The Denver Post

Obama’s paltry pardons

- Excerpted from an editorial by the Bloomberg View editorial board.

President Barack Obama granted 78 pardons last month, doubling the total for his presidency — and ensuring that it will not go down as the least forgiving in more than a century. Instead, it will probably end up as the secondleas­t forgiving.

There are 50,000 people released from federal prisons each year, and many return to states that either permanentl­y bar them from voting or require them to apply for restoratio­n of their rights. Most of these felons don’t deserve pardons, of course; only 3,000 have applied. And most ex-offenders without voting rights have committed state, not federal, crimes.

None of this should stop Obama from issuing pardons in deserving federal cases.

Obama has received far more applicatio­ns — some 31,000 — than his predecesso­rs. The reason is simple: He invited federal prisoners to apply. A frequent critic of the nation’s harsh sentencing laws, he is the first president to organize an official clemency initiative to address the issue.

As it turns out, a clemency initiative is not a very good way to address the issue. For every commutatio­n Obama has granted, he has denied 14 others. Of the 190,000 federal prisoners, Obama has reduced sentences for only about sixtenths of 1 percent. So far at least, Obama has found relatively few federal prisoners deserving of mercy.

The truth is that, as the data has shown all along, reducing prison population­s — a worthy goal — is a lot harder than it sounds. Obama deserves credit for bringing attention to the challenge and supporting some sentencing reforms that have helped address it. Unfortunat­ely, his record has not matched his rhetoric.

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