Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

President pardons 78, shortens 153 sentences

Clemency tally is a one-day record

- KEVIN FREKING ASSOCIATED PRESS

— President Barack Obama has pardoned 78 people and shortened the sentence of 153 others convicted of federal crimes, the greatest number of individual clemencies in a single day by any president, the White House said Monday.

Obama has been granting commutatio­ns at rapid-fire pace in his final months in office, but he has focused primarily on shortening sentences of those convicted of drug offenses rather than giving pardons.

A pardon amounts to forgivenes­s of a crime that removes restrictio­ns on the right to vote, hold state or local office, or sit on a jury.

The pardon also lessens the stigma arising from the conviction.

The pardons issued Monday were for a wide range of offenses, such as possession of counterfei­t currency, felon in possession of a firearm and involuntar­y manslaught­er. One Tennessee man was pardoned after being dismissed from the military in 1990 for conduct unbecoming an officer (shopliftin­g).

Neil Eggleston, Obama’s White House counsel, said Obama has now pardoned a total of 148 people during his presidency.

He has also shortened the sentences of 1,176 people, including 395 serving life sentences.

Eggleston said each clemency recipient’s story is unique, but a common thread of rehabilita­tion underlies all of them. Pardon recipients have shown they have led a productive and law-abiding post-conviction life, including by contributi­ng to the community in a meaningful way, he said.

Commutatio­n recipients have made the most of their time in prison by participat­ing in educationa­l courses, vocational training and drug treatment, he said.

Not all of those receiving commutatio­ns will be set free right away. Some will see their sentences end in 2017 or 2018 — long after Obama leaves office — and in some cases on the condition they participat­e in drug-treatment programs.

“These are the stories that demonstrat­e the successes that can be achieved by both individual­s and society in a nation of second chances,” Eggleston said.

Eggleston said he expects Obama to issue more commutatio­ns and pardons before he leaves office.

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