Biden pardons the late Black nationalist Marcus Garvey as well as 4
others and commutes 2 sentences
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[January 20, 2025]
By COLLEEN LONG
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden on Sunday posthumously pardoned
Black nationalist Marcus Garvey, who influenced Malcolm X and other
civil rights leaders and was convicted of mail fraud in the 1920s. Also
receiving pardons were a top Virginia lawmaker and advocates for
immigrant rights, criminal justice reform and gun violence prevention.
Congressional leaders had pushed for Biden to pardon Garvey, with
supporters arguing that Garvey's conviction was politically motivated
and an effort to silence the increasingly popular leader who spoke of
racial pride. After Garvey was convicted, he was deported to Jamaica,
where he was born. He died in 1940.
The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. said of Garvey: “He was the first man,
on a mass scale and level" to give millions of Black people "a sense of
dignity and destiny.”
It's not clear whether Biden, who leaves office Monday, will pardon
people who have been criticized or threatened by President-elect Donald
Trump.
Issuing preemptive pardons — for actual or imagined offenses by Trump’s
critics that could be investigated or prosecuted by the incoming
administration — would stretch the powers of the presidency in untested
ways.
Biden framed the commutations and pardons as in keeping with the “sacred
covenant of our nation.”
Speaking to the Royal Missionary Baptist Church in South Carolina, Biden
said that when people "we love fall and make mistakes,” Americans pick
them back up.

“We don’t turn on each other. We lean into each other. That’s the sacred
covenant of our nation. We pledge an allegiance, not just to an idea,
but to each other,” Biden said.
Biden has set the presidential record for most individual pardons and
commutations issued. He announced on Friday that he was commuting the
sentences of almost 2,500 people convicted of nonviolent drug offenses.
He also gave a broad pardon for his son Hunter, who was prosecuted for
gun and tax crimes.
The president has announced he was commuting the sentences of 37 of the
40 people on federal death row, converting their punishments to life
imprisonment just as Trump, an outspoken proponent of expanding capital
punishment, takes office. In his first term, Trump presided over an
unprecedented number of executions, 13, in a protracted timeline during
the coronavirus pandemic.
A pardon relieves a person of guilt and punishment. A commutation
reduces or eliminates the punishment but doesn’t exonerate the
wrongdoing.
Among those pardoned on Sunday were:
— Don Scott, who is the speaker of the Virginia House of Delegates in a
chamber narrowly controlled by Democrats. He was convicted of a drug
offense in 1994 and served eight years in prison. He was elected to the
Virginia legislature in 2019, and later became the first Black speaker.
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In this August 1922 file photo, Marcus Garvey is shown in a military
uniform as the "Provisional President of Africa" during a parade on
the opening day of the annual Convention of the Negro Peoples of the
World along Lenox Avenue in Harlem borough of New York. President
Joe Biden on Sunday posthumously pardoned Black nationalist Marcus
Garvey, who influenced leaders like Malcolm X and was convicted of
mail fraud in the 1920s, and pardoned immigrant rights activist Ravi
Ragbir and criminal justice reform advocate Kemba Smith Pradia. (AP
Photo/File)

“I am deeply humbled to share that I have received a Presidential
Pardon from President Joe Biden for a mistake I made in 1994 — one
that changed the course of my life and taught me the true power of
redemption,” Scott said in a statement.
Virginia Gov. Glenn Younkin, a Republican, said in a statement that
Scott's success and determination to “reshape his future" was
“inspirational for all of us.”
—Immigrant rights activist Ravi Ragbir, who was convicted of a
nonviolent offence in 2001 and was sentenced to two years in prison
and was facing deportation to Trinidad and Tobago.
—Kemba Smith Pradia, who was convicted of a drug offense in 1994 and
sentenced to 24 years behind bars. She has since become a prison
reform activist. President Bill Clinton commuted her sentence in
2000.
—Darryl Chambers of Wilmington, Delaware, a gun violence prevention
advocate who was convicted of a drug offense and sentenced to 17
years in prison. He studies and writes about gun violence
prevention.
Biden commuted the sentences of two people:
—Michelle West, who was serving life in prison for her role in a
drug conspiracy case in the early 1990s. West has a daughter,
Miquelle West, who has written publicly about the struggle of
growing up with a mother behind bars.
“I was only a little girl when my mom dropped me off for school one
morning and never picked me up," she said in a statement thanking
Biden. “I have grown up and lived my entire adult life under the
cloud of ‘mandatory life in prison.’ Today, after more than 30 years
hoping and advocating every day that her life sentence could somehow
be reduced, the clouds have parted. I finally see the sunshine and a
bright future for us both.”
—Robin Peoples, who was convicted of robbing banks in northwest
Indiana in the late 1990s and was sentenced to 111 years in prison.
The White House said in a statement that Peoples would have faced
significantly lower sentences today under current laws.
___
Associated Press writers Darlene Superville in Charleston, South
Carolina and Gary D. Robertson in Raleigh, North Carolina,
contributed to this report.
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