Obama cuts short prison sentences for 214
convicts
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[August 04, 2016]
By Timothy Gardner
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Barack
Obama cut short the prison terms of 214 convicts on Wednesday, the
largest number of commutations a U.S. leader has granted in single day
since at least 1900, the White House said.
Obama has now granted a total of 562 commutations during his presidency,
more than the number by the past nine presidents combined, it said. In
Wednesday's batch, 67 convicts were serving life sentences.
The convicts were serving time for crimes including possession of crack
cocaine and methamphetamine, with intent to distribute. Some were
imprisoned on charges of gun possession.
One of the convicts, James Wright of Baltimore, Maryland, was serving a
20 year sentence that began in 2006 for possession of crack with intent
to distribute. He will be released in December.
Obama has worked to reform the U.S. criminal justice system and reduce
the number of people serving long sentences for nonviolent drug
offences. It is a rare issue on which Obama gets support from Republican
lawmakers.
For years crack offenders faced stiffer penalties than powder cocaine
offenders, even though the substances are similar at the molecular
level. Critics have said the disparity has unfairly harmed minority and
poor communities.
In 2014, Obama announced the most ambitious clemency program in 40
years, inviting thousands of drug offenders and other convicts to seek
early release. But the program has struggled under a flood of
unprocessed cases.
"Our work is far from finished," White House counsel Neil Eggleston said
about the commutations. Eggleston urged Congress to take action. "While
we continue to work to act on as many clemency applications as possible,
only legislation can bring about lasting change to the federal system,"
he said.
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President Barack Obama speaks at a Young African Leaders Initiative
town hall in Washington, U.S., August 3, 2016. REUTERS/Yuri Gripas
The program automatically expires when Obama leaves office next
January and it is uncertain whether the next president would
continue with a similar plan. Donald Trump, the Republican candidate
in the Nov. 8 election, has championed "law and order" in his
campaign. Democrat Hillary Clinton has called for criminal justice
reform.
(Reporting by Timothy Gardner and Ayesha Rascoe; Editing by Andrew
Hay and Steve Orlofsky)
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