Obama
commutes sentences for 214 federal prisoners, Published
August 03, 2016 Associated Press
President Obama on
Wednesday cut short the sentences of 214 federal inmates, including 67 life
sentences, in what the White House called the largest batch of commutations on
a single day in more than a century.
Almost all the prisoners
were serving time for nonviolent crimes related to cocaine, methamphetamine or
other drugs, although a few were charged with firearms violations related to
their drug activities. Almost all are men, though they represent a diverse
cross-section of America geographically.
Obama's push to lessen
the burden on nonviolent drug offenders reflects his long-stated view that the
U.S. needs to remedy the consequences of decades of onerous sentencing
requirements that put tens of thousands behind bars for far too long. Obama has
used the aggressive pace of his commutations to increase pressure on Congress
to pass a broader fix and to call more attention to the issue.
All told, Obama has
commuted 562 sentences during his presidency -- more than the past nine
presidents combined, the White House said. Almost 200 of those who have
benefited were serving life sentences.
"All of the
individuals receiving commutation today -- incarcerated under outdated and
unduly harsh sentencing laws -- embody the president's belief that `America is
a nation of second chances,"' White House counsel Neil Eggleston wrote in
a blog post.
Eggleston said Obama
examines each clemency application on its specific merits to identify the
appropriate relief, including whether the prisoner would be helped by
additional drug treatment, educational programming or counseling. He called on
Congress to finally pass a criminal justice overhaul to bring about
"lasting change to the federal system."
Presidents tend to use
their powers to commute sentences or issue pardons more frequently at the end
of their presidencies, and Obama administration officials said the rapid pace
would continue during Obama's final months. "We are not done
yet," Deputy Attorney General Sally Yates said. "We expect that many
more men and women will be given a second chance through the clemency
initiative." Most of those receiving
commutations Wednesday will be released December 1.
Though there's broad
bipartisan support for a criminal justice overhaul, what had looked like a
promising legislative opportunity for Obama's final year has mostly fizzled. As
with Obama's other priorities, the intensely political climate of the
presidential election year has confounded efforts by Republicans and Democratic
in Congress to find consensus. Obama has long called
for phasing out strict sentences for drug offenses, arguing they lead to excessive
punishment and incarceration rates unseen in other developed countries. With
Obama's support, the Justice Department in recent years has directed
prosecutors to rein in the use of harsh mandatory minimums.
The Obama administration
has also expanded criteria for inmates applying for clemency, prioritizing
nonviolent offenders who have behaved well in prison, aren't closely tied to
gangs and would have received shorter sentences if they had been convicted a
few years later.
Civil liberties groups praised
that policy change but have pushed the Obama administration to grant
commutations at a faster pace. The Clemency Resource Center, part of NYU School
of Law, said more than 11,000 petitions are pending at the Justice Department
and that the group believes 1,500 of them meet the administration's criteria to
be granted.
But the calls for
greater clemency have sometimes sparked accusations from Obama's opponents that
he's too soft on crime, an argument that is particularly resonant this year as
presidential candidates Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton trade claims about who
is best positioned to keep the country safe.
"Many people will
use words today like leniency and mercy," said Kevin Ring of the group
Families Against Mandatory Minimums. "But what really happened is that a
group of fellow citizens finally got the punishment they deserved. Not less,
but at long last, not more."
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2016/08/03/obama-commutes-sentences-for-214-federal-prisoners.html
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