President Barack Obama commuted the sentences of 46 inmates currently serving long prison terms for non-violent drug offenses, saying in a video released on Monday that their punishments didn’t fit their crimes.
“These men and women were not hardened criminals, but the overwhelming majority had been sentenced to at least 20 years, 14 of them had been sentenced to life for non-violent drug offenses,” Obama said. “If they’d been sentenced under today’s laws nearly all of them would have served their time.”
The commutations come a day before the president is scheduled to deliver a speech on criminal justice reform at the NAACP convention in Philadelphia, and ahead of a historic visit later this week to the El Reno Federal Correctional Facility outside of Oklahoma City to talk with officials and prisoners about the same topic. The visit will be the first by a sitting president to a federal prison.
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In his announcement on Monday, Obama said now is the time to push for bipartisan criminal justice reform.
“Over the last few years, a lot of people have become aware of the inequities in the criminal justice system,” Obama said. “Right now with our overall crime rate and incarceration rate both falling we are at a moment when some good people in both parties, Republican and Democrat, are coming together around ideas to make the system work smarter, make it work better and I’m determined to do my part.”
The list of prisoners who had their sentences commuted include individuals from across the country, many sentenced to decades or even life for distribution and conspiracy to distribute narcotics under harsh mandatory minimum sentences handed out en masse during the so-called war on drugs of the late-1980s and early 1990s.
The issue of criminal justice reform is not only about righting the errors of bad policy but also about fiscal responsibility. Each year, America spends about $80 billion in incarcerating people, many of whom are non-violent offenders swept up in the nation’s mammoth illegal drug trade. Had the prisoners on the president’s list of commutations been sentenced under today’s laws nearly all of them would have served their time and been released by now, Obama said.
“I believe that at its heart America is a nation of second chances and I believe these folks deserve their second chance,” he said. “I also believe there’s a lot more that we can do to restore the sense of fairness at the heart of our justice system and to make sure our tax dollars are well spent even as we are keeping our streets safe.”
Obama wrote a personal letter to each of the men and women receiving commutations.
In one of the letters, addressed to Jerry Allen Bailey, who was sentenced to 30 years in prison in 1996 for conspiracy to violate crack cocaine law, Obama said he granted Baily a commutation because “you have demonstrated the potential to turn your life around.”








