According to Associated Press, calling America "a nation of second chances," President Barack Obama cut the prison sentences of 46 non-violent drug offenders on Monday
in what the White House hopes will be just one prong of a broader push
to make the criminal justice system fairer while saving the government
money.
Fourteen
of those whose sentences were commuted had been sentenced to life in
prison and the vast majority to at least 20 years, the president said in
a video released by the White House, adding that "their punishments
didn't fit the crime."
"These
men and women were not hardened criminals," he said, promising to lay
out more ideas on criminal justice changes during a speech to the NAACP on Tuesday in Philadelphia.
Since
Congress enacted mandatory minimum sentences for drug crimes in the
1980s, the federal prison population has grown from 24,000 to more than
214,000, according to Families Against Mandatory Minimums, a group
seeking sentencing changes.
And
the costs, said Obama, are over $80 billion a year to incarcerate
people who often "have only been engaged in nonviolent drug offenses."
While
Obama has spoken off and on during his presidency about the need for
smarter sentencing and other justice reforms, prospects for significant
structural change have improved recently with growing interest among
Republicans in Congress.
"Congress
simply can't act fast enough," said Julie Stewart, president and
founder of Families Against Mandatory Minimums. She said that while
Obama's executive actions have picked off some of the most egregious
sentencing inequities, significant legislative action is needed to stop
the flow of people "going to prison year in and year out, serving too
much time."
Republican
support in any such effort is critical, Stewart said, likening it to a
Nixon-goes-to-China moment. "Nobody's going to question a Republican's
credibility on being tough on crime," she said.
Yet
not all Republicans saw the commutations as a step in the right
direction. Rep. Jim Sensenbrenner of Wisconsin, who sits on the House
Judiciary Committee, accused the president of engaging in showmanship,
publicity stunts and political pandering.
"Commuting
the sentences of a few drug offenders is a move designed to spur
headlines, not meaningful reform," Sensenbrenner said.
Obama
has issued 89 commutations during his presidency, most of them to
non-violent offenders sentenced for drug crimes under now-outdated
sentencing guidelines. A commutation leaves the conviction in place, but
reduces the punishment. The sentences of those who received
commutations on Monday will expire on Nov. 10, 2015.
Obama wrote a personal letter to each of those whose sentence was commuted.
In
a letter to Jerry Bailey, sentenced to 30 years for conspiracy to
violate laws against crack-cocaine, Obama praised Bailey for showing the
potential to turn his life around.
"Now it is up to you to make the most of this opportunity," Obama wrote.
Obama
announced the commutations in a video produced and posted online by the
White House, preventing journalists from being able to question him
about the move. The White House and political candidates frequently use
the same technique, with some presidential hopefuls even announcing
their candidacy via scripted videos.
The
46 sentence reductions are the most presidential commutations in a
single day since at least the administration of President Lyndon
Johnson, according to the White House. Overall, Obama has commuted
sentences of 89 people, surpassing the combined number of commutations
granted by Presidents Ronald Reagan, George H.W. Bush, Bill Clinton and
George W. Bush.
They
represent a sliver of all those seeking clemency: Justice Department
statistics show that roughly 2,100 commutation petitions have been
received so far this fiscal year, and about 7,900 are pending.
White
House counsel Neil Eggleston predicted the president would issue even
more commutations before leaving office, but added that "clemency alone
will not fix decades of overly punitive sentencing policies."
The president this week is devoting considerable attention to criminal justice. In addition to his speech Tuesday
in Philadelphia, he is to become the first sitting president to visit a
federal prison when he goes to the El Reno Federal Correctional
Institution outside of Oklahoma City on Thursday. He'll meet with both law enforcement officials and inmates.
In recent years, long drug sentences have come under increasing scrutiny and downward trends already are taking shape.
The
Supreme Court has made sentencing guideline ranges advisory rather than
mandatory. Obama signed the Fair Sentencing Act in 2010 to cut
penalties for crack cocaine offenses. And last year, the independent
Sentencing Commission, which sets sentencing policy, reduced guideline
ranges for drug crimes and applied those retroactively.
Advocates for fair sentences expressed hope the president's actions would have a ripple effect in the states.
"I
hope this sends a message to governors of states that have the power to
grant clemencies to those who deserve a chance to be reunited with
their families," said Anthony Papa of the Drug Policy Alliance. Papa was
granted clemency in New York in 1997 after serving 12 years under state
drug laws.
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