Baltimore Sun

Clemency recipient released from prison after celebrity support

- By Jonathan Mattise

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Cyntoia Brown, championed by celebritie­s as a symbol of unfair sentencing, was released Wednesday from the Tennessee Prison for Women, where she had been serving a life sentence for killing a man who had picked her up for sex when she was 16.

Kim Kardashian West, Rihanna, Snoop Dogg and LeBron James had lobbied for Brown’s release, calling her a sex traffickin­g victim. She was granted clemency in January by outgoing Gov. Bill Haslam.

“Cyntoia Brown welcome home!!” James tweeted Wednesday.

Now 31, Brown will remain on parole for 10 years, on condition that she does not violate state or federal laws, holds a job and participat­es in regular counseling sessions, Haslam’s commutatio­n says.

Brown released a statement Monday saying she wants to help other women and girls suffering sexual abuse and exploitati­on.

She also has a memoir coming out in mid-October and has gotten married, according to her publisher, Atria Books. A news release about the book lists her name as Cyntoia Brown-Long and mentions an “unlikely romance.” The publisher and one of her attorneys declined to discuss further details of her marriage.

“I thank Governor and First Lady Haslam for their vote of confidence in me and with the Lord’s help I will make them as well as the rest of my supporters proud,” she wrote.

Her attorneys said she’s requesting privacy and transition time before she makes herself available to the public.

Brown was convicted in 2006 of murdering 43-year-old Nashville real estate agent Johnny Allen. Police said she shot Allen in the back of the head at close range with a gun she brought to rob him after he picked her up at a drive-in restaurant in Nashville to have sex with her.

The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled against life-without-parole sentences for juveniles. But the state of Tennessee argued successful­ly in lower courts that Brown’s sentence was not in violation of federal law because she would be eligible for parole after serving at least 51 years.

Haslam said that was too harsh a condition for a crime Brown admitted to committing as a teen, especially given the steps she has taken to rebuild her life. She earned her GED and completed university studies as an inmate.

Brown ran away from her adoptive family in Nashville in 2004 and began living in a hotel with a man known as “Cut Throat,” who forced her into prostituti­on and verbally, physically and sexually assaulted her, according to court documents.

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