The U.S. pardon attorney who withheld key information from the president in a high profile clemency case was removed from office Wednesday as the Obama administration announced a new pardons policy that could potentially allow hundreds of federal inmates to be freed early from prison.
The announcement by Deputy Attorney General James Cole caps more than a year of internal reviews by the White House and the Justice Department aimed at seeing the president exercise his pardons authority more aggressively and more fairly. An investigative series in 2011 showed significant race disparity in the awarding of presidential pardons and efforts by the pardons office to squelch opportunities for federal inmates serving unfair or overly long sentences.
“She is a breath of fresh air in an office that is so stale,” said Julie Stewart, president of Families Against Mandatory Minimums, a nonpartisan advocacy group in Washington. “Debby cares deeply about the clemency process, about the fact that too many people are serving too much time for too little an offense,” Stewart said.
Leff replaces Ronald L. Rodgers, a former military judge and major drug crimes prosecutor who served since April, 2008.
A scathing 2012 inspector-general report, commissioned at the request of Congress following this story in The Washington Post, confirmed that Rodgers had withheld key facts from the White House in the 2008 clemency application of Clarence Aaron. Aaron was a first time offender serving a triple life sentence for a minor role in a drug case. He had overwhelming support for his application and a White House eager to see his release. But Rodgers blocked it.
When his actions became public, he was chastised by the Justice Department inspector-general. Rodgers engaged in “conduct that fell substantially short of the high standards expected of Department of Justice employees and the duty he owed the President of the United States,” Inspector General Michael Horowitz wrote.
Horowitz then called on Cole to determine “whether administrative action is appropriate” against Rodgers. It also urged the pardons office to begin reviewing files to locate “other instances” similar to the Aaron’s case “to ensure that the information provided to the White House,” in clemency decisions accurately reflects the facts.
In announcing new leadership for the pardons office Tuesday, Cole said Rodgers had “performed admirably” and “demonstrated dedication and integrity in his work on pardons and commutations.” Rodgers, who has refused to give public interviews, did not attend the news conference and Cole wouldn’t directly address a question about the inspector-general findings. Instead, he insisted that Rodgers, a member of the government’s senior executive service, had sought to move on to another job within the Justice Department for some time.
But the leadership change was significant. Under Rodgers and his predecessor, white applicants were nearly four times as likely to be pardoned than all minorities combined. African-Americans were the least likely to succeed. The pardons office reviews candidates eligible for a presidential pardon after completion of sentence and candidates eligible for commutation, which cuts short a sentence.
Even before the inspector-general report, the White House ordered the Bureau of Justice Statistics to review the findings. Examples from pardon office documents showed how qualified minority applicants were summarily denied, while white applicants with lengthier records, worse crimes and lighter sentences were awarded.
In recent years, relying on the recommendation of the pardon attorney, presidents have pardoned fewer and fewer people each year and released only a handful early from prison. President Obama has pardoned fewer individuals than any modern president.
That is set to change.
In December, Obama commuted Aaron‘s sentence, the prisoner whose release Rodgers had successfully blocked for years. Earlier this week, Attorney General Eric Holder held up Aaron as an example of the kinds of cases Obama would like to consider for commutations. Rodgers departure, and the arrival of new attorneys, will help facilitate that goal.









