Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Newsom vowed to pardon LGBTQ California­ns, but just 1 living person has benefited

- By Mackenzie Mays

Three years after Gov. Gavin Newsom announced an initiative to pardon LGBTQ California­ns who were prosecuted for being gay, only one living person has benefited from the program.

The governor launched the LGBTQ California Clemency Initiative in February 2020 and vowed to eradicate “historic homophobia” in the criminal justice system by offering pardons to people “subjected to discrimina­tory arrest and prosecutio­n.” The program focuses on charges such as vagrancy, loitering and sodomy that were used to target LGBTQ people and may remain on their criminal records decades later.

But besides a posthumous pardon announced with its launch of renowned civil rights activist Bayard Rustin, who died in 1987, only one other person has benefited so far. Henry Pachnowski, an 83-year-old man living in Maryland, was pardoned last year for a lewd conduct charge for participat­ing in consensual sexual activity with another man in Orange County in 1967.

“I am thrilled that this finally happened. I thought I was going to die with that,” said Pachnowski, a Holocaust survivor who moved to the United States when he was 11 and lost his green card in the 1960s because of a marijuana possession charge — the only other citation on his record. “My life really hasn’t been the happiest. It almost feels like now I’m whole.”

Gay rights advocates are calling for Newsom to issue more pardons for people like Pachnowski, and for broader clemency actions for LGBTQ people in prison.

Pardons are part of the governor’s clemency powers under the state constituti­on and sought by people who have served their time in prison and believe they have proved they are rehabilita­ted. Pardons can reinstate some civic rights, including the right to own a firearm or serve on a jury. In California, pardons have helped people avoid deportatio­n and provided housing and job opportunit­ies that were limited by past conviction­s.

“We were very thankful and very happy with the initiative when it launched,” said Jorge Reyes Salinas, spokespers­on for Equality California, which advocates for LGBTQ rights. “People are still alive in California impacted by these laws, and seeing more of these pardons take place would really impact tremendous­ly the life of someone, regardless of their age, and how they are accepted and reintroduc­ed back into the community.”

Newsom — who made his name as a gay rights champion when he issued same-sex marriage licenses as mayor of San Francisco before it was legal — urged California­ns to apply three years ago. He said the state was “turning the page on historic wrongs.”

He would “work to identify eligible pardon candidates and diligently process applicatio­ns with the express goal of pardoning eligible individual­s,” Newsom said then.

The governor’s office, though, has not tracked informatio­n about applicatio­ns related to the program.

Izzy Gardon, a spokespers­on for Newsom, said in a statement that “given the public nature of the pardon process,” people often seek alternativ­e criminal record remedies instead that “may provide more meaningful concrete legal relief.”

That includes dismissals and certificat­es of rehabilita­tion issued by judges, he said. Gardon encouraged people who have been prosecuted for lawful conduct because of their LGBTQ status to apply for pardons “or other legal remedies.”

The pool of potential pardon candidates could be small and apply only to elderly LGTBQ people; California repealed a law that made consensual gay sex a crime in 1975. But activists say the program can have a meaningful

effect.

Conviction­s could remain

While the state in 1997 establishe­d a process for LGBTQ people to seek removal from the sex offender registry for charges related to consensual adult sexual conduct, the underlying conviction­s can remain on records.

In his applicatio­n for a pardon, Pachnowski said clemency would “not only recognize the injustice that I suffered” but would also ensure that “I do not face any future obstacles such as employment­and housing-related ones.”

Pachnowski spent 10 days in jail for engaging in consensual sex with a man in a car in a deserted industrial area more than 55 years ago. A security guard who caught Pachnowski and his partner told them they had “gone against God and nature,” he said.

The pardon program’s stagnancy is proof that it was too narrow an attempt to meaningful­ly help LGTBQ people affected by the criminal justice system, said Colby Lenz, an activist with the California Coalition for Women Prisoners who advised Newsom’s staff when the program was created.

“We are looking for a way to take this symbolic recognitio­n and make it real,” Lenz said.

Newsom has named both prison reform and LGBTQ civil rights protection­s as priorities of his administra­tion. He signed a law in 2020 that allows incarcerat­ed transgende­r, nonbinary and intersex people to choose whether to be housed in a men’s or women’s facility. Last year, he signed a controvers­ial bill that repealed anti-loitering laws at the urging of LGBTQ advocates who said police used it to disproport­ionately target transgende­r sex workers.

Groups including the Transgende­r Law Center, Survived & Punished and Flying Over Walls are calling on the governor to grant more commutatio­ns, which may shorten current prison sentences, as studies show that LGBTQ people — especially transgende­r people — are more likely to be incarcerat­ed and face more violence in prison.

Lesbian, gay and bisexual people are incarcerat­ed at three times the rate of heterosexu­al people, according to the nonprofit Prison Policy Initiative. Although data are more limited for incarcerat­ed transgende­r people, 1 in 6 have reported they have served time, according to the initiative.

Jennifer Orthwein, an Alameda-based attorney who represents LGBTQ clients, who formerly worked as a forensic psychologi­st in state prisons, said people are still being discrimina­ted against by the justice system but not in the overt ways of the past. Orthwein said LGBTQ clients not only face overly harsh sentences but see harsher discipline in prison compared with straight people, which in turn makes it harder for them to be

granted parole.

“While optically this initiative appears to be righting a historical wrong, it really has very little, if any, impact on the actual lives of the people subjected to discrimina­tory laws in the first place,” Orthwein said. “I think if Gov. Newsom wants to have an actual impact on the current discrimina­tion LGBTQ+ people face, he should take a look at the discrimina­tory laws that are disparatel­y impacting LGBTQ+ folks right now and apply equitable solutions.”

Bamby Salcedo, a transgende­r activist based in Los Angeles, wants to see the initiative expanded to benefit people like her.

Salcedo, president and CEO of the Translatin@ Coalition, traveled to the United States illegally as a minor and has been denied the type of visa she seeks because of past conviction­s. A pardon from the governor could change what she called an “unstable immigratio­n status.”

She spent years in and out of jail from 1988 to 2000 for crimes including possession of a controlled substance, petty theft and prostituti­on, according to records. Salcedo, 53, said she was a drug addict struggling to survive, and though she was not charged with crimes openly targeting her because of her identity, the discrimina­tion she faced as a transgende­r woman contribute­d to her contact with the justice system, she said.

“I was not able to obtain employment or proper health care. Being that there was no opportunit­ies for me as a young trans woman, the only venue to survival was the street economy,” Salcedo said. “I have been able to reform my life and do a lot of good. I’ve been clean for more than 22 years.”

Salcedo, who was appointed to Newsom’s Commission on the State of Hate last year, said the current pardon initiative is too limited.

“If the governor is saying he is giving priority to a particular population, the actions don’t show that,” Salcedo said.

Attorney: Don’t apply

Josh Kim, an attorney who works for Root & Rebound, an organizati­on that provides legal support to those “harmed by mass incarcerat­ion,” does not typically recommend people seeking to clear their records apply for a gubernator­ial pardon. Pardons are rare and more publicized and time consuming compared with other routes like expungemen­t,

which does not erase charges from records but updates them to signal they have been dismissed, he said.

“To rely on pardons — this executive grant of mercy that is exceptiona­l almost by definition — as a form of policy, I think it’s a misguided effort. We should look at relief that benefits everybody,” Kim said. “But it doesn’t mean my clients wouldn’t want it. Symbolic relief is not nothing.”

In response to activists’ calls for commutatio­ns, Newsom’s spokespers­on said that LGBTQ people in prison can apply for commutatio­ns “to redress unjust legal outcomes” in their cases.

“Every clemency applicatio­n received by the governor’s office receives careful considerat­ion, and there are many factors the governor weighs before granting clemency in an individual case,” Gardon said.

Since elected in 2019, Newsom has called his executive clemency power “an important part of the criminal justice system.”

While in office, the governor has issued 123 commutatio­ns, 140 pardons and 35 medical reprieves.

A Los Angeles Times investigat­ion found that as of January, a third of people granted commutatio­ns remained behind bars due largely to a process that defers to the Board of Parole Hearings despite Newsom’s executive authority to free people from prison.

Calls by Black and LGTBQ state lawmakers for Rustin to be pardoned after his death were the impetus for Newsom’s program. Rustin, who advised the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., was convicted of vagrancy in California for engaging in consensual sexual activity with a man in 1953.

President Barack Obama also awarded Rustin, who was influentia­l in the 1963 March on Washington, the Presidenti­al Medal of Freedom in 2013.

State Sen. Scott Wiener, D-san Francisco, was influentia­l in Rustin’s posthumous pardon.

Wiener said in a recent interview that he was “very grateful” to the governor for creating the initiative but has not been involved in its operation. Wiener worried that the program has been held back because of fear, especially among LGBTQ elders.

“These are historical­ly horrific criminal laws that destroyed countless people’s lives,” he said. “I don’t know exactly why the uptake of this program has been so low but it could be a combinatio­n of shame and of people not knowing about it.”

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I / AP FILE PHOTO (2022) ?? California Gov. Gavin Newsom speaks with reporters Oct. 7 in Sacramento, Calif. Gay rights advocates are calling for Newsom to issue more pardons and for broader clemency actions for LGBTQ people in prison.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I / AP FILE PHOTO (2022) California Gov. Gavin Newsom speaks with reporters Oct. 7 in Sacramento, Calif. Gay rights advocates are calling for Newsom to issue more pardons and for broader clemency actions for LGBTQ people in prison.
 ?? SHUTTERSTO­CK FILE PHOTO ?? Lesbian, gay and bisexual people are incarcerat­ed at three times the rate of heterosexu­al people, according to the nonprofit Prison Policy Initiative.
SHUTTERSTO­CK FILE PHOTO Lesbian, gay and bisexual people are incarcerat­ed at three times the rate of heterosexu­al people, according to the nonprofit Prison Policy Initiative.

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