Tag: consensual sex with same-sex partners

  • Biden commutes sentences of nearly 1,500 people, pardons 39 in historic clemency action

    Biden commutes sentences of nearly 1,500 people, pardons 39 in historic clemency action

    By:  Ohio Capital Journal

    WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden Thursday commuted the sentences of roughly 1,500 people who were placed in home confinement during the coronavirus pandemic, and granted pardons for 39 individuals with convictions for nonviolent crimes.

    “America was built on the promise of possibility and second chances,” Biden said in a statement. He noted many of the 1,500 were serving long sentences that would be shorter under current laws, policies and practices.

    As the Biden administration winds down, it’s the largest single-day grant of clemency in modern day history.

    The president added that his administration will continue to review clemency petitions before his term ends on Jan. 20. There are more than 9,400 petitions for clemency that were submitted to the White House, according to recent Department of Justice clemency statistics. 

    “As President, I have the great privilege of extending mercy to people who have demonstrated remorse and rehabilitation, restoring opportunity for Americans to participate in daily life and contribute to their communities, and taking steps to remove sentencing disparities for non-violent offenders, especially those convicted of drug offenses,” Biden said.

    Those 39 people who received pardons included 67-year-old Michael Gary Pelletier of Augusta, Maine, who pleaded guilty to a nonviolent offense, according to the White House, which provided brief biographies of the pardoned individuals.

    After his conviction, Pelletier worked for 20 years at a water treatment facility and volunteered for the HAZMAT team, assisting in hazardous spills and natural disasters. He now grows vegetables for a local soup kitchen and volunteers to support wounded veterans.

    Another pardon was granted to Nina Simona Allen of Harvest, Alabama.

    Allen, 49, was convicted of a nonviolent offense in her 20s, the White House said. After her conviction, she earned a post-baccalaureate degree and two master’s degrees and now works in the field of education. Additionally, she volunteers at a local soup kitchen and nursing home.

    Hunter Biden pardon

    The clemency action came after the president gave a full pardon for his son, Hunter Biden, on gun and tax charges and any other offenses, from 2014 until December. The president previously stated he would not pardon his son, but changed his mind because he said his son was constantly targeted by Republicans.

    Other clemency actions Biden has taken include commuting sentences of those serving sentences for simple possession and use of marijuana under federal and District of Columbia law and a pardon of former U.S. service members who were convicted under military law of having consensual sex with same-sex partners — a law that is now repealed.

    Additionally, advocates and Democrats have pressed Biden to exert his clemency powers on behalf of the 40 men on federal death row before President-elect Donald Trump returns to the White House. Democrats have pushed for this because Trump expedited 13 executions of people on federal death row in the last six months of his first term.

    The co-executive directors of Popular Democracy in Action, a progressive advocacy group, Analilia Mejia and DaMareo Cooper, said in a joint statement that Biden should “not stop now.”

    “Thousands more of our people who have been wronged by an unjust system are still waiting for freedom and compassion,” they said.

    Those with nonviolent offenses who were pardoned by the president, according to the White House:

    Alabama

    Nina Simona Allen

    California

    Gregory S. Ekman

    Colorado

    Johnnie Earl Williams

    Connecticut

    Sherranda Janell Harris

    Delaware

    Patrice Chante Sellers

    District of Columbia

    Norman O’Neal Brown

    Florida

    Jose Antonio Rodriguez

    Illinois

    Diana Bazan Villanueva

    Indiana

    Emily Good Nelson

    Kentucky

    Edwin Allen Jones

    Louisiana

    Trynitha Fulton

    Maine

    Michael Gary Pelletier

    Maryland

    Arthur Lawrence Byrd

    Minnesota

    Kelsie Lynn Becklin

    Sarah Jean Carlson

    Lashawn Marrvinia Walker

    Nevada

    Lora Nicole Wood

    New Mexico

    Paul John Garcia

    New York

    Kimberly Jo Warner

    Ohio

    Duran Arthur Brown

    Kim Douglas Haman

    Jamal Lee King

    James Russell Stidd

    Oklahoma

    Shannan Rae Faulkner

    Oregon

    Gary Michael Robinson

    South Carolina

    Denita Nicole Parker

    Shawnte Dorothea Williams

    Tennessee

    James Edgar Yarbrough

    Texas

    Nathaniel David Reed III

    Mireya Aimee Walmsley

    Lashundra Tenneal Wilson

    Utah

    Stevoni Wells Doyle

    Virginia

    Brandon Sergio Castroflay

    Washington

    Rosetta Jean Davis

    Terence Anthony Jackson

    Russell Thomas Portner

    Wisconsin

    Jerry Donald Manning

    Audrey Diane Simone

    Wyoming

    Honi Lori Moore

    Last updated 1:50 p.m., Dec. 12, 2024


    Ariana Figueroa
    Ariana Figueroa

    Ariana covers the nation’s capital for States Newsroom. Her areas of coverage include politics and policy, lobbying, elections and campaign finance.

    Ohio Capital Journal is part of States Newsroom, the nation’s largest state-focused nonprofit news organization.

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