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May 9, 2012
ACS event in DC tomorrow on presidential clemency and drug sentencing
If I was within ready driving distance of DC, I would make extra sure to find time to attend this notable ACS event scheduled for tomorrow morning (Thursday, May 10), which is titled "Reimagining the Constitutional Pardon Power: Does the President Have a Role in Making Drug Sentences Fairer?". The program has an awesome line-up of important speakers from both the academy and practice, including former Maryland Governor Robert Ehrlich, and former White House Counsel Gregory Craig. Here is how the ACS website sets up the event:
On Thursday, May 10, 2012, at 10:00 a.m., the American Constitution Society for Law and Policy and the Open Society Foundations will host “Reimagining the Constitutional Pardon Power: Does the President Have a Role in Making Drug Sentences Fairer?” In Article II of the U.S. Constitution, the President’s pardon power resides with little fuss or fanfare, likely a result of its infrequent use. Article II, Section 2 provides that the President "shall have Power to grant Reprieves and Pardons for Offenses against the United States, except in Cases of Impeachment." Despite this explicit authority, and the thousands of clemency petitions received by the Department of Justice each Administration – close to 6,000 such petitions have been received by the Obama Administration thus far – the pardon power is a tool rarely used in our criminal justice system. As the Administration wraps up its first term in office having granted 23 clemency petitions, we consider whether the pardon power should be used as a tool for balancing unfair sentencing laws in the criminal justice system.
The President took a step in this direction when he commuted the sentence of federal prisoner Eugenia Jennings, who was serving a 22-year sentence for a nonviolent, crack cocaine offense. Should clemency in this context become customary? Is there a viable pardon process that can be used? If pardon power is exercised regularly, how do we ensure fair and nondiscriminatory procedures? Are governors setting an example at the state level for how pardon powers should be used? These questions and others will be considered by the program’s panel of experts.
May 9, 2012 at 03:22 PM | Permalink
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Comments
Pres. Obama and VP Biden ares too busy, as are the political pundits, boring the public with the repetitive "news" of same-sex marriage. Over-incarceration is the unmentionable. So will go the pardon power conference.
Posted by: FluffyRoss | May 10, 2012 7:16:33 AM