I wrote yesterday about the increasing momentum that seems to be swelling up about the case of triple-life prisoner Clarence Aaron, and the alarming allegations raised in last week’s joint ProPublica/Washington Post report that his plea for commutation was mishandled by the current head of the U.S. Pardon Attorney’s office, Ronald Rodgers. The NAACP and ACLU had just served as two of over three dozen signatories on a letter sent to the Senate Judiciary Committee.
Whether or not that letter had anything to do with it, two Democrats on the House Judiciary Committee today put pressure directly on the White House to investigate ProPublica’s claims.
Rep. John Conyers, the committee’s ranking member, co-authored a letter to President Obama requesting that he take action on the Clarence Aaron case. Though Rep. Conyers and Rep. Bobby Scott, a fellow Judiciary member, didn’t spell ProPublica reporter Dafna Linzer’s name correctly, they got pretty much everything else right:
“…we request that you direct Attorney General (Eric) Holder to investigate these allegations. And if the allegations are proven, we believe the case warrants your immediate reconsideration of his application for clemency.”
Along with the White House, Conyers and Scott are calling upon Attorney General Eric Holder because the U.S. Pardon Attorney’s office is a section of the Department of Justice that he leads. Linzer also notes that even Alberto Gonzales, the (admittedly disgraced) former Attorney General under George W. Bush, is speaking out about her report:









