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Pressure on Obama to grant last-minute pardons, commutations

Pressure on Obama to grant last-minute pardons, commutations
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WASHINGTON — Under mounting pressure to free convicts as a last act, President Barack Obama is planning at least one more batch of pardons and commutations before leaving office in two weeks, but don't expect many famous offenders to make the list.

The list of bold names appealing to Obama for compassion in his final weeks includes accused leaker Chelsea Manning, former Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich, Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl, and supporters of Edward Snowden, to name a few. Yet White House officials say Obama's final grants are expected to remain focused on the nonviolent drug offenders he's sought to help during his second term.

That's a contrast with former presidents like Bill Clinton, who ignited a major controversy with a last-minute pardon for fugitive financier Marc Rich, the ex-husband of a major Democratic fundraiser. But Obama has viewed clemency as a tool to promote policy goals, not to "clean out the barn" on his way out, said the officials, who requested anonymity to discuss internal White House deliberations.

"The process that I put in place is not going to vary" at the end, Obama said in August. He said he'd make the calls "based on the merits, as opposed to political considerations."

Presidents have two clemency options: commutations, which reduce sentences being served but don't erase convictions, and pardons, which generally restore civil rights — like voting — often after a sentence has been served.

Earlier in his presidency, Obama was unsatisfied with the cases he was receiving, officials said, and so in a 2014 initiative the Justice Department created specific criteria focusing on nonviolent individuals like drug offenders who have served 10 years and, if convicted under today's more lenient sentencing guidelines, would have received shorter sentences.

All told, Obama has granted 1,176 commutations and 148 pardons — fewer pardons than some presidents, but more commutations than any other, the White House said.

Obama's goal in taking on the commutations project was to spur action in Congress on a criminal justice overhaul. That seemed initially promising, but the momentum petered out.

"It's politically risky. You commute somebody and they commit a crime, and the politics of it are tough," Obama has said.

Some commutation recipients have had firearms violations related to their drug crimes. A handful were unrelated to Obama's criminal justice push but received clemency as part of diplomatic deals with Iran and Cuba. The more recent batches have included some that met the spirit — but not the letter — of Obama's guidelines, such as people who have served eight or nine years, but not 10.

Mary Price of the advocacy group Families against Mandatory Minimums said Obama's commutations had increased awareness about decades-long sentences for drug crimes.

"I think that that's very positive," Price said, though she added she would have liked even more.

But Obama has also been criticized for being too lenient — including by President-elect Donald Trump, who has accused the president of putting "bad dudes" on the street and warned Americans, "Sleep tight, folks."

Steve Cook, the National Association of Assistant United States Attorneys president, faulted Obama for feeding the perception that federal prisons are "full of low-level, nonviolent offenders." He said Obama was eroding prison's deterrent effect by granting clemency to people with multiple felony convictions and firearms charges.

"When you grant somebody like that clemency, you're sending a message to the entire drug trafficking world," Cook said.

There will be a backlog of applicants when Obama leaves office, officials said, just as a backlog awaited Obama. But most whose cases won't be resolved are people convicted of serious crimes like murder. Rather than expend limited resources issuing formal denials, the administration focused on approving those eligible under Obama's guidelines.

A look at the higher-profile cases vying for last-minute clemency:

EDWARD SNOWDEN

The former National Security Agency contractor took secret documents and leaked them, revealing massive post-9-11 domestic surveillance programs in the U.S. government. He fled to Hong Kong, then Russia, to avoid prosecution, and a recent congressional report said Snowden remains in contact with Russian intelligence services.

Snowden hasn't formally petitioned for a pardon, the Justice Department said, but his supporters and the American Civil Liberties Union have been calling for one. Yet Obama takes a dim view on Snowden. He told the German newspaper Der Spiegel last month he was disinclined to consider a pardon request until Snowden returns to the U.S. to face charges.

ROD BLAGOJEVICH

The former governor of Illinois has petitioned Obama for a commutation of his 14-year sentence, being served at a minimum-security federal prison in Colorado. But it's unlikely that Obama would grant it, given Blagojevich's involvement in an effort to trade an appointment to Obama's former Senate seat for campaign cash.

CHELSEA MANNING

The ACLU and LGBT groups have lobbied Obama to commute Manning's sentence. The transgender soldier leaked classified government and military documents to WikiLeaks, and has since tried to commit suicide at least twice. Manning is serving a 35-year sentence, at Fort Leavenworth in Kansas.

BOWE BERGDAHL

The U.S. Army sergeant could garner some sympathy from Obama, given that an Army Sanity Board Evaluation concluded that Bergdahl suffered from schizotypal personality disorder when he left his post in Afghanistan in 2009. Obama hasn't commented in detail on Bergdahl, who has said he left his post to alert higher-ups to problems with his unit and faces desertion and misbehaviour charges.

Bergdahl was captured and held by the Taliban and its allies for five years. Two soldiers who went searching were seriously wounded. Obama exchanged Bergdahl in 2014 for five Taliban prisoners. Because of his military involvement, both the Justice Department and Defence Department must evaluate Bergdahl's pardon request.

Josh Lederman And Eric Tucker, The Associated Press