Obama
commutes 46 prison sentences, still shy of estimates
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[July 14, 2015]
By Julia Edwards
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Barack
Obama reduced the prison sentences of 46 inmates on Monday, bringing the
commutations he has granted to a total of 89, a number still far shy of
the thousands his administration originally estimated it would make.
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Obama has said reforming the complex U.S. criminal justice system
to reduce the number of people serving long sentences for
non-violent drug crimes is one of the top priorities for his
remaining time in office.
"Their punishments didn't fit the crimes," Obama said of those whose
sentences he commuted in a video statement on Monday.
Obama said he hoped to work with a bipartisan group of lawmakers on
criminal justice reforms. But so far legislative fixes have stalled
in Congress.
With only 5 percent of the world’s population, the United States
accounts for about 25 percent of the world’s prison population,
according to the American Civil Liberties Union.
The Justice Department launched a program in April 2014 to
systematically identify prisoners serving time for crimes they were
sentenced for under laws that have since been changed to carry less
severe punishments. Traditionally, presidents have granted pardons
or commutations on a one-off basis.
Justice Department officials estimated the review would affect
thousands, especially crack cocaine offenders sentenced when the
drug still carried a sentence equivalent to someone caught with 100
times the same amount of powder cocaine.
But lawyers tasked with reviewing applications for reduced sentences
say the complexity of the cases, and high number of applications,
caught them off guard and created a backlog.
“The response was overwhelming,” said Cynthia Roseberry, director of
Clemency Project 2014, which works with volunteer lawyers to process
applications for the Justice Department to consider.
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Roseberry’s team received 18,000 applications in the first two weeks
of the clemency initiative. They have now received 30,000 and
determined 13,000 failed to qualify.
Roseberry said lawyers were now racing against the clock to review
as many applications as possible before Obama leaves office in early
2017.
Applicants qualify only if they have no record of violence, no
significant ties to a gang or drug cartel, have been in prison at
least 10 years and have demonstrated good behavior while
incarcerated.
Only very recently has the review process started running
effectively, said George O'Connell, a California-based former U.S.
Attorney now providing pro bono legal assistance to prisoners.
(Reporting By Julia Edwards; Editing by Tom Brown)
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