in a statement to AP, referring to the latest wave of clemency Trump has granted in recent weeks.

White House spokesperson Abigail Jackson wrote in an email that Trump “signed each one of these pardons by hand as he does with all pardons.”

“The media should spend their time investigating Joe Biden’s countless auto penned pardons, not covering a non-story,” she wrote.

Trump has been an outspoken critic of Biden’s use of the autopen to conduct executive business, going as far as to display a picture of one such device in place of a portrait of his predecessor in a new “Presidential Walk of Fame” he created along the West Wing colonnade. His Republican allies in Congress last month released a blistering critique of Biden’s alleged “diminished faculties” and mental state during his term that ranked the Democrat’s use of the autopen among “the greatest scandals in U.S. history.”

The Republicans said their findings cast doubt on all of Biden’s actions in office and sent a letter to Attorney General Pam Bondi urging a full investigation.

“Senior White House officials did not know who operated the autopen and its use was not sufficiently controlled or documented to prevent abuse,” the House Oversight Committee found. “The Committee deems void all executive actions signed by the autopen without proper, corresponding, contemporaneous, written approval traceable to the president’s own consent.”

On Friday, Republicans who control the committee released a statement that characterized Trump’s potential use of an electronic signature as legitimate, which it distinguished from Biden’s.

But Rep. Dave Min, a California Democrat on the House Oversight Committee, seized on the apparent similarities in the initial version of the pardons and called for an investigation of the matter, deploying the Republican arguments against Biden in a statement to AP that “we need to better understand who is actually in charge of the White House, because Trump seems to be slipping.”

Regardless, legal experts say the use of an autopen has no bearing on the validity of the pardons.

“The key to pardon validity is whether the president intended to grant the pardon,” said Frank Bowman, a legal historian and professor emeritus at the University of Missouri School of Law who is writing a book on pardons. “Any re-signing is an obvious, and rather silly, effort to avoid comparison to Biden.”

Much of Trump’s mercy has gone to political allies, campaign donors and fraudsters who claimed they were victims of a “weaponized” Justice Department. Trump has largely cast aside a process that historically has been overseen by nonpolitical personnel at the Justice Department.

Casada, a disgraced former Republican speaker of the Tennessee House, was sentenced in September to three years in prison. He was convicted of working with a former legislative aide to win taxpayer-funded mail business from state lawmakers who previously drove Casada from office amid a sexting scandal.

Strawberry was convicted in the 1990s of tax evasion and drug charges. Trump cited the 1983 National League Rookie of the Year’s post-career embrace of his Christian faith and longtime sobriety when pardoning him.

McMahon, a former New York City police sergeant, was sentenced this spring to 18 months in prison for his role in what a federal judge called “a campaign of transnational repression.” He was convicted of acting as a foreign agent for China after he tried to scare an ex-official into going back to his homeland.

McMahon’s defense attorney, Lawrence Lustberg, said he was not aware the pardon documents had been replaced until he was contacted Friday by an AP reporter.

“It is and has always been our understanding that President Trump granted Mr. McMahon his pardon,” Lustberg wrote in an email.

___

Mustian reported from Natchitoches, Louisiana. AP reporter Eric Tucker contributed reporting from Washington.



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