Orlando Sentinel

What about our other nonviolent inmates?

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counts related to a Memphis-based cocaine traffickin­g operation. Her 1994 indictment describes dozens of deliveries and drug transactio­ns, many involving her.

President Barack Obama, who commuted the sentences of hundreds of federal inmates convicted of drug crimes, rejected clemency for her. Conscious of critics nipping at his heels, Obama scrupulous­ly took his time with clemency or pardon requests. Trump relies on his instincts, turning the review process into another pseudo-reality TV show — “Celebrity Pardons,” former Obama adviser David Axelrod calls it.

I can’t say for certain that the lure of performing a good deed that Obama had not done gave Alice Johnson’s clemency more appeal, as it apparently did for Jack Johnson’s pardon. But I’m sure it didn’t hurt her chances either.

Rather than criticize Trump’s good deed, I encourage him to do more. Before Trump’s election, reversing the 30-year explosion in our prison population was becoming a bipartisan issue. He could bring that back, if he wants to have a real impact on our criminal justice system.

For his humanitari­an aid to Alice Johnson, Trump deserves credit. But he’ll deserve even more credit when he does something to help the nation’s other 576,000 prison inmates — 39 percent of the nation’s 1.46 million prison population — who experts at the Brennan Center for Justice at NYU School of Law believe to be incarcerat­ed with little public safety rationale.

When Trump at Sylvester Stallone’s suggestion pardoned the late AfricanAme­rican heavyweigh­t boxing champion Jack Johnson, who had been convicted on racially loaded charges 105 years earlier, I was asked sarcastica­lly by some proTrump readers, “Why don’t you just say, ‘Thank you?’ ”

I’m waiting, I responded, to see what the president does for black people who are still alive.

After Alice Johnson’s clemency, I am now waiting to see what Trump will do to help other unnecessar­ily incarcerat­ed, nonviolent offenders, even if they don’t have a Hollywood celebrity on their side.

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