Marin Independent Journal

Biden pardons former Secret Service agent, 2 others

- By Aamer Madhani and Don Babwin

>> President Joe Biden has granted the first three pardons of his term, providing clemency to a Kennedy-era Secret Service agent convicted of federal bribery charges that he tried to sell a copy of an agency file and to two people who were convicted on drug-related charges but went on to become pillars in their communitie­s.

The Democratic president also commuted the sentences of 75 others for nonviolent, drugrelate­d conviction­s. The White House announced the clemencies Tuesday as it launched a series of job training and reentry programs for those in prison or recently released.

Many of those who received commutatio­ns have been serving their sentences on home confinemen­t during the COVID-19 pandemic. Several were serving lengthy sentences and would have received lesser terms had they been convicted today for the same offenses as a result of the 2018 bipartisan sentencing reform ushered into law by the Trump administra­tion.

“America is a nation of laws and second chances, redemption, and rehabilita­tion,” Biden said in a statement announcing the clemencies. “Elected officials on both sides of the aisle, faith leaders, civil rights advocates, and law enforcemen­t leaders agree that our criminal justice system can and should reflect these core values that enable safer and stronger communitie­s.”

Those granted pardons are:

• Abraham Bolden Sr., 86, the first Black Secret Service agent to serve on a presidenti­al detail. In 1964, Bolden, who served on President John F. Kennedy's detail, faced federal bribery charges that he attempted to sell a copy of a Secret Service file. His first trial ended in a hung jury.

Following his conviction in a second trial, key witnesses admitted lying at the prosecutor's request, according to the White House. Bolden, of Chicago, was denied a retrial and served three years, nine months in federal prison. Bolden has maintained his innocence and wrote a book in which he argued he was targeted for speaking out against racist and unprofessi­onal behavior in the Secret Service.

Bolden in an interview said he believed Biden “sympathize­d” with him and “saw a need to honor due process in my case.” The pardon came nearly 61 years after he joined the Kennedy detail. He said he asked off of the detail after enduring racial slurs from fellow agents and small nooses were left around his workplace.

“I met President Kennedy on April 28, 1961 and on April 25 I got word of the presidenti­al pardon,” said Bolden, who first petitioned the White House for a pardon during the Nixon administra­tion. “That's pretty close.”

• Betty Jo Bogans, 51, was convicted in 1998 of possession with intent to distribute crack cocaine in Texas after attempting to transport drugs for her boyfriend and his accomplice. Bogans, a single mother with no prior record, received a seven-year sentence. In the years since her release from prison, Bogans has held consistent employment, even while undergoing cancer treatment, and has raised a son.

• Dexter Jackson , 52, of Athens, Georgia, was convicted in 2002 for using his pool hall to facilitate the traffickin­g of marijuana. Jackson pleaded guilty and acknowledg­ed he allowed his business to be used by marijuana dealers.

After Jackson was released from prison, he converted his business into a cellphone repair service that employs local high school students through a program that provides young adults with work experience. Jackson has built and renovated homes in his community, which has a shortage of affordable housing.

Civil rights and criminal justice reform groups have pushed the White House to commute sentences and work harder to reduce disparitie­s in the criminal justice system. Biden's grants of clemency also come as the administra­tion has faced congressio­nal scrutiny over misconduct and the treatment of inmates in the beleaguere­d federal Bureau of Prisons, which is responsibl­e for inmates serving sentences of home confinemen­t.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Biden in his first commutatio­ns of his presidency focused on petitions from individual­s who had less than four years to serve.

Biden, as head of the Senate Judiciary Committee, helped shepherd through the 1994 crime bill that many criminal justice experts say contribute­d to harsh sentences and mass incarcerat­ion of Black people.

During his 2020 White House run, Biden vowed to reduce the number of people incarcerat­ed in the U.S. and called for nonviolent drug offenders to be diverted to drug courts and treatment.

He also has pushed for better training for law enforcemen­t and called for criminal justice system changes to address disparitie­s that have led to minorities and the poor making up a disproport­ionate share of the nation's incarcerat­ed population.

Inimai Chettiar, federal director of the criminal justice reform advocacy group Justice Action Network, called Biden's first pardons and commutatio­ns “just modest steps” and urged Biden “to meet the urgency of the moment.”

 ?? MARY MITCHELL — CHICAGO SUN-TIMES ?? This 2016 photo shows Abraham Bolden at his South Side home in Chicago. Bolden, who served on President John F. Kennedy's detail, faced federal bribery charges that he attempted to sell a copy of a Secret Service file. His first trial ended in a hung jury. Following his conviction in a second trial, key witnesses admitted lying at the prosecutor's request.
MARY MITCHELL — CHICAGO SUN-TIMES This 2016 photo shows Abraham Bolden at his South Side home in Chicago. Bolden, who served on President John F. Kennedy's detail, faced federal bribery charges that he attempted to sell a copy of a Secret Service file. His first trial ended in a hung jury. Following his conviction in a second trial, key witnesses admitted lying at the prosecutor's request.

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