Enterprise-Record (Chico)

Biden pardons Secret Service agent from Kennedy era, 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, drug-related 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.

• 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.

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