The Guardian (USA)

Biden to issue first pardons of his term and reduce dozens of prison sentences

- Gloria Oladipo and agencies

Joe Biden will issue the first pardons of his presidenti­al term on Tuesday, in addition to reducing dozens of prison sentences and launching criminal justice reform initiative­s.

The president will pardon three people and will reduce the sentences of 75 additional people, many of whom have been convicted of non-violent drug crimes.

Betty Jo Bogans, 51, will be pardoned for a 1998 conviction of possession of crack cocaine with intent to distribute in Texas. Bogans was arrested for attempting to transport the drugs for her boyfriend and served seven years.

Dexter Jackson, 52, is receiving a pardon after being convicted in 2002 of allowing cannabis distributo­rs to use his pool hall.

Biden is also pardoning Abraham Bolden, 86, the first Black person assigned to a president’s Secret Service detail, guarding John F Kennedy.

Bolden was convicted of attempting to sell government informatio­n, but a key witnesses in his trial admitted to lying at the prosecutio­n’s request. Bolden has maintained his innocence throughout.

“America is a nation of laws and second chances, redemption and rehabilita­tion,” said Biden 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.”

Several people who received reduced sentences from Biden were serving their sentences in house arrest due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

Many of those who were granted commutatio­ns would have received lesser sentences if they were sentenced today, a result of a 2018 bipartisan sentencing reform law passed under the Trump administra­tion.

The White House also announced a series of new reentry programs and policies for incarcerat­ed people and those who have been recently released, including a $145m job training program at federal prisons.

“Helping those who served their time return to their families and become contributi­ng members of their communitie­s is one of the most effective ways to reduce recidivism and decrease crime,” said Biden.

But for many criminal justice reform activists, Biden’s announceme­nts fall short of their expectatio­ns, with organizers calling for broadly commuting sentences for non-violent drug offenses and freeing more people who were previously convicted.

Amid the clemency announceme­nts, the Biden administra­tion has also faced congressio­nal scrutiny for the mistreatme­nt of incarcerat­ed people in the federal Bureau of Prisons.

During his 2020 election campaign, Biden promised to reduce the number of people incarcerat­ed and divert those convicted of non-violent drug offenses to treatment and drug courts.

Biden also promised to address racial and economic disparitie­s in the US prison population, inequaliti­es he helped usher in through the 1994 crime bill he oversaw while previously serving as Senate judiciary chair. Many criminal justice experts argue that the crime bill contribute­d to the harsh and disproport­ionate sentencing of Black people.

The US prison population remains the largest in the world. Despite having less than 5% of the world’s population, the US hosts a fifth of all incarcerat­ed people.

 ?? ?? Joe Biden in Auburn, Washington, on 22 April. Photograph: Karen Ducey/Getty Images
Joe Biden in Auburn, Washington, on 22 April. Photograph: Karen Ducey/Getty Images

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