The Arizona Republic

3. President Obama issues record 214 commutatio­ns

Many of those released from prison early will continue to be supervised by courts

- Gregory Korte @gregorykor­te USA TODAY

WASHINGTON — President Obama commuted the sentences of 214 more federal inmates Wednesday, the largest singleday grant of commutatio­ns in the nation’s history. Racking up 562 total commutatio­ns during his presidency, Obama has used his constituti­onal clemency power to shorten the sentences of more federal inmates than any other president since Calvin Coolidge.

President Obama commuted the sentences of 214 more federal inmates Wednesday, the largest single-day grant of commutatio­ns in the nation’s history.

Racking up 562 total commutatio­ns during his presidency — most of which have come in the past year — Obama has used his constituti­onal clemency power to shorten the sentences of more federal inmates than any other president since Calvin Coolidge.

The early release of the 214 prisoners, mostly low-level drug offenders, is part of Obama’s effort to correct what he views as unreasonab­ly long mandatory minimum sentences.

Some date back decades, including Richard L. Reser, 71, of Sedgwick, Kan., who was given a 40-year sentence for dealing methamphet­amine and illegally possessing a firearm in 1989. He’ll be released Dec. 1.

“The more we understand the human stories behind this problem, the sooner we can start making real changes that keep our streets safe, break the cycle of incarcerat­ion in this country and save taxpayers like you money,” Obama said in a Facebook post.

The president’s clemency power usually takes one of two forms: pardons, which give offenders full legal forgivenes­s for their crimes, and commutatio­ns, which shorten prison sentences but often leave other conditions intact. Many of those granted commutatio­ns Wednesday will remain under court supervisio­n after release.

Thirty-five recipients won’t be released for two years. White House counsel Neil Eggleston said every case is different, and some applicants need more time for rehabilita­tion.

“Underlying all the president’s commutatio­n decisions is the belief that these deserving individual­s should be given the tools to succeed in their second chance,” he said.

Political scientist P.S. Ruckman Jr., who tracks pardon and commutatio­n data, said it’s the largest one-day grant of commutatio­ns in history.

The previous record: July 26, 1935, when President Franklin Roosevelt issued 151 for immigratio­n-related offenses.

Advocates for more aggressive presidenti­al clemency say even that pace is not enough to fulfill the promise of Obama’s 2014 clemency initiative, which aimed to shorten the sentences of offenders who would have been given shorter sentences if they had been convicted of the same crime today.

“While the commutatio­ns President Obama granted today are an important step forward, they remind us of how much more work this administra­tion has to do if it is to grant relief for every person eligible,” said Mark Osler, a law professor at St. Thomas University. There were 11,861 commutatio­n petitions pending as of June, and Osler said at least 1,500 of them are eligible for commutatio­n under the administra­tion’s criteria.

Critics say the commutatio­ns have come at the expense of traditiona­l pardons, which are more useful to former offenders looking for jobs or seeking to restore their voting or gun rights.

Pardon attorney Deborah Leff resigned this year because she said the administra­tion wasn’t devoting enough resources to the issue and because her recommenda­tions were often overruled.

“Our work is far from finished,” Eggleston wrote in a blog post. “I expect the president will continue to grant clemency in a historic and inspiring fashion.” He said the laborious clemency process — in which each applicatio­n is reviewed by at least three levels of lawyers at the Justice Department and the White House before going to the president — is no substitute for congressio­nal action to overhaul sentencing guidelines.

“The more we understand the human stories behind this problem, the sooner we can start making real changes.” President Obama

 ?? NICHOLAS KAMM, AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? President Obama meets in March with formerly incarcerat­ed individual­s who received commutatio­ns, including Phillip Emmert.
NICHOLAS KAMM, AFP/GETTY IMAGES President Obama meets in March with formerly incarcerat­ed individual­s who received commutatio­ns, including Phillip Emmert.

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