Monterey Herald

Governor issues pardons; commutes murder sentence

- By Adam Beam

SACRAMENTO >> Gov. Gavin Newsom on Friday commuted the life sentence of a woman convicted of killing her stepfather in 1989, making her immediatel­y eligible for release on parole.

Teresa Paulinkoni­s, 57, has been in prison for 31 years. She was sentenced to 25 years to life for murder in 1992 in Alameda County. In an order commuting her sentence that Newsom signed Friday, the governor says Paulinkoni­s “has worked hard to better herself” by earning an associate degree, a business certificat­e and participat­ing “in extensive self-help programmin­g.”

The order noted four correction­s workers praised Paulinkoni­s for “her positive attitude and her willingnes­s to help others.”

The commutatio­n was one of 20 acts of clemency Newsom signed on Friday, including nine pardons and 10 medical reprieves, all relating to the coronaviru­s. Newsom has now issued a total of 72 pardons, 79 commutatio­ns and 20 medical reprieves since taking office in 2019.

The California Constituti­on gives the governor authority to grant clemency. A commutatio­n reduces the length of a prison sentence. A pardon would effectivel­y do the same, but it also restores certain civil rights for people who have already completed their sentences.

A medical reprieve temporaril­y moves medically vulnerable people out of prison to to serve their sentences in the community under the supervisio­n of parole officers.

Newsom’s pardons included:

• Jimmy Cha, sentenced to five years in prison in 1996 for threatenin­g four people with a gun in a restaurant parking lot and punching two of them.

• Josephine Edu, sentenced to seven years in prison for a 1996 getting into a fight with her boss and cutting her with a piece of glass.

• Alexander Galuz, sentenced to three years probation and one year in jail for a 2001 conviction of possessing a controlled substance for sale.

• Marco Gomez, who was sentenced to five years in prison in 1998 after he shot someone following an argument at an intersecti­on.

• Steven Husong, who was sentenced to five years probation and 32 days in jail in 2014 for extortion.

• Robert Hutton, who was sentenced to four years probation and 90 days in jail in 1985 for possessing a controlled substance for sale.

• Ian Jerde, who was sentenced to three years probation and one year in jail in 1993 after being convicted of conspiracy to commit a crime.

• Robert Thies, who was sentenced to 10 years in prison for a 1988 conviction of manufactur­ing, transporti­ng, and possession of a controlled substance; possession of a controlled substance for sale; and conspiracy to commit a crime and obstruct justice.

• Paul Williams, who was sentenced to three years probation and 150 days in jail in 1987 for transporti­ng or selling a controlled substance.

Newsom’s medical reprieves included:

• Leland Amos, 68, sentenced to 36 years to life sentence for burglary as a third strike.

• Douglas Aubineau, 63, sentenced to 108 years to life for three counts of robbery as a third strike and for carrying a dirk or dagger as a third strike.

• Rickie Blue-Sky, 75, sentenced to 27 years to life for murder.

• Gabriel Camarena, 63, sentenced to 25 years to life for robbery as a third strike.

• Ronald Carter, 56, sentenced to 42 years to life for carjacking as a third strike.

 ?? JAE C. HONG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Gov. Gavin Newsom speaks during a news conference on the campus of the California State University of Los Angeles in Los Angeles.
JAE C. HONG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Gov. Gavin Newsom speaks during a news conference on the campus of the California State University of Los Angeles in Los Angeles.

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