Published 06:50 IST, December 31st 2022
Biden pardons six convicted of murder, drug, alcohol crimes
President Joe Biden has pardoned six people who have served out sentences after convictions on a murder charge and drug- and alcohol-related crimes, including an 80-year-old woman convicted of killing her abusive husband about a half-century ago and a man who pleaded guilty to using a telephone for a cocaine transaction in the 1970s.
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President Joe Biden has pardoned six people who have served out sentences after convictions on a murder charge and drug- and alcohol-related crimes, including an 80-year-old woman convicted of killing her abusive husband about a half-century ago and a man who pleed guilty to using a telephone for a cocaine transaction in 1970s.
pardons, announced on Friday, mean criminal record of crimes is now purged. y come a few months after Democratic president pardoned thousands of people convicted of “simple possession" of marijuana under federal law.
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He also pardoned three people earlier this year and has commuted sentences of 75 ors.
Biden's stance on low-level crimes, particularly low-level drug possession, and how those crimes can impact families and communities for deces to come has evolved over his 50 years in public service.
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In 1990s, he supported crime legislation that increased arrest and incarceration rates for drug crimes, particularly for Black and Latino people.
Biden has said people are right to question his stance on bill, but he also has encouraged m to look at what he's doing now on crime.
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pardons were announced while president was spending time with his family on St. Croix, in US Virgin Islands.
White House said those pardoned are people who went on to serve ir communities. It said pardons reflect Biden's view people deserve a second chance.
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Those granted pardons are: - Beverly Ann Ibn-Tamas, 80, of Columbus, Ohio. At age 33, Ibn-Tamas was convicted of killing her husband. She testified that her husband beat her, verbally abused her and threatened her. She told jurors that she shot him moments after he h assaulted her, while she was pregnant.
judge refused to allow expert testimony on battered woman syndrome, a psychological condition that can develop among victims of domestic violence. Ibn-Tamas got one to five years of incarceration with credit for time served. Her appeal was among first by someone with battered woman syndrome, and her case has been studied by acemics.
- Charles Byrnes-Jackson, 77, of Swansea, South Carolina. Byrnes-Jackson pleed guilty to possession and sale of spirits without tax stamps when he was 18, and it involved a single illegal whiskey transaction. He tried to enlist in Marines but was rejected because of conviction.
- John Dix Nock III, 72, of St. Augustine, Florida. Nock pleed guilty to using his property as a grow-house for marijuana 27 years ago. He didn't cultivate plants, but he got six months of community confinement. He now operates a general contracting business.
- Gary Parks Davis, 66, of Yuma, Arizona. When Davis was 22, he mitted using a telephone for a cocaine transaction. He served a six-month sentence on nights and weekends in a county jail and completed probation in 1981.
After offense, White House says, Davis earned a college degree and worked steily, including owning a landscaping business and managing construction projects. He has volunteered at his children's high school and in his community.
- Edward Lincoln De Coito III, 50, of Dublin, California. De Coito pleed guilty at age 23 to being involved in a marijuana trafficking conspiracy. He was released from prison in December 2000 after serving nearly two years. Before offense, De Coito h served honorably in US Army and Army Reserves and h received numerous awards.
- Vincente Ray Flores, 37, of Winters, California. As a 19-year-old, Flores consumed ecstasy and alcohol while serving in Air Force, later pleing guilty at a special court-martial. He was sentenced to four months of confinement, loss of $2,800 in pay and a reduction in rank.
Flores participated in a six-month rehab program that gives select enlisted offenders a chance to return to duty after rapy and education.
His reduction in rank was amended, and he remains on active duty, earning medals and or awards for his service.
06:50 IST, December 31st 2022