As part of a broader conversation on race and policing in the United States, yesterday I spoke to the unabated killing of African-American men, women, and children by over-militarized police and the collusion of the various government agencies all the way up to the US Supreme Court in the furtherance of that genocide. I named Elijah McClain in that article, who was murdered by cops in Colorado two years ago.
Elijah McClain
According to NBC News, Elijah McClain’s encounter with police in Aurora, a Denver suburb, began just after 10:30 p.m. on Aug. 24, 2019, after buying iced tea from a corner store. At the time, McClain, a massage therapist, was wearing a ski mask — which he typically did because of a blood condition that made him feel cold, according to his family. Three Aurora police officers responded to a report of a suspicious person wearing a mask and waving his arms. Bodycam video later released showed officers ordering McClain to stop. He responded that he was an introvert and “please respect the boundaries that I am speaking.” After questioning him, the officers grabbed McClain. One of them said he believed McClain had reached for a holstered gun and brought McClain to the ground. Aurora police said in a statement that he “resisted contact, a struggle ensued, and was taken into custody.“Authorities said officers applied a carotid control hold on McClain, a type of chokehold meant to restrict blood to the brain to render a person unconscious. Paramedics were called to the scene. McClain was injected with ketamine to sedate him after police video showed him writhing on the ground, saying, “I can’t breathe, please,” and vomiting. He apologized for vomiting.
After brutalizing Elijah McClain, they took selfies at a memorial site set up in his honor.
About seven minutes after he received the drug, McClain was found to have no pulse in the ambulance and went into cardiac arrest, according to a report released in the fall of 2019 by a local prosecutor, Dave Young. Medics revived McClain, but he was later declared brain dead and taken off life support less than a week later. According to Young’s report, the Adams County Coroner’s Office determined that McClain’s death was due to “undetermined causes” and that the “evidence does not support the prosecution of a homicide,” according to Young’s report. Young declined to press charges against the officers. But the coroner did not rule out that the chokehold, in addition to the ketamine, may have contributed to his death. Aurora police banned carotid control holds last summer, and separately, federal authorities said they were reviewing whether a civil rights investigation is warranted.
They were mighty happy knowing they had just killed an innocent young Black man.
In addition, the three officers involved in taking McClain into custody were moved to “nonenforcement” duties. Two remain employed by the department, while a third was one of three officers fired in July 2020 after an internal investigation found they held a selfie photo session near a memorial site for McClain. A fourth officer also resigned as part of the scandal. A lawsuit filed by McClain’s family in August 2020 alleges that excessive force used by the officers over a span of 18 minutes caused an increase of lactic acid in his blood, and mixed with the ketamine injected into him, negatively affected his respiratory system. An independent probe commissioned by the city of Aurora and released in February concluded police had no justification to stop or use force to detain McClain, and responding paramedics sedated him with ketamine “without conducting anything more than a brief visual observation.” According to the panel’s findings, the 5‑foot‑7, 140-pound McClain was given ketamine that would have been proper for a man weighing 190 pounds. The report suggested a change in policy for paramedics responding to the scene with police and said they should not act as an “arm” of the department. (NBCNEWS)
Elijah McClain
Gov. Jared Polis appointed Attorney General Phil Weiser as a special prosecutor in the case after activists demanded a proper investigation into the death of Elijah McClain. Mister Weiser announced the 32-count indictment almost exactly two years after Mr. McClain’s death in August of 2019. In announcing the charges, Weiser declared, “Our goal is to seek justice for Elijah McClain, for his family and friends and our state,” Mr. Weiser said at a news conference announcing the charges, the culmination of months of investigation, protests, and calls for justice by Mr. McClain’s family and friends.”
Coroner Monica Broncucia-Jordan,
In all this, it is important to remember that theAdams County Coroner, Monica Broncucia-Jordan, refused to call Elijah McClain’s cause of death what it is: homicide. Dave Young subsequently opted not to prosecute the cops, a local Prosecutor, which further enraged the community. Events surrounding Monica Broncucia-Jordon office’s decision not to name the cause of death a homicide but “undetermined” set off a discussion in the Bromfield County Council. Her offices also provided coroner’s services. Bromfield officials approved continuing the contract with Coroner Monica Broncucia-Jordan but raised questions on her role in investigating the Aug. 30, 2019, death of Elijah McClain after being violently arrested by Aurora police. Broncucia-Jordan, who’s been Adams County’s coroner since 2011, told the council in a letter on Dec. 17 she would not renew the contract because Broomfield’s elected leaders “expressed a clear lack of confidence” in her office during the City Council meeting. Broncucia-Jordan did not attend the meeting.
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Mike Beckles is a former Police Detective, businessman, freelance writer, black achiever honoree, and creator of the blog mikebeckles.com.
It is pretty easy to scroll past the atrocities quickly these days and pretend that they are anomalies, as some would like to have you believe. Move on to something more palatable, something less demanding on our souls to speak up. When the enemies of humanity tell you it is not racial, ask them to match these facts with white victims.You know what I am talking about; for years, we saw the images of emaciated babies, flies in their mouths, noses, and eyes, ribs sticking out of their sustenance-deprived, malnutrition-ravaged little bodies as their mothers, hardly in any better shape, holds them and try to give comfort. We scrolled past because we felt helpless, that there was nothing we could do, so we hurriedly scrolled past, changed the channel, or turned the page. But where were those who claim to speak for the Lord? Those who took your money every chance they get while telling you that it is what God commands you to do? What about the other things we are supposed to do? Like looking out for the hungry, the poor, the destitute, the widowed, the incarcerated, the orphaned? Don’t they count? This is no different; they tell you if only they obeyed commands, if only they obeyed, if only they sat, if only they stood, if only they did not move, if only they moved, if only they did not fall asleep, if only they weren’t sitting at home, if only they were at home, if only they had signaled when turning, if only they had repaired the broken taillight, if only they weren’t Black.…. that’s what you actually mean!!! It is an extermination campaign sanctioned by the robed gods on the Supreme Court, an entity that has a shameful history against the rights, dignity, autonomy, and existence of African-Americans. Its rulings, and more so its policies, Ie (qualified immunity), gave carte blanch to police to murder without fear of consequence.
THISISJUST A SMALLNUMBEROFTHEPEOPLEBRUTALIZEDANDKILLEDBYPOLICE. ITHARDLYSCRATCHESTHESURFACEOFTHENUMBEROFINNOCENTUNARMEDPEOPLEAMERICANPOLICEMURDER.…
.Black man was beaten by cop to within an inch of his life. (Aaron Larry Bowman). .Black woman tackled by cop while walking her dog. (Nikkita Brown). .Black man killed by police who pulled him over for broken tail light. (Malcolm Williams). .Black kid murdered by cop while playing in the park with a toy gun only 12-years ‑old. (Tamir Rice). . Black man killed by cops in Walmart for having a rifle he picked up to purchase from Walmart. (John Crawford). . Black woman dies in police custody after being arrested for not using a turn signal. (Sandra Bland). . Black man murdered by cop in his apartment as he watched television and ate ice cream. (Botham Jean). . Black man murdered by cop who taught he was using her taser. (Daunte Wright). .Black man murdered by police for standing outside his home. (Amadou Diallo). .Black man murdered by police for standing behind his door. (Kenneth Chamberlain). .Black man murdered by police for standing outside store selling loose cigarettes. (Eric Garner). .Black man murdered by cops for driving while Black. (Philando Castille). .Black man murdered by cops for selling CD’s & DVD’s outside gas station. (Alton Sterling). .Black man murder by cops Riding in the passenger’s seat of a car. (Jordan Edwards). .Black man murdered by cop while holding a cell phone. (Stephon Clark). .Black woman killed by cop in her own home as she played video game with her nephew. (Atatiana Jefferson). .Black woman killed by cops as she sleeps in her house.(Breonna Taylor). .Black man killed by cops for allegedly passing a fake $20 note in a store. (George Floyd) .Black man killed by cop standing in friend’s garage. (Andre Hill). .Black man killed by police while walking home from a convenience store. (Manuel Ellis). .Black man killed by cops after falling asleep in his car. (Rashard Brooks). .Black man killed by cops after mental episode. (Daniel Prude). .Black woman killed by cops after boyfriend asked cops to escort her from home. (Aura Rosser). .Black man killed by cops while riding shackled in police van. (Freddie Gray). .Black woman killed by cops while having a mental episode. (Fanisha Fonville). .Black woman killed by cops who invaded her home. (Michelle Cesseaux). .Black man killed by cop for walking in stairwell of girlfriend’s building. ( Akai Gurley). .Black man killed by cop for walking across the street. (Michael Brown). Black woman killed by cop for trying to leave her home. (Tanisha Anderson). .Black woman killed by cops after her car ran into cruiser. (Gabriella Nevarez). .Black man killed by cops after they illegally stopped him walking home. (Elijah McClain).
According to NPR, Since 2015, police have fatally shot at least 135 unarmed Black men and women nationwide, an NPR investigation found. NPR reviewed police, court, and other records to examine the details of the cases. At least 75% of the officers were white. The latest one happened this month in Killeen, Texas, when Patrick Warren Sr., 52, was fatally shot by an officer responding to a mental health call. Time Magazine wrote; People Expected Police Behavior to Change After George Floyd’s Murder. The Numbers Tell a Different Story. “Since June 2020, police in the U.S. have killed people across different backgrounds at virtually the same rate that they have for the past five years, according to several surveys, despite a pandemic that kept many people at home. As of April 30, there had only been six days this year on which police did not kill a civilian while on duty, according to Mapping Police Violence. Many promised reforms have stalled at the state level — including in the Minnesota legislature—as well as in Washington, with the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act of 2020 dying in the Senate: Time said.
Ending police violence would mean a collective consensus to dismantle the white power structure that police were created to protect and defend. Therefore, as African-Americans become more educated, more informed, and more assertive about their rights, police will, by default, become more violent. For those reasons, police did not step back from the unlawful murders after George Floyd was murdered; if anything, they became more brutal by the numbers. They have a role to fulfill, which has always been to keep Black and Brown people in their place in defense of white supremacy. It is for those reasons that the African-American community must see the police not as an entity that they can call for help. The police in Black communities, and to Black people in America are occupying armies and prowling mercenaries ready to kill to maintain and preserve white power…
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Mike Beckles is a former Police Detective, businessman, freelance writer, black achiever honoree, and creator of the blog mikebeckles.com.
You are not going to believe what you see here. Would this creep walk up to a white woman walking her dog and assault her? The answer is absolutely not. He is still on the job.
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Officials are investigating after a video from this weekend showed a Chicago police officer follow and grab a Black woman as she walked along the lakefront. Videos from the confrontation — which show an officer walking closely after Nikkita Brown, grabbing her and holding her as she tried to leave the park — have spread quickly on social media. Mayor Lori Lightfoot said she’s urging the Civilian Office of Police Accountability to investigate the incident quickly. “I was quite disturbed by what I saw,” Lightfoot said at an unrelated news conference Monday morning. “It looked like the woman was following the direction of the officer and leaving the beach. … This is a pretty straightforward matter. It’s concerning what we saw in the video.” The Civilian Office of Police Accountability, which handles potential misconduct and uses of force by police officers, confirmed it is investigating. But Brown’s attorney — Keenan Saulter, who is also representing Anjanette Young, the woman whose home police wrongfully raided — said the Police Department hasn’t given Brown a copy of her police report, and his office needs help identifying the officer.
“This was an obvious case of racial profiling,” Saulter’s office said in a news release. “Ms. Brown is suffering from emotional trauma as a result of this brutal, unprovoked, and unlawful attack by this Chicago Police Department officer.” About 12:12 a.m. Saturday, Brown was walking her dog near the lakefront in Lincoln Park when an officer walked up to her, according to Saulter’s office. The officer said he was confronting Brown because the park was supposed to be closed, according to Saulter’s law office. Brown told the officer she was leaving the park asked him to stay socially distant because he was not wearing a mask, but he ignored her request, according to Saulter’s office. Video shows Brown asking the officer to stay distant and saying she’s leaving the park, but the officer tells her he’s going to handcuff her and doesn’t need to wear a mask since they are outside.
Brown recorded the officer with her phone as she tried to leave, but the officer attacked her, according to her attorney’s office. Video shows Brown walking away from the officer as he walked after her, waving his arms at her. At one point, Brown stops walking and appears to be using her phone. The officer tries to grab the phone from her hands and then grabs Brown’s arms as she screams for him to “let go” and tries to get away. He wraps his arms around her holds her. Brown’s small dog gets yanked around during the encounter as the officer grabbed her, and Brown’s phone gets knocked out of her hands. The officer lets Brown go, and she picks up her belongings and walks away while the officer watches.
There were other people walking in the park when the officer chose to stop Brown, including a group of four white people she saw behind her, according to Saulter’s office. Witnesses who were in the area recorded a video of the confrontation. “I am deeply concerned by what is depicted on the lakefront beach in that video,” Lightfoot wrote on Twitter. The Police Department said the incident is under investigation but otherwise declined to comment. The Civilian Office of Police Accountability said it is investigating and is “in communication” with Brown’s attorney. During a news conference Monday morning, Supt. David Brown, he’d only received preliminary information about the incident and was going to get more information. He asked for people to allow COPA to investigate. “We don’t have the person’s full accounting of what happened, why it happened, what was said,” David Brown said. “Nor do we have the full accounting of the officer’s statement.
Mayor Lori E. Lightfoot
@chicagosmayor
I am deeply concerned by what is depicted on the lakefront beach in that video. I am aware of the incident, and it is currently under investigation.
COPA is aware of the incident & video currently circulating on social media regarding a CPD officer & woman with her dog on a Chicago beach. We are investigating and in communication with the woman’s attorney.
It will not be the first time that the Mayor of Chicago has expressed [concern] at a video of her officers presumably engaged in grave misconduct, but rather than take corrective steps to enhance the process of justice has dragged her feet and allowed the process to cover for cops. As a consequence, the Chicago Police Department has one of the worst records of corruption as a police department anywhere in the world, dating back to Al Capone’s days. These are police departments that were not built on serving and protecting; neither were they built on respecting the rights of African-Americans. As such, these edifices of oppression From the LAPD through Minnesota, Chicago, Pennsylvania, New York up to Maine must be deconstructed if there is to be true racial justice in America.
The challenge for smaller news agencies and private bloggers to get the facts before the larger population was always a steep climb. However, with Donald Trump’s actions on net neutrality, that challenge became a mount- Everest. Large tech giants like Google and Facebook get to decide what viewers get to see. Hosting platform Hostgator had this to say about net neutrality. (If net neutrality ceases, we could be looking at an internet bogged down by fees, where users must pay to access certain types of content. The various streaming services available today, from NetFlix to Amazon, would impose additional tolls that would then be passed onto the end-users of their services. This would not affect just streaming services but all content). The FCC has hardly done anything to curtail the desires of big-tech to control the information superhighway like truckers control the I‑84.
So even though private bloggers like your humble servant have been warning about the Supreme Court’s actions in solidifying and maintaining police violence in America, those facts hardly get to the larger reading public because of what large corporations like Facebook, Google, Amazon, and others are allowed to get away with by deciding what you are allowed to see, even though the idea of the internet was supposed to be a place where information should flow freely without, discrimination, blocking or throttling internet usage by all ISPs (Internet Service Providers) or any governmental intervention.
Having said that, I must be candid by adding that among the Black population in the United States, there is a certain segment that stubbornly refuses to seek out and find information that informs and educates. At the risk of attracting incoming fire- I venture to add that African-Americans, to a large extent, seem to be reading averse. Sure, a sizeable percentage of the African-American female community is earning college degrees but we are yet to see the data on how this positivity impacts the younger generation one way or the other. By and large, the focus appears to be on entertainment and preening of feathers, except for a few standouts like Stacey Abrams et al. Large News Agencies have a duty to inform and not engage in fluff reporting, but fluff gets eyeballs on television screens these days, not solid news reporting. So I was surprised to read an article by CNN’s Brando Tensley titled (The Supreme Court has sided with the police at the expense of Black Americans). You think?
In his article posted on CNN’s website on August 26th, 2021, Tensley wrote; Mostly, civil rights activists have laid the responsibility for curbing police abuse at the feet of national lawmakers, whose efforts have so far yielded nothing. For all the ferocious debate about the US’s racist policing régime, there’s been minimal discussion about an actor that deserves a lot of the blame for the wretched state of present-day policing: the US Supreme Court. Tenley’s short but brilliant article was a breath of fresh air, for me at least, in that as a local blogger constrained by the lack of neutrality on the web, I felt like a lone voice crying out in the wilderness —at least before Tensley’s article. But in fairness, I have not been silent in pointing to the real cause of police violence in America today: the US Supreme. Court.
It isn’t that this is news; every single step that America takes, in whatever direction it goes, stitched in those steps are threads that protect white supremacy. Every yard of the American body fabric is intertwined with racist protections for whites that are antithetical to the interest of Black & Brown Americans. The Supreme Court is the chief architect of white supremacy in America; it will not protect Black and Brown people from police violence. Police are the enforcement arm of American Fascism, and that’s the bottom line. https://mikebeckles.com/supreme-courts-qualified-immunity-a-death-warrant-on-black-americans/
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Mike Beckles is a former Police Detective, businessman, freelance writer, black achiever honoree, and creator of the blog mikebeckles.com.
While serving in office or before departing office, a Governor or President can grant clemency, commute a convicted person’s sentence, pardon a convicted felon or take other measures as is their right under the law. Governor Andrew Cuomo has been no exception. Before leaving office due to allegations of improper behavior towards women, the Governor, Monday, granted clemency to six persons as is his right. Governor Cuomo’s office says all six demonstrated substantial evidence of rehabilitation and a commitment to their communities.
One of the persons to whom the governor showed mercy is David Gilbert, a 76-year-old Black man. In 1981 Gilbert was the getaway driver of what was then labeled a politically motivated $1.6 million robbery at the Nanuet Mall that killed two police officers and a Brinks security guard. Despite being unarmed, Gilbert was convicted of three counts of second-degree murder and four counts of first-degree robbery in 1983. Gilbert has been serving time at Shawangunk Correctional Facility. “He has served 40 years of a 75-years-to-life sentence, related to an incident in which he was the driver, not the murderer. While incarcerated, Mr. Gilbert has made significant contributions to AIDS education and prevention programs; he has also worked as a student tutor, law library clerk, paralegal assistant, teacher’s aide, and an aide for various additional facility programs. At this time, Mr. Gilbert is the only individual still incarcerated, with no possibility of parole in his lifetime,” Cuomo’s office said in a press release. Gilbert will be referred to the Parole Board for potential release.
This was the tweet from Dutchess County Executive Marc Molinaro, who loves to go to Black Churches and quote scriptures to try and fool religious black church folk.
Marcus J. Molinaro
“Another act of betrayal by a corrupted Governor. He once again betrays the victims of a horrendous crime and the brave men and women of law enforcement while undermining public safety and giving comfort to a terrorist.”
Hey Marc, am I the only Black person who knew that you were a fraud? I mean, as one person of faith to another, I understand the politics behind your decision to speak. But this has so many layers to it. You profess to be a man of faith man, I have seen you come to my church and chew bible leaves to the delight of those who are enamored by you, man .…but look dude, as a former detective, I can spot a phony a mile out man. Where is your Christianity given the facts of this specific case that you condemn the now-former governor for? Do you think for a moment that the sentence meted out to mister Gilbert was a fair and just sentence? And if so, do you think that it was just only because he is black, or because cop’s lives are more important than the lives of others, or both? And oh, while we are on the subject of commutations and pardons, mister County Executive, no one heard Jack s**t from you while the most corrupt insect to occupy the presidency was giving passes to his criminal cabal.
Here is a short list of the criminals Donald Trump pardoned on his way out the door, and oh by the way,.….….that was before he went ahead and incited an insurrection against the United States.
Alex Adjmi: Adjmi was granted a full pardon. The White House said Adjmi was convicted of a financial crime in 1996 and served 5 years in prison.
Fred Keith Alford: Alford received a full pardon. The White House said he was convicted in 1977 for a firearm violation and served one year’s unsupervised probation.
Michael Ashley: Ashley was convicted for bank fraud over the 2009 collapse of mortgage company Lend America and sentenced to 3 years in prison in 2019. He was the executive vice president and chief business strategist with the company. Ashley was ordered to pay $49 million in restitution and $800,000 in forfeiture. His sentence was commuted.
Stephen K. Bannon: Trump’s former chief strategist in the White House was in charge of the final months of his 2016 presidential campaign and was indicted in August along with three others on wire fraud and money laundering conspiracy charges. Prosecutors alleged that Bannon’s crowdfunding “We Build the Wall” campaign raised more than $25 million from Trump supporters and used hundreds of thousands for personal expenses. He was taken into custody by U.S. Postal Inspection Service agents while on board the yacht of Chinese billionaire Guo Wengui. Bannon received a full pardon and now will not have to face a trial.
Lynn Barney: Trump granted a full pardon to Lynn Barney, who was sentenced to 35 months in prison for possessing a firearm as a previously convicted felon, after having previously been convicted for distributing a small amount of marijuana, according to the White House.
David Barren: Trump commuted the sentence of David Barren, who was sentenced to life in prison in addition to 20 years for a drug conspiracy charge. In 2017, President Barack Obama commuted his life term to a 30-year sentence. The White House said Barren is a father of six children and has maintained an exemplary prison record. A petition advocating for further clemency for Barren’s release has garnered nearly 20,000 signatures.
Dr. Faustino Bernadett: Bernadett, a retired anesthesiologist, was sentenced last year to 15 months in federal prison for taking part in a long-running health care fraud scheme where he authorized sham contracts that concealed over $30 million in illegal kickback payments to physicians, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office. The overall scheme resulted in more than $900 million in fraudulent bills being submitted, the office said. The White House said Bernadett has spent the past year “devoted to helping protect his community from Covid-19.” He received a full pardon.
Carl Andrews Boggs: Trump granted a full pardon to Carl Andrews Boggs. In 2014, Boggs pleaded guilty to federal charges stemming from a criminal investigation into the illegal use of a disadvantaged business enterprise to obtain government-funded construction contracts. According to the U.S. Attorney’s Office, he pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to defraud the department of transportation and one count of money laundering conspiracy.
Kristina Bohnenkamp: Trump commuted the sentence of Kristina Bohnenkamp. According to the White House, she has served more than 10 years of a 24-year sentence for a non-violent drug offense.
Todd Boulanger: Trump granted a full pardon to Todd Boulanger, who is a former deputy to disgraced lobbyist Jack Abramoff. In 2009, he pleaded guilty to conspiring with others to commit honest services fraud, according to the Department of Justice. Boulanger, Abramoff and other lobbyists working with them sought to advance the interests of groups and companies they represented by lobbying federal legislative and executive branch officials, the department said.
Jonathon Braun: Braun imported marijuana worth approximately $1.76 billion, from 2008 to 2010, according to Customs and Border Protection documents, including 2,200 pounds in a single incident. He pleaded guilty in 2011 and served five years of a 10-year sentence for conspiracy to import marijuana and to commit money laundering. Trump commuted his sentence.
Elliott Broidy: Broidy, a former Republican National Committee finance chair and one of Trump’s top fundraisers, was pardoned. Broidy pleaded guilty in October to conspiring to violate foreign lobbying laws. Prosecutors said that the scheme aimed to have the Trump administration sink an investigation into the multibillion-dollar looting of a Malaysian state investment fund.
Dwayne Michael Carter Jr.: Carter, a rapper who performs as Lil Wayne, was also granted a pardon. He pleaded guilty in December to a federal weapons charge after he carried a handgun from California to Florida on his private jet. Due to past felony convictions, he is barred under federal law from possessing firearms. The charge carries a maximum prison sentence of 10 years. Carter has frequently expressed support for Trump and recently met with the president on criminal justice issues.
Randall “Duke” Cunningham: Another ex-member of Congress, the California Republican was sentenced to 8 years in prison for bribery and was released in 2013. He received a conditional pardon.
Paul Erickson: Erickson, a conservative operative with ties to the NRA, came under scrutiny during the investigation into Russian election interference. He pleaded guilty to wire fraud and money laundering in an unrelated case.
Rodney Nakia Gibson: Convicted of drug trafficking in 2009, Gibson served more than 11 years in custody, according to the White House. His commutation was supported by Acting Attorney General Jeffrey Rosen and the Office of the Pardon Attorney. The details of his conviction couldn’t be independently verified.
George Gilmore: This former local GOP chairman was convicted in April 2019 of failing to pay payroll taxes and for making false statements on a bank loan application. In an appeal, Gilmore claimed that a “hoarding” disorder made him spend lavishly on personal expenses rather than make timely payments to the IRS. His pardon was supported by former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie among others.
Deborah, Gregory and Martin Jorgensen: In the 1980s, the Jorgensens marketed and sold processed beef as heart-healthy, antibiotic-free and hormone-free. When demand outstripped their supply of beef, they mixed in commercial beef trim that usually used to make hamburgers, without telling their customers. They were convicted in 1996 of several counts, including conspiracy and fraudulent sale of misbranded meat. Martin Jorgensen passed away in 2019, and was married to Deborah Jorgensen. Gregory Jorgensen is their son.
Bill K. Kapri: Kodak Black, whose legal name is Bill Kapri, was sentenced to 46 months in prison on federal weapons charges in 2019 after admitting that he falsified information on federal forms to buy four firearms. The rapper obtained three guns: a 9mm handgun, a .380-caliber handgun and a semi-automatic Mini Draco weapon. He received a pardon.
Kwame Kilpatrick: The former mayor of Detroit had his 28-year sentence commuted. He pleaded guilty to obstruction of justice and resigned from office as part of a plea deal in 2008 following a pay-to-play scheme in which Kilpatrick and his father took kickbacks and bribes to steer city business to certain contractors. He initially served 99 days in prison but then served an additional year for violating his probation and was released in 2011.
Kenneth Kurson: Trump granted clemency to Kurson, the former editor of the New York Observer and friend of Trump son-in-law Jared Kushner who was charged last October with cyberstalking during a heated divorce.
Anthony Levandowski: Levandowski, a former Google engineer who was sentenced for stealing a trade secret on self-driving cars months before he briefly headed Uber Technologies Inc’s rival unit, was also pardoned.
Salomon Melgen: Trump commuted the prison sentence of Melgen, an eye doctor and major Democratic donor convicted of defrauding Medicare patients. He stood trial with New Jersey Sen. Bob Menendez, who lobbied Trump for Melgen’s case.
Desiree Perez: Perez was arrested in 1994 for drug possession and in 1998 for grand larceny and possession of a firearm. In 2019, she was named CEO of Roc Nation, the entertainment company founded by rapper-turned-mogul Jay‑Z.
Albert J. Pirro, Jr.: With less than an hour to go before Biden is sworn in, Trump granted a full pardon to Albert J. Pirro, Jr. Pirro, Jr., the ex-husband of Fox News host and Trump ally Jeanine Pirro, was convicted on conspiracy and tax evasion charges in 2000.
Rick Renzi: Former U.S. Rep. Rick Renzi, R‑Ariz., was granted a full pardon. In 2013, he was sentenced to three years in prison for extortion, bribery, insurance fraud, money laundering and racketeering in a public corruption case. He had served three terms in the House.
Aviem Sella: An Israeli citizen, Sella was indicted in March 1987 on charges he recruited convicted American spy Jonathan Jay Pollard to collect U.S. military secrets for Israel. Trump granted him a full pardon and his request was supported by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, the Israeli ambassador to the U.S. and the U.S. ambassador to Israel.
Brian Simmons: Trump commuted the sentence of Brian Simmons, who has served 5 years of a 15-year sentence for nonviolent conspiracy to manufacture and distribute marijuana.
Syrita Steib-Martin: Syrita Steib of New Orleans, received a full pardon after being convicted at the age of 19 of using fire to commit a felony. Steib now serves as executive director and co-founder of Operation Restoration, which works to create education and work opportunities for formerly incarcerated women.
Patrick Lee Swisher: Patrick Swisher of Charlotte, North Carolina, was granted a full pardon after being convicted in 2002 of tax fraud and false statements and serving 18 months in prison. Previous to this, the Securities and Exchange Commission had charged his company with accounting fraud in 2001. Swisher now works as CEO of a company at which he employs more than 1,000 individuals, according to the White House.
David Tamman: Trump granted a full pardon to David Tamman, who was a partner at a law firm when he doctored financial documents at the behest of a client who was perpetrating a Ponzi scheme. According to the Department of Justice, the scheme ultimately took $22 million from victims. Tamman was found guilty of 10 counts that included obstruction of justice, altering records in a federal investigation, and being an accessory after the fact to the fraud scheme. He was convicted in 2013 and completed his seven-year sentence in 2019.
Casey Urlacher: Urlacher was pardoned after being named in a grand jury indictment in 2020 and being accused of helping to run an illegal offshore gambling business. Urlacher faced two counts in the case, each of which had carried a potential prison sentence of five years. He currently serves as the mayor of Mettawa, Illinois and is the brother of former Chicago Bears linebacker Brian Urlacher.
Monstsho Eugene Vernon: Vernon had his sentence commuted after serving 19 years in prison. Vernon committed numerous armed bank robberies in Greenville, South Carolina. The White House said that some of these offenses involved Vernon carrying BB guns as opposed to genuine firearms.
Blanca Virgen: Blanca Virgen was convicted of drug charges, and has served 12 years of a 30-year sentence. Virgen featured on the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers trial penalty clemency project which described her as “a model prisoner” and highlighted her desire to return to Mexico to care for her children.
Jerry Donnell Walden: Convicted in 1998 of conspiracy to distribute and to possess with intent to distribute five kilograms or more of cocaine, Walden was sentenced to 40 years in prison. President Trump has commuted Walden’s sentence, 23 years into his incarceration.
John Harold Wall: Wall was granted a full pardon after being convicted of aiding and abetting possession with intent to distribute methamphetamine in 1992. According to the White House, he completed a 60 month prison sentence with 4 years’ supervised release.
William Walters: A retired professional gambler, Las Vegas-based William Walters had been sentenced to prison for five years in 2017 for conspiring to commit insider trading from at least 2008 through 2014. Walters, who was 70 at the time of his conviction, was also ordered to pay a $10 million fine. Trump’s commutation of the sentence was supported by former Majority Leader Harry Reid and golfer Phil Mickelson, among others. The New York Times reportedthat this pardon was brokered by John Dowd, Trump’s former personal lawyer, who was hired by Walters to exert his influence on Trump
Eliyahu Weinstein: Weinstein, from Lakewood, New Jersey, has been pardoned whilst serving his eighth year of a 24-year sentence for a real estate investment fraud as well as money laundering charges. His commutation was supported by former U.S. Attorney Brett Tolman, former Representative Bob Barr, and Alan Dershowitz, among others.
Shalom Weiss: Weiss was pardoned 18 years into an 835-year sentence — believed to be the longest-ever white-collar prison sentence — for his role in setting up an insurance fraud scheme. He received support from Alan Dershowitz and Jay Sekulow, who sent letters to Trump.
Tom Leroy Whitehurst: The White House has said that Whitehurst was serving a life sentence in prison for leading a conspiracy to manufacture at least 16.7 kilograms of methamphetamine and possessing numerous firearms during the course of the conspiracy. His sentence has been commuted to 30 years, of which he’s served 24.
Caroline Yeats: The White House has said that Yeats’s 20-year sentence has been commuted. She has served almost 7 years of it and is a first-time, non-violent drug offender.
Chris Young: Young was pardoned for his non-violent drug offense in a conspiracy case and had served over 10 years of the sentence. He has initially been given a life sentence. Kim Kardashian West had been advocating for his release.
Robert “Bob” Zangrillo: Robert Zangrillo was pardoned for his role in the 2019 college admissions scandal. Zangrillo, the CEO of a private investment firm in Miami, FL, was accused of bribing employees from the University of Southern California’s athletics department to secure his daughter’s college place. He was charged with conspiracy to commit mail fraud and honest services mail fraud.
Here is the full list, as provided by the White House:
Abel Holtz — President Trump granted a full pardon to Abel Holtz. This pardon is supported by Representative Mario Diaz-Balart and friends and business colleagues in his community. Mr. Holtz is currently 86 years old. In 1995, he pled guilty to one count of impeding a grand jury investigation and was sentenced to 45 days in prison. Before his conviction, Mr. Holtz, who was the Chairman of a local bank, never had any legal issues and has had no other legal issues since his conviction. Mr. Holtz has devoted extensive time and resources to supporting charitable causes in South Florida, including substantial donations to the City of Miami Beach.
Jaime A. Davidson — President Trump commuted the sentence of Jaime A. Davidson. This commutation is supported by Mr. Davidson’s family and friends, Alice Johnson, and numerous others. In 1993, Mr. Davidson was convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment in relation to the murder of an undercover officer. Notably, witnesses who testified against Mr. Davidson later recanted their testimony in sworn affidavits and further attested that Mr. Davidson had no involvement. Although Mr. Davidson has been incarcerated for nearly 29 years, the admitted shooter has already been released from prison. Following the commutation of his sentence, Mr. Davidson will continue legal efforts to clear his name. In addition, while incarcerated, Mr. Davidson mentored and tutored over 1,000 prisoners to help them achieve their GED certificates. Mr. Davidson has earned praise from prison officials for his dedication to helping others.
James E. Johnson, Jr. — President Trump granted a full pardon to James E. Johnson, Jr. In 2008, Mr. Johnson pled guilty to charges related to migratory birds. Mr. Johnson received 1 year probation, was barred from hunting during that period, and a $7,500 fine was imposed. Throughout his life, Mr. Johnson has made numerous contributions for the conservation of wildlife.
Tommaso Buti — President Trump granted a full pardon to Tommaso Buti. Mr. Buti is an Italian citizen and a respected businessman. He is the Chief Operating Officer of a large Italian company and has started a successful charitable initiative to raise funds for UNICEF. More than 20 years ago, Mr. Buti was charged with financial fraud involving a chain of restaurants. He has not, however, been convicted in the United States.
Jawad A. Musa — President Trump commuted the sentence of Jawad A. Musa. In 1991, Mr. Musa was sentence to life imprisonment for a non-violent, drug-related offense. Mr. Musa’s sentencing judge and the prosecutor on the case have both requested clemency on his behalf. He is currently 56-years old. During his time in prison, Mr. Musa has strengthened his faith and taken dozens of educational courses. Mr. Musa is blessed with a strong supportive network in Baltimore, Maryland and has numerous offers of employment.
Adriana Shayota — President Trump commuted the sentence of Adriana Shayota. Ms. Shayota has served more than half of her 24 month sentence. The Deputy Mayor of Chula Vista, California, John McCann, supports this commutation, among other community leaders. Ms. Shayota is a mother and a deeply religious woman who had no prior convictions. She was convicted of conspiracy to traffic in counterfeit goods, commit copyright infringement, and introduce misbranded food into interstate commerce. During her time in prison, Ms. Shayota mentored those who wanted to improve their lives and demonstrated an extraordinary commitment to rehabilitation.
Glen Moss — President Trump granted a full pardon to Glen Moss. After pleading guilty in 1998, Mr. Moss has been a vital member of his community. Mr. Moss has been committed to numerous philanthropic efforts at the national level, including St Jude’s Hospital for Children, Breast Cancer Awareness, and the Colon Cancer Foundation. Within his community, he has contributed to Danbury Hospital and Ann’s Place, a community-based cancer support center.
Michael Liberty — President Trump granted a full pardon to Michael Liberty. Mr. Liberty’s request for clemency is supported by Representative Susan Austin, Matthew E. Sturgis, and Anthony Fratianne. In 2016 Mr. Liberty was convicted for campaign finance violations and later was indicted for related offenses. Mr. Liberty is the father of 7 children and has been involved in numerous philanthropic efforts.
Greg Reyes — President Trump granted a full pardon to Greg Reyes. This pardon is supported by Shon Hopwood, former United States Attorney Brett Tolman, and numerous others. Mr. Reyes was the former CEO of Brocade Communications. Mr. Reyes was convicted of securities fraud. The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, however, threw out his convictions, finding prosecutorial misconduct. He was later retried, convicted, and sentenced to 18 months in Federal prison. Mr. Reyes has accepted full responsibility for his actions and has been out of prison for more than 8 years.
Ferrell Damon Scott — President Trump commuted the sentence of Ferrell Damon Scott. This commutation is supported by former Acting United States Attorney Sam Sheldon, who prosecuted his case and wrote that he “… strongly does not believe that [Mr. Scott] deserves a mandatory life sentence.” Ms. Alice Johnson, the CAN-DO Foundation, and numerous others also support clemency for Mr. Scott. Mr. Scott has served nearly 9 years of a life imprisonment sentence for possession with intent to distribute marijuana. Under today’s sentencing guidelines, it is likely that Mr. Scott would not have received such a harsh sentence.
Jeffrey Alan Conway — President Trump granted a full pardon to Jeffrey Alan Conway. Mr. Conway’s pardon is strongly supported by his business partners Gary N. Solomon and Ely Hurwitz, members of law enforcement, and numerous other members of the community. Since his release from prison, Mr. Conway has led a successful life and currently runs 10 restaurant businesses that employ nearly 500 people. Mr. Conway is active in his community and in various philanthropic efforts.
Benedict Olberding — President Trump granted a full pardon to Benedict Olberding. Mr. Olberding was convicted on one count of bank fraud. Mr. Olberding is an upstanding member of the community who has paid his debt to society. After completing his sentence, he purchased two aquarium stores, as well as a consulting business to train prospective mortgage brokers.
Lou Hobbs — President Trump commuted the sentence of Lou Hobbs. Mr. Hobbs has served 24 years of his life sentence. While incarcerated, Mr. Hobbs completed his GED as well as various other education classes. Mr. Hobbs is dedicated to improving his life and is focused on his family and friends who have assisted him during difficult times.
Matthew Antoine Canady — President Trump commuted the sentence of Matthew Antoine Canady. This commutation is supported by Acting Attorney General Jeffrey Rosen and the Office of the Pardon Attorney. Mr. Canady had an unstable childhood and all of his prior drug-related convictions occurred during his teenage years. Mr. Canady worked hard to move beyond his challenging circumstances and has demonstrated extraordinary rehabilitation while in custody. He has maintained clear conduct while incarcerated and has notably taken advantage of significant vocational programs, including an electrical apprenticeship. He receives “outstanding” work reports and is described as “hardworking” and “respectful” by the Bureau of Prisons staff. Mr. Canady takes full responsibility for his criminal actions and would like to find gainful employment to help support his children.
Mario Claiborne — President Trump commuted the sentence of Mario Claiborne. This commutation is supported by Acting Attorney General Jeffrey Rosen and the Office of the Pardon Attorney. Mr. Claiborne is serving life imprisonment and has already served more than 28 years in prison. For more than 20 years, Mr. Claiborne has maintained clear conduct. Mr. Claiborne currently works for a UNICOR facility and has completed rehabilitative programming, including drug education.
Luis Fernando Sicard — President Trump commuted the sentence of Luis Fernando Sicard. This commutation is supported by Acting Attorney General Jeffrey Rosen and the Office of the Pardon Attorney. Mr. Sicard was sentenced in 2000 for conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute cocaine and possession of a firearm during and in furtherance of a drug trafficking crime. He has served 20 years with clear conduct. Mr. Sicard has participated in substantial programming, including a number of vocational courses. Currently, Mr. Sicard works in the camp vehicular factory and previously worked in UNICOR earning “outstanding” work reports, and he also volunteers in the inmate puppy program. Importantly, Mr. Sicard takes full responsibility for his criminal actions. Mr. Sicard is a former Marine and father of two girls.
DeWayne Phelps — President Trump commuted the sentence of DeWayne Phelps. This commutation is supported by Acting Attorney General Jeffrey Rosen and the Office of the Pardon Attorney. Mr. Phelps has served 11 years in prison for conspiracy to distribute methamphetamine. He has served over a decade in prison with clear conduct, has trained as a dental apprentice, participated in UNICOR, and is noted as being a reliable inmate capable of being assigned additional responsibilities. Most notably, Mr. Phelps’s sentence would unquestionably be lower today under the First Step Act.
Isaac Nelson — President Trump commuted the sentence of Isaac Nelson. This commutation is supported by Acting Attorney General Jeffrey Rosen and the Office of the Pardon Attorney. Mr. Nelson is serving a mandatory 20 year sentence for conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute and distribution of 5 kilograms or more of cocaine and 50 grams or more of crack cocaine. Following the First Step Act’s changes to the definition of serious drug felony, Mr. Nelson would no longer receive a mandatory minimum term of 20 years’ imprisonment. Instead, he would likely face a 10-year sentence. He has already served more than 11 years in prison. Throughout his incarceration, he appears to have demonstrated commendable adjustment to custody.
Traie Tavares Kelly — President Trump commuted the sentence of Traie Tavares Kelly. This commutation is supported by Acting Attorney General Jeffrey Rosen and the Office of the Pardon Attorney. Mr. Kelly was convicted of conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute and to distribute 50 grams or more of cocaine base and 5 kilograms or more of cocaine. He has served over 14 years in prison, but if he were sentenced today, he would likely be subject only to 10-year mandatory minimum. Moreover, Mr. Kelly has substantial work history while incarcerated and his notable accomplishments in education and programming demonstrate that he has used his time to maximize his chance at being a productive citizen upon release.
Javier Gonzales — President Trump commuted the sentence of Javier Gonzales. This commutation is supported by Acting Attorney General Jeffrey Rosen and the Office of the Pardon Attorney. Mr. Gonzales was convicted of conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute methamphetamine and distribution of methamphetamine in 2005. He has served over 14 years in prison, which is 4 years longer than the 10-year sentence he would likely receive today. He has a demonstrated record of rehabilitation during his incarceration, including steady employment, with substantial UNCIOR experience, and participation in vocational programming and training to facilitate his successful reintegration into the workforce upon release. He also has no history of violent conduct. Mr. Gonzales has actively addressed his admitted substance abuse issues with nonresidential drug treatment and participation in the residential program.
Eric Wesley Patton — President Trump granted a full pardon to Eric Wesley Patton. This pardon is supported by former Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein and the Office of the Pardon Attorney. Mr. Patton was convicted of making a false statement on a mortgage application in 1999. In the 20 years since his conviction, Mr. Patton has worked hard to build a sterling reputation, been a devoted parent, and made solid contributions to his community by quietly performing good deeds for friends, neighbors, and members of his church.
Robert William Cawthon — President Trump granted a full pardon to Robert William Cawthon. His pardon is supported by former Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein and the Office of the Pardon Attorney. Mr. Cawthon was convicted in 1992 for making a false statement on a bank loan application and was sentenced to 3 years’ probation, conditioned upon 180 days’ home confinement. Mr. Cawthon has accepted responsibility for his offense, served his sentence without incident, and fulfilled his restitution obligation. His atonement has been exceptional, and since his conviction he has led an unblemished life while engaging in extensive, praiseworthy community service.
Hal Knudson Mergler — President Trump granted a full pardon to Hal Knudson Mergler. This pardon is supported by former Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein and the Office of the Pardon Attorney. Mr. Mergler was convicted of conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute and distribution of lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) in 1992. He received 1 month imprisonment, 3 years supervised release, and ordered to pay restitution. Since his conviction, Mr. Mergler has lived a productive and law-abiding life, including by earning a college degree, creating a successful business career, and starting a family. He has made significant contributions to his community and has helped to build a new school for a non-profit charitable organization. He is uniformly praised as a hardworking and ethical businessman and a caring father.
Gary Evan Hendler — President Trump granted a full pardon to Gary Evan Hendler. This pardon is supported by former Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein and the Office of the Pardon Attorney. In 1984, Mr. Hendler was convicted of conspiracy to distribute and dispense controlled substances and served 3 years’ probation for his crime. He is remorseful and has taken full responsibility for his criminal actions. In the 40 years since his conviction, Mr. Hendler has lived a law-abiding life and has positively contributed to his community. He is financially stable and owns a successful real estate business. Most notably, he has helped others recover from addiction. Since 1982, he has organized and led weekly AA meetings. He also has mentored many individuals on their journey to sobriety with his radio broadcasts. His former probation officer noted that Mr. Hendler had become “integral” in the lives of many members of the community who were dealing with substance abuse issues. Further, his efforts in addiction and recovery have been recognized by Pennsylvania Governor Tom Wolf, who recently appointed him to a state advisory council on drug and alcohol abuse.
Steven Samuel Grantham — President Trump granted a full pardon to Steven Samuel Grantham. This pardon is supported by Mr. Grantham’s friends and family who praise his moral character, Acting Attorney Jeffrey Rosen, former Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, and the Office of the Pardon Attorney. Mr. Grantham was convicted in 1967 for stealing a vehicle. He received 18-months imprisonment, and 2 years’ probation. Since his conviction and release from prison, he has demonstrated remorse and accepted responsibility for his crime, which he committed approximately 50 years ago when he was just 19 years old. Mr. Grantham has lived a law-abiding and stable life. Most notably, he stepped in and assumed custody of his grandchild when the child’s parents were unable to care for him. He now seeks a pardon for forgiveness and to restore his gun rights.
Clarence Olin Freeman — President Trump granted a full pardon to Clarence Olin Freeman. This pardon is supported by former Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein and the Office of the Pardon Attorney. Mr. Freeman was convicted in 1965 for operating an illegal whiskey still. He received 9 months imprisonment and 5 years’ probation. Since his conviction and release from prison, Mr. Freeman has led a law-abiding life. He has expressed sincere remorse for his illegal activity and remains mindful of the valuable lesson his conviction taught him. In the approximately 55 years since his conviction, he has built a stable marriage, founded a thriving business, and contributed positively to his community. He has earned a reputation for honesty, hard work, and generosity.
John Knock — President Trump commuted the sentence of John Knock. This commutation is supported by his family. Mr. Knock is a 73 year-old man, a first-time, non-violent marijuana only offender, who has served 24 years of a life sentence. Mr. Knock has an exemplary prison history, during which he completed college accounting classes and has had zero incident reports.
Kenneth Charles Fragoso — President Trump commuted the sentence of Kenneth Charles Fragoso. Mr. Fragoso is a 66 year-old United States Navy veteran who has served more than 30 years of a life sentence for a nonviolent drug offense. Mr. Fragoso has an exemplary prison history and has worked for UNICOR for over 20 years, learned new trades, and has mentored fellow inmates.
Luis Gonzalez — President Trump commuted the sentence of Luis Gonzalez. Mr. Gonzalez is a 78 year-old non-violent drug offender who has served more than 27 years of a life sentence. Under the First Step Act, Mr. Fragoso would not have been subject to a mandatory life sentence. Mr. Gonzalez has an upstanding prison record and has worked for UNICOR for over 20 years producing military uniforms.
Anthony DeJohn — President Trump commuted the sentence of Anthony DeJohn. Mr. DeJohn has served more than 13 years of a life sentence for conspiracy to distribute marijuana. Mr. DeJohn has maintained a clear disciplinary record and has been recognized for his outstanding work ethic while incarcerated. Mr. DeJohn has employment and housing available to him upon release.
Corvain Cooper — President Trump commuted the sentence of Mr. Corvain Cooper. Mr. Cooper is a 41-year-old father of two girls who has served more than 7 years of a life sentence for his non-violent participation in a conspiracy to distribute marijuana.
Way Quoe Long — President Trump commuted the sentence of Way Quoe Long. Mr. Long is a 58-year-old who has served nearly half of a 50-year sentence for a non-violent conviction for conspiracy to manufacture and distribute marijuana. Mr. Long has spent his incarceration striving to better himself through English proficiency classes and by obtaining his GED. Upon release, Mr. Long will reunite with his family and will be strongly supported as he integrates back into the community.
Michael Pelletier — President Trump commuted the sentence of Michael Pelletier. Mr. Pelletier is a 64-year-old who has served 12 years of a 30-year sentence for conspiracy to distribute marijuana. Mr. Pelletier has maintained a clear disciplinary record, has thrived as an artist working with oil paints on canvas, and has taken several courses to perfect his skill while incarcerated. Upon his release, Mr. Pelletier will have a meaningful place of employment and housing with his brother.
Craig Cesal — President Trump commuted the sentence of Craig Cesal. Mr. Cesal is a father of two, one of whom unfortunately passed away while he was serving his life sentence for conspiracy to distribute marijuana. Mr. Cesal has had an exemplary disciplinary record and has become a paralegal assistant and a Eucharistic Minister in the Catholic Church to assist and guide other prisoners. Upon his release, Mr. Cesal looks forward to reintegrating back into society and to contributing to his community while living with his daughter with whom he has remained close. Mr. Cesal hopes to be a part of her upcoming wedding.
Darrell Frazier — President Trump commuted the sentence of Darrell Frazier. Mr. Frazier is a 60-year-old who has served 29 years of a life sentence for non-violent conspiracy to distribute and possess with intent to distribute cocaine. Mr. Frazier has had an exemplary disciplinary record in prison and has spent his time creating the Joe Johnson Tennis Foundation, a 501(c)(3) that provides free tennis lessons to hundreds of children in underserved communities. Upon his release, Mr. Frazier will have a meaningful place of employment and housing with his mother.
Lavonne Roach — President Trump commuted the sentence of Lavonne Roach. Ms. Roach has served 23 years of a 30-year sentence for non-violent drug charges. She has had an exemplary prison record and has tutored and mentored other prisoners. Ms. Roach has a strong family support system to help her transition back into the community.
Robert Francis — President Trump commuted the sentence of Robert Francis. Mr. Francis has served 18 years of a life sentence for non-violent drug conspiracy charges. Mr. Francis has a spotless disciplinary record in prison and has been active in his efforts toward rehabilitation. Upon release, Mr. Francis, a father of 3, will live with his sister in Houston, Texas
Derrick Smith — President Trump commuted the sentence of Derrick Smith. Mr. Smith is a 53-year-old who has served more than 20 years of a nearly 30-year sentence for distribution of drugs to a companion who passed away. Mr. Smith is deeply remorseful for his role in this tragic death and has had an exemplary record while incarcerated. Mr. Smith intends to secure a construction job, care for his mother and his son, and rebuild his relationship with his two other children.
Raymond Hersman — President Trump commuted the sentence of Raymond Hersman. Mr. Hersman is a 55-year-old father of two who has served more than 9 years of a 20-year sentence. While incarcerated, Mr. Hersman has maintained a spotless disciplinary record, worked steadily, and participated in several programming and educational opportunities. Upon release, he looks forward to transitioning back into the community and leading a productive life with strong family support.
James Romans — President Trump commuted the sentence of James Romans. Mr. Romans is a father and a grandfather who received a life sentence without parole for his involvement in a conspiracy to distribute marijuana. Mr. Romans has had an exemplary disciplinary record for the more than 10 years he has served, and has completed a long list of courses. He has already secured job opportunities that will help him successfully re-enter society.
Michael Harris — President Trump commuted the sentence of Michael Harris. Mr. Harris is a 59 year old who has served 30 years of a 25 year to life sentence for conspiracy to commit first-degree murder. Mr. Harris has had an exemplary prison record for three decades. He is a former entrepreneur and has mentored and taught fellow prisoners how to start and run businesses. He has completed courses towards business and journalism degrees. Upon his release, Mr. Harris will have a meaningful place of employment and housing with the support of his family.
Kyle Kimoto — President Trump commuted the sentence of Kyle Kimoto. Mr. Kimoto is a father of six who has served 12 years of his 29-year sentence for a non-violent telemarketing fraud scheme. Mr. Kimoto has been an exemplary prisoner, has held numerous jobs, shown remorse, and mentored other inmates in faith. Upon his release, he has a job offer and will help care for his six children and three grandchildren.
Chalana McFarland – President Trump commuted the sentence of Chalana McFarland. Ms. McFarland has served 15 years of a 30-year sentence. Though she went to trial, Ms. McFarland actually cooperated with authorities by informing them of a potential attack on the United States Attorney. Her co-defendants who pled guilty, however, received lesser sentences ranging from 5 to 87 months. Ms. McFarland was a model inmate and is now under home confinement.
John Estin Davis – President Trump commuted the sentence of John Estin Davis. This commutation is supported by Caroline Bryan, Luke Bryan, Ellen Boyer, Amy Davis, Kim Davis, Brandon McWherter, Sheila McWherter, Dr. Jeff Hall, Dr. Brad Maltz, Brent Ford, Mark Lotito, Keri Rowland, Mark Rowland, and Stephen Stock. Mr. Davis has spent the last 4 months incarcerated for serving as Chief Executive Office of a healthcare company with a financial conflict of interest. Notably, no one suffered financially as a result of his crime and he has no other criminal record. Prior to his conviction, Mr. Davis was well known in his community as an active supporter of local charities. He is described as hardworking and deeply committed to his family and country. Mr. Davis and his wife have been married for 15 years, and he is the father of three young children.
Douglas Jemal – President Trump granted a full pardon to Douglas Jemal. Mr. Jemal is an American businessman and philanthropist credited with rebuilding many urban inner cities in the United States. In 2008, Mr. Jemal was convicted of fraud. In addition, Mr. Jemal was instrumental to various other charitable causes, including the rebuilding of churches prior to his conviction. Notably, at his trial the presiding judge told prosecutors that he thought it “inconceivable” to send Mr. Jemal to prison.
Noah Kleinman – President Trump commuted the sentence of Noah Kleinman. Mr. Kleinman is a 45-year old father of two children. The mother of his children unfortunately passed away during Mr. Kleinman’s incarceration. Mr. Kleinman has served 6 years of a nearly 20 year sentence for a non-violent crime to distribute marijuana. Mr. Kleinman has had an exemplary prison history and has worked to remain close to his children and his father. Upon release, he looks forward to living with his father, working for the family business, and caring for his children.
Dr. Scott Harkonen – President Trump granted a full pardon Dr. Scott Harkonen. Dr. Harkonen was convicted of fraud based on a misleading caption in a press release with respect to a treatment for a disease. Dr. Harkonen is world renowned for his discovery of a new kidney disease, as well as its cause and treatment. Dr. Harkonen looks forward to returning to medicine.
Johnny D. Phillips, Jr. – President Trump granted a full pardon to Johnny D. Phillips, Jr. This pardon is supported by Senator Rand Paul, the former United States Attorney for the Middle District of Tennessee, and numerous members of his community. In 2016, Mr. Phillips was convicted of conspiracy to commit wire fraud and mail fraud. Mr. Phillips is known as an upstanding citizen and is a valued member of his community. He dedicates his time to his three young children and is an advocate for Type 1 diabetes research.
Dr. Mahmoud Reza Banki – President Trump granted a full pardon to Dr. Mahmoud Reza Banki. This pardon is supported by many elected officials of stature, including the late Representative John Lewis, Senator Diane Feinstein, and other Members of Congress. Dr. Banki is an Iranian American citizen who came to the United States when he was 18 years old. He graduated from the University of California, Berkeley, before obtaining a PhD from Princeton University and an MBA from the University of California, Los Angeles. In 2010 Dr. Banki was charged with monetary violations of Iranian sanctions and making false statements. The charges related to sanctions violations were subsequently overturned by the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. However, the felony charges for making false statements have prevented Dr. Banki from resuming a full life. In the years since his conviction, Dr. Banki has dedicated himself to his community and maintained a sincere love and respect for the United States.
Tena Logan – President Trump commuted the sentence of Tena Logan. Ms. Logan has served 8 years of a 14-year sentence for a non-violent drug offense. She had an exemplary prison record with extensive work and programming, and has assumed several leadership positions. In addition, Ms. Logan was authorized to work outside the perimeter of the prison, and was granted home confinement under the CARES Act last summer. Today, Ms. Logan lives with her husband and works fulltime at a major retail store.
MaryAnne Locke – President Trump commuted the sentence of MaryAnne Locke. Ms. Locke has served roughly 11 years of a nearly 20-year sentence for a non-violent drug offense. Despite the difficulties of beginning her sentence just 6 weeks after having a Caesarean section, her prison record has been exemplary, with extensive programming and work. Ms. Locke was authorized to work outside the perimeter of the prison, and was granted home confinement under the CARES Act last summer. Today, she lives with her father, is building a relationship with her children, and works fulltime at a major retail store.
April Coots – President Trump commuted the sentence of April Coots. Ms. Coots has served more than 10 years of her 20-year sentence for a non-violent drug offense. Throughout her incarceration, she has been an exemplary inmate, obtained an HVAC license, and completed the PAWS apprenticeship program. During the 18 months before the trial, Ms. Coots started a business, completed her GED, and took two semesters of community college classes. Importantly, Ms. Coots has a supportive family and church community that will help her transition and create a stable network for her post-incarceration
Jodi Lynn Richter – President Trump commuted the sentence of Jodi Lynn Richter. Ms. Richter has served 10 years of a 15-year sentence for a non-violent drug offense. Ms. Richter has an exemplary prison record, and spends her time training service dogs in the PAWS program, tutoring other inmates in pursuit of their GED, and learning to operate a range of heavy machinery. Her parents have continued to support her and she has various employment opportunities available.
Mary Roberts – President Trump commuted the sentence of Mary Roberts. Ms. Roberts has served 10 years of a 19-year sentence for a non-violent drug offense. She has maintained an exemplary disciplinary record, and a strong programming and work history, including as a part of the PAWS program, UNICOR and food service, and she is authorized to work outside the prison perimeter. Upon her release, Ms. Roberts plans to spend time with her daughter and enjoys strong support from her family. In addition, she has various employment opportunities available.
Cassandra Ann Kasowski – President Trump commuted the sentence of Cassandra Ann Kasowski. Notably, her warden recommended her for home confinement under the CARES Act. Ms. Kasowski has served more than 7 years of a 17-year sentence for a non-violent drug offense. She has been an exemplary inmate and has worked extensively, including as a part of the PAWS program and in UNICOR. Upon her release, she plans to spend time with her son and seek employment.
Lerna Lea Paulson – President Trump commuted the sentence of Lerna Lea Paulson. Notably, Ms. Paulson’s warden recommended her for home confinement under the CARES Act. Ms. Paulson has served nearly 7 years of a 17-year sentence for a non-violent drug offense. During her time in prison, she has maintained an exemplary disciplinary record, has worked full-time in UNICOR, and served as a mental health counselor. In addition, she has served an inmate companion as well as a suicide watch companion. She is also authorized to work outside the prison perimeter. Upon her release, she plans on spending time with her family and seek employment.
Ann Butler — President Trump commuted the sentence of Ann Butler. Ms. Butler has served more than 10 years of a nearly 20-year sentence for a non-violent offense. She has an exemplary prison record, with extensive programming and work history and has garnered outstanding evaluations. In addition, she is extraordinarily devoted to her faith. At the time of her arrest, Ms. Butler was caring for five children and held two minimum-wage jobs. Upon her release, Ms. Butler wishes to reunite with her family and seek employment.
Sydney Navarro — President Trump commuted the sentence of Sydney Navarro. Ms. Navarro has served nearly 8 years of a 27-year sentence for a non-violent drug offense. She has an exemplary prison record. In addition, Ms. Navarro obtained her GED, participated in extensive program work, and earned excellent work evaluations. Notably, Ms. Navarro was chosen to speak to at-risk youth in the community through the SHARE program. Upon her release, Ms. Navarro wishes to reunite with her daughter and seek employment.
Tara Perry — President Trump commuted the sentence of Tara Perry. Ms. Perry has served nearly 7 years of a 16-year sentence for a non-violent drug offense. She has maintained an exemplary prison record and has obtained her nursing certification. Ms. Perry also enjoys singing during the prison religious services. Upon her release, Ms. Perry plans to spend time with her mother and seek employment.
John Nystrom – President Trump granted a full pardon to John Nystrom, who, other than this conviction, was described by his sentencing judge as a “model citizen.” His clemency is supported by Governor Kristi Noem and Senator Michael Rounds. Over 10 years ago, while working as a contractor on a school reconstruction project, Mr. Nystrom failed to alert the proper authorities when he learned that a subcontractor was receiving double payments for work performed. Mr. Nystrom took full responsibility for this oversight and even tried to pay the Crowe Creek Tribe, who was paying for the work, restitution before he pled guilty. Mr. Nystrom has since paid his restitution in full. Mr. Nystrom teaches Sunday school and volunteers for the Knights of Columbus and Habitat for Humanity, among other organizations, and has previously served as County Commissioner.
Jessica Frease — President Trump granted a full pardon to Jessica Frease. This pardon is supported by Governor Kristi Noem, South Dakota State Senator Lynne Hix-DiSanto, the United States Probation Officer responsible for Ms. Frease’s supervision, and many in her community. Ms. Frease was 20 years old when she was convicted after converting stolen checks and negotiating them through the bank where she worked as a teller. Upon her arrest, however, she immediately relinquished the stolen funds to the authorities. After serving her two year sentence, she was granted early termination of her supervised release due to her commendable conduct. Currently, Ms. Frease is studying to become an Emergency Medical Technician and devotes her time and energy to raising funds for cancer patients.
Robert Cannon “Robin” Hayes — President Trump granted a full pardon to Robert Cannon “Robin” Hayes. The former North Carolina Congressman is serving a 1‑year term of probation for making a false statement in the course of a Federal investigation. In addition to his years in Congress, Mr. Hayes has served as Chairman of the North Carolina Republican Party and Chair of the National Council of Republican Party Chairs. Senator Thom Tillis and several members of the North Carolina Congressional delegation strongly support clemency for Mr. Hayes.
Thomas Kenton “Ken” Ford — President Trump granted a full pardon to Ken Ford, a 38-year veteran of the coal industry and currently the General Manager of a coal company. Mr. Ford’s pardon is supported by members of the coal mining community, including those with extensive experience in mining operations, safety, and engineering, who describe Mr. Ford as a “model manager” who conducts himself with the utmost professionalism and integrity. Twenty years ago, Mr. Ford made a material misstatement to Federal mining officials. Mr. Ford pled guilty and served a sentence of 30 years’ probation. In the decades since, Mr. Ford has been an upstanding member of his community and has used this experience and his decades of expertise to keep miners safe, including promoting truthfulness and integrity with Federal mining officials, for whom Mr. Ford states that he has the “utmost respect.”
Jon Harder — President Trump commuted the sentence of Jon Harder, former President and CEO of Sunwest Management Inc., who has served nearly 5 years of a 15-year prison sentence. Notable figures, including the Honorable Michael Hogan who served as the Federal judge overseeing Sunwest’s bankruptcy and receivership, Ford Elsaesser who served as counsel to Sunwest’s creditors in receivership, and multiple other individuals involved in the litigation support Mr. Harder’s commutation. Mr. Harder was serving as president and CEO of Sunwest Management Inc., a large management company overseeing residential senior care facilities, when he misused investment funds during the real estate crisis. Mr. Harder fully accepted responsibility, pled guilty, and cooperated with the government’s civil and criminal actions against him at great personal cost. According to former Chief Judge Hogan, Mr. Harder’s full coöperation “against his substantial financial and penal interests” helped secure the sale of the company’s assets, ensuring that Sunwest’s investors recovered more of their investment, seniors could continue living in their facilities, and employees could retain their livelihoods. Mr. Elsaesser stated that “of all the financial wrongdoers that [the court and the Government] dealt with during the real estate crash of 2008, Mr. Harder acted more responsibly than any of his ‘peers.’” President Trump commends Mr. Harder for choosing to put his employees, investors, and the senior citizens residing in Sunwest’s homes above himself.
Scott Conor Crosby — President Trump granted a full pardon to Scott Conor Crosby. Mr. Crosby is supported by Senator Martha McSally, the Mayor and Vice Mayor of Mesa, Arizona, and the Bishop of his church, all of whom attest to Mr. Crosby’s service to his community and upstanding character. In 1992, Mr. Crosby made a “‘spur of the moment’ poor decision” to participate in a co-worker’s plan to commit a bank robbery. Mr. Crosby was arrested the same day and cooperated with the authorities. Since his release from prison, he has spent significant time volunteering at his church, mentoring youth, and has earned a certification as an Emergency Medical Technician. Mr. Crosby’s civil rights were restored by the State of Arizona in 2003, and this action restores his Federal civil rights.
Adrianne Miller – President Trump commuted the remaining sentence of Adrianne Miller. This commutation is supported by former U.S. Attorney Brett Tolman and the Clemency for All Non-Violent Drug Offenders (CAN-DO) Foundation. Ms. Miller has served 6 years of a 15-year sentence after pleading guilty to conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute methamphetamine and possession of a list I chemical. Ms. Miller, who has struggled with drug addiction, has fully committed to rehabilitation while in prison. In addition, she has taken numerous courses including drug education, life management, and has participated in the Life Connections Program, an intensive, multi-phase re-entry program offered by the Bureau of Prisons. She is extremely remorseful, regrets her “destructive choices” and has taken full responsibility for her actions.
Joshua J. Smith — President Trump granted a full pardon to Joshua J. Smith. Tennessee Governor Bill Lee, Representative Tim Burchett, Commissioner of the Tennessee Department of Corrections Tony Parker, Director of the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation David Rausch, and numerous other community and faith leaders support the pardon of Mr. Smith. Since his release from prison in 2003 for conspiracy to possess drugs with intent to distribute, Mr. Smith has dedicated his life to his faith and to his community. He is now a successful businessman and has used his financial success to establish Fourth Purpose, a non-profit organization devoted to making prison “a place of transformation.” He has mentored incarcerated individuals and taught business classes to those in prison — including at the prison where he was incarcerated. Mr. Smith has also been heavily involved in mission trips throughout Latin America.
Amy Povah – President Trump granted a full pardon to Amy Povah, the founder of the CAN-DO (Clemency for All Non-violent Drug Offenders) Foundation. In the 1990s, Ms. Povah served 9 years of a 24 year sentence for a drug offense before President Clinton commuted her remaining prison sentence in 2000. Since her release, she has become a voice for the incarcerated, a champion for criminal justice reform, and was a strong advocate for the passage of the First Step Act. Those assisted by Ms. Povah’s organization include Ms. Adrianne Miller, whose remaining prison sentence the President commuted.
Dr. Frederick Nahas – President Trump granted a full pardon to Frederick Nahas. This pardon is supported by Representative Jeff Van Drew. Dr. Nahas is a talented surgeon with a practice in New Jersey. In the 1990s, Dr. Nahas became aware of a Federal investigation into his billing practices. Although the 6‑year investigation uncovered no underlying billing fraud, Dr. Nahas did not fully coöperate and ultimately pled guilty to one count of obstructing justice in a health care investigation. Dr. Nahas spent 1 month in prison in 2003 and has spent the subsequent 18 years working tirelessly to regain the trust and admiration of his patients, colleagues, and community.
Fred “Dave” Clark — President Trump commuted Dave Clark’s remaining term of incarceration after serving over 6 years in Federal prison for a first-time, non-violent offense. Mr. Clark’s commutation is supported by Professor Alan Dershowitz, Ken Starr, the Aleph Institute, his family of seven children, and former business colleagues and investors, among others. While in prison, Mr. Clark has lead Bible Study and developed a “Promising People” program to teach inmates technical skills and connect them with faith-based support.
Todd Farha, Thaddeus Bereday, William Kale, Paul Behrens, Peter Clay — President Trump granted full pardons to Todd Farha, Thaddeus Bereday, William Kale, Paul Behrens, and Peter Clay, former executives of a healthcare maintenance organization. Widely cited as a case study in overcriminalization, these men have attracted a broad range of support, including from the CATO Institute, the Reason Foundation, the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, and various scholars and law professors. In 2008, Messrs. Farha, Bereday, Kale, Behrens, and Clay were criminally prosecuted for a state regulatory matter involving the reporting of expenditures to a state health agency. The expenditures reported were based on actual monies spent, and the reporting methodology was reviewed and endorsed by those with expertise in the state regulatory scheme. Notably, there was no evidence that any of the individuals were motivated by greed. And in fact, the sentencing judge called the likelihood that there was any personal financial motivation “infinitesimal.” The judge imposed a range of sentences from probation to 3 years’ imprisonment, reflecting the conduct as an aberration from these individuals’ otherwise law-abiding lives. Messrs. Farha, Bereday, Kale, Behrens, and Clay are described as devoted to their family and their communities, and have weathered their convictions without complaint
David Rowland — President Trump granted a full pardon to David Rowland. This pardon is supported by Senator Lindsey Graham. Mr. Rowland’s asbestos removal license had lapsed when he agreed to remove asbestos found in an elementary school. He completed the work in compliance with all other regulations, but received 2 years’ probation for a violation of the Clean Air Act. Mr. Rowland accepts responsibility and is remorseful. In addition, he has given back to his community by continuing to work with the Make-A-Wish Foundation after the completion of his mandatory community service.
Stephen Odzer — President Trump granted a conditional pardon to Stephen Odzer. This pardon is supported by former Acting Attorney General Matthew Whitaker, Sigmund “Sig” Rogich, Jason Greenblatt, Michael Steinhardt, Wayne Allyn Root, Salvador Moran, the Aleph Institute, and numerous members of Mr. Odzer’s religious community. Mr. Odzer pled guilty to conspiracy and bank fraud, for which he was sentenced to 18 months in prison. Numerous individuals testify to his substantial philanthropic and volunteer activities. His philanthropic endeavors include providing personal protective equipment to front-line workers in New York City hospitals; visiting sick children in hospitals; and donating religious materials to prison inmates and U.S. Service Members around the world. He has also dedicated resources to support and build synagogues in memory of his late cousin who was kidnapped and killed by Muslim terrorists while in Israel. The pardon requires Mr. Odzer to pay the remainder of his restitution order.
James Brian Cruz — President Trump commuted the remaining sentence of James Brian Cruz. Mr. Cruz’s many supporters include Alice Johnson, Dr. Robert Jeffress, Pastor of the First Baptist Church in Dallas, Texas, Kelly Shackelford of the First Liberty Institute, several former inmates who Mr. Cruz mentored or ministered, Mr. Cruz’s work supervisor, and several business owners and managers. Mr. Cruz, who has served approximately half of a 40-year sentence for a drug crime, has truly reformed and has worked to better his life and the lives of other inmates while in prison. Several former inmates credit Mr. Cruz, whom they met while incarcerated, as someone who helped changed their life, as “a great source of comfort” for many, and one who helps others without looking for anything in return. Mr. Cruz’s work supervisor describes him as a dependable and hard-working employee, who has “gained the respect of many staff workers and inmates alike” and who helps arguing inmates “make peace.” Mr. Cruz writes that he recognizes the effect drugs have on people, families, and the community, and desires a second chance to “live life as one who upholds the law, and lives to help others.”
Steven Benjamin Floyd — President Trump granted a full pardon to Steven Benjamin Floyd. This pardon is supported by Representative Mark Green. Mr. Floyd joined the United States Marines Corps at age 17 and earned a combat action ribbon in Iraq. He pled guilty to one count of bank robbery by extortion. Since his release from prison in 2009, Mr. Floyd has exemplified the power of second chances, and is raising a family and owns a successful car repair business. Mr. Floyd’s dedication to service includes helping extinguish fires set during the recent unrest and repairing widows and disabled veterans’ cars free of charge. President Trump thanks Mr. Floyd for his past military service and for his commitment to his community.
Joey Hancock — President Trump granted a full pardon to Joey Hancock. Senator Roger Wicker, and Mr. Hancock’s employer, pastor, and other members of his community all support this pardon. Mr. Hancock was convicted for conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute a controlled substance. Following his release from prison, Mr. Hancock has been a hard-working employee and active in his church and community.
David E. Miller — President Trump granted a full pardon to David E. Miller. Governor Bill Lee, Mr. Miller’s employer, and numerous colleagues support this pardon. In 2015, Mr. Miller pled guilty to one count of making a false statement to a bank. Today, Mr. Miller is the development director for the charitable organization Men of Valor, where he helps previously incarcerated men rebuild relationships with their faith, family, and society. Governor Lee describes Mr. Miller as having “embraced the ministry’s work and [has] committed himself to doing right and serving others.”
James Austin Hayes – President Trump granted a full pardon to James Austin Hayes. Mr. Hayes’s pardon is supported by Paula White, Rick Hendrick of Hendrick Motorsports, and NASCAR legend Jeff Gordon. Nearly 10 years ago, Mr. Hayes was convicted of conspiracy to commit insider trading. Mr. Hayes cooperated immediately and extensively and disgorged all profits he earned in a related civil action. Since his conviction, Mr. Hayes has been active in his church and his community.
Drew Brownstein — President Trump granted a full pardon to Drew Brownstein, who, other than this conviction, was described by his sentencing judge as someone who “goes out of his way to help people that are less fortunate.” This pardon is supported by the Assistant Attorney General for the Antitrust Division, Makan Delrahim, and several of Mr. Brownstein’s friends and family. Mr. Brownstein was convicted of insider trading and has since paid his fines and forfeitures in full. Both before and after his conviction, Mr. Brownstein has volunteered extensively as a youth coach with the Boys & Girls club in Denver and the Jewish Family Services of Colorado.
Robert Bowker – President Trump granted a full pardon to Robert Bowker. Mr. Bowker’s pardon is supported by Ann Marie Pallan, Sherriff Butch Anderson, and the late Robert Trump. Nearly 30 years ago, Mr. Bowker pled guilty to a violation the Lacey Act, which prohibits trafficking in wildlife, when he arranged for 22 snakes owned by Rudy “Cobra King” Komarek to be transported to the Miami Serpentarium. Although he did not ask for any animals in return, he was offered 22 American alligators. After pleading guilty, Mr. Bowker was sentenced to probation. Mr. Bowker has dedicated resources to animal conservation efforts in the intervening decades, including as a member of the Humane Society of the United States, World Wildlife Fund, and Wildlife Conservation Society.
Amir Khan – President Trump granted a full pardon to Amir Khan. This pardon is supported by his adult children and members of the community. Mr. Khan pled guilty to wire fraud. Notably, he immediately paid back the victim more than in full and has demonstrated remorse for his conduct. Prior to the pandemic, Mr. Khan volunteered at the organization 3 Square Meals, and has regularly donated to charities including St. Jude Children’s Hospital, Boys Town, Covenant House, Tunnel to Towers Foundation, and the Salvation Army.
Robert Sherrill – President Trump granted a full pardon to Robert Sherrill. Mr. Sherrill was convicted of conspiracy to distribute and possession with intent to distribute cocaine. Mr. Sherrill has taken full responsibility for his criminal past and received treatment for his drug addiction. He started a commercial cleaning business as well as a non-profit organization that mentors at-risk youth.
Dr. Robert S. Corkern — President Trump granted a full pardon to Robert S. Corkern. This pardon is supported by Senators Roger Wicker and Cindy Hyde-Smith, Governor Phil Bryant, and Dr. Michael Mansour. Dr. Corkern was convicted of Federal program bribery. This pardon will help Dr. Corkern practice medicine in his community, which is in dire need of more doctors as it has struggled to keep up with demand for emergency services. Dr. Corkern served in the Mississippi Army National Guard and has generously provided his services to low-income patients.
David Lamar Clanton – President Trump granted a full pardon to David Lamar Clanton. This pardon is supported by Senator Roger Wicker, Alton Shaw, Mark Galtelli, and Terri Rielley. Mr. Clanton was convicted of false statements and related charges. Mr. Clanton’s supporters testify to his contributions to the community, especially with respect to issues surrounding rural healthcare. Mr. Clanton has been active with 4‑H Clubs and other organizations in his community.
Hillel Nahmad — President Trump granted a full pardon to Hillel Nahmad. This pardon is supported by members of his community. Mr. Nahmad was convicted of a sports gambling offense. Since his conviction, he has lived an exemplary life and has been dedicated to the well-being of his community.
Brian McSwain — The President granted a full pardon to Brian McSwain. This pardon is supported by Senator Lindsey Graham, two former United States Attorneys for the District of South Carolina, and other former law enforcement officers. Since serving his 18 month sentence for a drug crime committed in the early 1990s, Mr. McSwain has been gainfully employed and has been passed over for several promotion opportunities due to his felony conviction.
John Duncan Fordham — President Trump granted a full pardon to John Duncan Fordham. Mr. Fordham was convicted on one count of health care fraud. A judge later dismissed the conspiracy charge against him.
William “Ed” Henry — President Trump granted a full pardon to William “Ed” Henry of Alabama. This pardon is supported by Senator Tommy Tuberville. Mr. Henry was sentenced to 2 years’ probation for aiding and abetting the theft of government property and paid a $4,000 fine.
In addition, President Trump commuted the sentences to time served for the following individuals: Jeff Cheney, Marquis Dargon, Jennings Gilbert, Dwayne L. Harrison, Reginald Dinez Johnson, Sharon King, and Hector Madrigal, Sr.
List courtesy of NBCNEWS
I have long argued that there are no good Republicans. Some people are fooled by local Republicans who come around pretending to care about Black people. Certainly not this guy. Molinaro should be ashamed of himself for trying to use the just commutation of an egregiously unjust sentence and the one hand and for a man who has certainly paid the price and deserves a second chance. But for Republicans like Molinaro and other wolves in sheep clothing, cops’ lives are far more valuable than the lives of others.
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Mike Beckles is a former Police Detective, businessman, freelance writer, black achiever honoree, and creator of the blog mikebeckles.com.
‘This Case Was Never About Fraud’: Federal Judge Refers ‘Kraken’ Attorneys, Including Lin Wood and Sidney Powell, for ‘Possible Suspension or Disbarment.
A judge convicted a U.S. Army sergeant of assault for shoving a Black man in a heated April confrontation in South Carolina, according to multiple reports. As seen on a viral video, 42-year-old Jonathan Pentland shoved 22-year-old Deandre Williams in a residential community in Richland County. The footage, posted by a bystander on Twitter, quickly racked up tens of thousands of retweets and 2.6 million views after being first published in April. “I went for a walk yesterday evening and I encountered a young man (Deandre)in distress,” the bystander tweeted. “I decided to record the incident in order to protect this black man from possibly becoming a statistic.”Pentland testified he was just protecting his family, and the defense said the incident followed Williams’s confrontations with local women. Authorities dismissed that, saying Pentland was being a bully. Williams’ father reportedly took the stand to say that his son previously suffered cognitive damage from cancer.
Tourist Fatally Shot While Eating with Family at Florida Café, Suspect Seen Dancing over Victim’s Body
Dustin Wakefield, 21, was dining with his wife and son on vacation when he was shot to death in an unprovoked attack. A tourist was fatally shot in Florida Tuesday evening after a stranger approached his family and opened fire. Dustin Wakefield, 21, of Colorado, was dining at an outdoor Miami Beach café with his wife and 1‑year-old son when he was shot multiple times. First responders rendered first aid to Wakefield and transported him to a hospital, where he was pronounced dead shortly after, according to a police report obtained by PEOPLE. A Miami Beach park ranger said he witnessed the moments leading up to Tuesday’s shooting, according to the police report. The ranger alleged that before approaching Wakefield, the suspect was chasing another man. The suspect began firing his gun, and at some point during the chaos, aimed it at Wakefield. The other man was not harmed, police confirm. Read the full story here. https://people.com/crime/young-father-fatally-shot-eating-with-family-at-florida-beach-café/
This is basically the face of America’s almost 18’000 police departments. They are white, male, and racists, usually poorly educated and on a mission. They no longer need to wear white hoods, they long figured out a better strategy, one that allows them to do as they please under the color of law. These are the stories that the mainstream media is not reporting on. This is America!!!
Trooper Jacob Brown,
A graphic body camera video kept secret for more than two years shows a Louisiana State Police trooper pummeling a Black motorist 18 times with a flashlight — an attack the trooper defended as “pain compliance.” “I’m not resisting! I’m not resisting!” Aaron Larry Bowman can be heard screaming between blows on the footage obtained by The Associated Press. The May 2019 beating following a traffic stop left him with a broken jaw, three broken ribs, a broken wrist, and a gash to his head that required six staples to close.
Bowman’s encounter near his Monroe home came less than three weeks after troopers from the same embattled agency punched, stunned, and dragged another Black motorist, Ronald Greene before he died in police custody on a rural roadside in northeast Louisiana. Video of Greene’s death similarly remained under wraps before AP obtained and published it earlier this year. Federal prosecutors are examining both cases in a widening investigation into police brutality and potential cover-ups involving both troopers and state police brass. State police didn’t investigate the attack on Bowman until 536 days after it occurred — even though it was captured on body camera — and only did so weeks after Bowman brought a civil lawsuit.
Aaron Larry Bowman discusses his injuries resulting from a Louisiana state trooper pummeling him with a flashlight during a 2019 traffic stop.
State police say trooper “engaged in excessive and unjustifiable actions”
The state police released a statement Wednesday saying that Jacob Brown, the white trooper who struck Bowman, “engaged in excessive and unjustifiable actions,” failed to report the use of force to his supervisors, and “intentionally mislabeled” his body camera video. Before resigning in March, Brown tallied 23 use-of-force incidents dating to 2015 — 19 of them targeting Black people, according to state police records. Aside from the federal investigation, Brown faces state charges of second-degree battery and malfeasance in Bowman’s beating. He also faces state charges in two other violent arrests of Black motorists, including one he boasted about last year in a group chat with other troopers, saying the suspect is “gonna be sore” and “it warms my heart knowing we could educate that young man.”
How the incident unfolded
On the night Bowman was pulled over for a traffic violation, Brown came upon the scene after deputies had forcibly removed Bowman from his vehicle and taken him to the ground. The trooper later told investigators he “was in the area and was trying to get involved.”
Wielding an 8‑inch aluminum flashlight reinforced with a pointed end to shatter car glass, Brown jumped out of his state police vehicle and began bashing Bowman on his head and body within two seconds of “initial contact” — unleashing 18 strikes in 24 seconds, detectives wrote in an investigative report. “Give me your f — — hands!” the trooper shouted. “I ain’t messing with you.” Bowman tried to explain several times that he was a dialysis patient, had done nothing wrong, and wasn’t resisting, saying, “I’m not fighting you, you’re fighting me.” Brown responded with: “Shut the f — - up!” and “You ain’t listening.” Bowman later can be heard moaning, still on the ground. “I’m bleeding!” he said. “They hit me in the head with a flashlight!”
Brown, 31, later said Bowman had struck a deputy and that the blows were “pain compliance” intended to get Bowman into handcuffs. Investigators who reviewed Brown’s video months after the fact determined his use of force was not reasonable or necessary. Brown did not respond to several messages seeking comment.
Bowman still faces charges in the incident
Bowman, 46, denied hitting anyone and is not seen on the video being violent with officers. But he still faces a list of charges, including battery of a police officer, resisting an officer, and the traffic violation for which he was initially stopped, improper lane usage. Brown not only failed to report his use of force but mislabeled his footage as a “citizen encounter” in what investigators called “an intentional attempt to hide the video from any administrative review.” Bowman’s defense attorney, Keith Whiddon, said he was initially told there was no body-camera video. The American Civil Liberties Union of Louisiana said the video was further impetus for federal authorities to conduct a so-called “pattern and practice” investigation of the state police. “In the absence of federal oversight, LSP will continue to put Louisianans at risk of constitutional rights violations,” said the group’s executive director, Alanah Odoms.
Robert Tew, the district attorney in Monroe, declined to discuss Brown’s case or anything to do with the state police. “We’ll see what the DOJ has to do,” he said during a brief interview outside his home. Bowman himself hadn’t seen the footage until recently when prosecutors from the U.S. Justice Department showed it to him and his civil attorney. “I kept thinking I was going to die that night,” Bowman told the AP through tears in a recent interview. “It was like reliving it all over again. By watching it, I broke down all over again.”
The wife of former Florida Republican congressman Allan West was arrested on a DWI charge with her 3‑month-old grandson in the car last Friday Night. Angela West was arrested and spent the night in jail and was released Saturday afternoon. Angela West’s husband, Allan West, is a retired lieutenant colonel and congressman. Allan West announced his candidacy for Governor of Texas in July of this year, days before resigning as Chair of the Texas Republican Party.
West is livid that his wife was arrested, even though the roadside test came up negative. It is easy not to like Allan West, and maybe his wife is a piece of work just like he is; however, to be fair, here we are again with these cops that cannot simply issue a citation if they see something that seems like an infraction. Instead, they take every minute infraction and escalate until they create an arrestable offense, even in a situation in which the breathalyzer does [not]show the presence of alcohol. ‘The thing that upsets me the most is that they [Dallas police] took my wife, arrested her, brought her to jail, and left my grandson with two Dallas police officers,’ West said in the Twitter video.
You may all remember that West was a demagogue who consistently called for the impeachment of Barack Obama as soon as he took office in 2008. Allan West maintains that his wife was not drinking and called the arrest ‘insidious. Angela Graham-West, 61, was driving home from dinner at P.F. Changs with her three-month-old grandson, Jaxton, when she was pulled over for a traffic violation at around 8.45 p.m. Friday in Dallas County, leading to an officer to suspect that she was intoxicated before performing a field sobriety test on her. After the breathalyzer test, which her husband says ‘came up negative,’ Graham-West was charged with ‘Driving While Intoxicated with a Child under 15 Years Old’ and stayed in jail overnight before her release on Saturday afternoon. West is said to be ‘beyond livid’ with the Dallas Police Department for the arrest, which he insists was wrongful and that his wife was sober at the time.
West posted a photo of his wife’s receipt the night she was arrested, which shows a lemonade, but lists no alcoholic beverages at P.F. Changs in Dallas, Texas…
I guess it does not matter that you act white, name your kids like white kids, give your grandkids white-sounding names, and go all out against your race to impress them, or whether you are running for Governor. When the rubber meets the road, you are just another n*****.
Long before he ran for the Presidency, Donald Trump saw the opening to divide Americans along racial lines. He said he would run as a Republican because they were the most gullible, the stupidest. Imagine Donald Trump singling out anyone for being stupid? But Trump was onto something, not that the Democratic party is much better on race but because the Republican party is pretty much a white people’s party. There are a few Blacks who still support the Republican party out of sheer ignorance and stupidity. The Hispanics are hardly any better; they are confused, unable to determine whether they are brown or white. As far as they go when the rubber meets the road, white people are not shy about letting them know what hue they are, so there is that.
The fact that the nation reached a certain maturity plateau in 2008 when the Democratic party, for the first time in its history and the History of the United States, nominated someone other than a white male to represent a major party for the presidency was a watershed moment. It was a sign that some of the old ways were dissipating, and a newer, more enlightened point of view on race was taking shape. Barack Obama was that candidate; he spoke about America’s path forward not being a straight line but two steps forward, on to the side and one step back .….. How prophetic were those words? After the nation elected him to the presidency in 2008, how could the same nation eschew Hillary Clinton and elect Donald Trump? It makes no sense, right? Well, it does make a lot of sense if you think about it. The same people who elected Jimmy Carter elected Ronald Reagan. The same voters who were once called white working-class union workers in the rust belt of Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Michigan, and the midwestern states of Minnesota, and Missouri, and others who voted for Democrats Clinton and Obama are the very same people who became Trump voters.….and you are left wondering what changed?
The data changed!!! Even though there was joy among Blacks and many whites when Obama was elected and reelected in 2012, a strange reset started to take shape. An awakening emerged like a light lightbulb being turned on in a dark room… or Bugs Bunny sitting in the pot of water heating by the second, chomping on a carrot, stirring the pot, then finally realizing that he was the meat for the stew. “Wait just a minute,” in my best Bugs bunny voice.…… The euphoria suddenly changed, and the T‑Party and other right-wing hate groups were born from the checkbooks of David and Charles Koch. The general fear was and is that a great replacement was going on. That it empowers more people of color to vote, thus replacing white people’s power. In fact, they believed that the Democrats support immigration for exactly those reasons, and therefore they are vehemently opposed to immigration. To bookend that they ramped up their opposition to abortions, by making no exception for a woman raped, as far as they are concerned a woman has no autonomy over her body and therefore must carry to term a rapist’s baby. Former Ohio Republican representatives argued” we cannot maintain our civilization with other people’s babies”, referencing nom-white babies. South Carolina Republican US Senator Lindsay Graham said ‘if we play fair we will never win another election”. But this is not just about winning elections, it is about stopping others from voting, a process that will inexorably change the way racial set-asides and practices have divided the country, empowering some and marginalizing a great many others. Remember that for most whites Americans belonged to them and all decisions about the country rest with them.
Right-wing media houses discarded truth for propaganda and lies. By the time Donald Trump started his campaign of lies against Barack Obama and everyone else he hated.….lies had long become an accepted reality in right-wing circles. So while people in the center and left of center wrung their hands and lamented the demise of truth, Trump the great mendicant was heavily immersed in building a web of lies on which he would further tear the country apart in order to gain power so he may enrich himself and his criminal acolytes. An entire cottage industry sprung up around white supremacy, Rush Limbaugh, Mark Levin, and a whole host of stars emerged to spew the same racist bile on FOX and other media outlets. Talk radio became the new right-wing church for the old-guard too stupid to navigate the web.….. for the younger swamp creatures the internet offered a whole new avenue from which they would poison the minds of the intellectually weak, deficient, and feeble. Fox in-house racist-in-chief summed up the right’s point of view on voting rights this way.
Tucker Carlson
“Now I know that the left and all the little gatekeepers on Twitter become literally hysterical if you use the term “replacement,” if you suggest the Democratic Party is trying to replace the current electorate, the voters now casting ballots, with new people, more obedient voters from the Third World. But they become hysterical because that’s what’s happening, actually. Let’s just say it! That’s true”.
Carlson recently made that statement on FOX, but that sense of fear has been behind Donald Trump’s racist attacks on Barack Obama since he started running for the presidency. It was behind the Koch big money that drove Republican strategy, and it has been behind the John Roberts Supreme court decision, Shelby County, Alabama Vs. Holder in 2013 that eviscerated the 1965 Voting rights act, right after Obama secured a second term. It is what propelled Trump to the presidency. It is behind the cult following of Trump, a man they know is a certified idiot but nonetheless revere because he has the power to mobilize the worst instincts of all the swamp creatures. It is a tough row to hoe because white people see their power threatened by diversity at all levels of the American body-politic. It makes them stark raging mad that a time may soon be here that they will be forced to compete on a level playing field. That’s what drives the right. If it means destroying this democracy to keep what they have, they will do it. They would rather drain the pool than share it; that’s how demented they are.
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Mike Beckles is a former Police Detective, businessman, freelance writer, black achiever honoree, and creator of the blog mikebeckles.com.
Georgia police shot and killed a motorist who had been “driving erratically” before leading officers on a brief chase near Atlanta, authorities said Thursday.
The driver, identified as 28-year-old Austell resident Devonte Dawayne Brown, “initially pulled over, but then refused to comply and sped away,” according to the GBI.
Police and Cobb County Sheriff’s deputies chased Brown and at “one point, the officers attempted to box in the vehicle,” the state authorities said.
“During this incident, Brown attempted to get away and hit multiple police vehicles,” the GBI statement continued. “As police officers were trying to take Brown into custody, a Cobb County Police Department officer fired his gun, striking Brown.”
The driver was taken to the hospital where he was pronounced dead.
Monica Brown, the driver’s biological aunt, and adoptive mom, said she’s troubled by the video and believes her loved one didn’t need to be shot.
“I feel like this was excessive force,” she told NBC News on Thursday. “He couldn’t go anywhere. They surrounded him.”
The biological aunt said she’s already spoken to an internal affairs detective with Cobb County police and will speak with state investigators shortly.
“I told him, ‘Was this necessary?’ ” Brown said she told the detective. “ ‘Was there any way you could have de-escalated the situation where we could still have him with us?’ ”
While a “handgun was found in the vehicle,” the GBI statement did not specify whether Brown ever picked up the weapon or pointed it at police before he was killed.
GBI spokeswoman Nelly Miles declined to elaborate.
“It is still very early in the case so at this time, there is no other information to report at this time as the case is under investigation,” she said.
A representative for the Cobb County Police Department declined to comment and referred all questions to state authorities, who are taking over the investigation.
Devonte Brown was a truck driver and father of four young children, according to his aunt.
Sergeant Geraint Jones, 47, shared the altered image to a WhatsApp group of other police officers and colleagues in May.
By Ruby ‑Lott Lavigna
A British police officer has been given a final written warning after sharing a “grossly offensive” doctored image of George Floyd’s arrest, meaning he will remain in his job.
Sergeant Geraint Jones, 47, admitted to gross misconduct during an Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) investigation, which found he had breached the professional standards of authority such as respect and courtesy, equality and diversity, duties and responsibilities, and that he had behaved in a manner that discredited the police.
Jones sent the image to a WhatsApp group containing police colleagues and civilian staff from Devon and Cornwall Police in May 2020, just days after Floyd’s death. The altered image depicted a naked picture of Wardy Joubert III superimposed over Minneapolis cop Derek Chauvin kneeling on the neck of Floyd. In June this year, Chauvin was sentenced to 22.5 years for murdering Floyd.
The meme came to light after it was reported by a colleague in the WhatsApp chat. Two colleagues responded with laughing emojis, however.
Jones was acquitted of any criminal charges at a hearing before a district judge at Plymouth Magistrates’ Court on the 21st of April earlier this year. But he still faced separate disciplinary action by the UK police watchdog, the IOPC
IOPC regional director Catrin Evans said: “The image was bound to cause significant offense, not least within our Black communities. It is encouraging that the matter was swiftly reported by a work colleague who rightly called out the behavior.”
“The outcome is a reminder that the sharing of offensive material by any serving police officer is unacceptable, and that individuals will be held accountable. It is important officers understand that whether such behavior occurs on or off duty, or in a private or public social media network, inappropriate and unprofessional conduct has serious consequences.”
Jones’ written warning will last for five years but he will continue in his post.
Who recalls the days when a cop would stop a person with a gun and shout freeze, drop the gun, drop the gun, and the person with the gun would either drop the gun and run or fire, and the cops would take cover? I do too, but I would not ask cops to do that these days, even though the United States has more guns than any other nation, and that means more guns than people. But how does a cop shoots and kill a person with a gun who has not threatened them and be justified, in a country in which many states have open-carry laws, concealed carry laws, and in all states, citizens have the right to own and have a gun on their person? Worse yet, how does a cop shoot and kill someone who has no gun? Mark you, we are not talking about a person who has a gun that, for all that cop knows, may very well be legal in that person’s possession, we aren’t talking about a situation in which a cop sees a weapon and knows that it is illegal, and even so, he has no justifiable reason to shoot at the person unless the person directly threatens him or someone else with the gun. We are talking about cops claiming that they thought something in the person’s possession was a gun, then opens fire and kills the person.
In America, the calculus is that in order to ensure that state agents have the cover they need to exact the authority of the state’s power they will allow state actors (police) to murder citizens under any pretext; they then throw some of the same citizens tax-dollars back at the family of the decedent and keep the officer employed. It is a calculus that weighs the need for the state to maintain its oppressive authority over the citizenry at all costs, and in the process of effectuating that authority, those citizens who are unlucky or unhealthy enough to be ensnared in that process is justifiable collateral damage. How did a country that preaches and lectures other nations on human rights and dignity ‑albeit hypocritically- get to such a place where it feels such confidence in treating the lives of its own citizinery with such contempt and blatant disregard? It begins with the devaluing of some lives. In this case, the lives of Black Americans. in the process of devaluing some lives, a certain segment of the society found glee in the abuse and barbarism meted out to those they hate. And as Martain Niemoller said:
First, they came for the socialists, and I did not speak out — because I was not a socialist.
Then they came for the trade unionists, and I did not speak out— because I was not a trade unionist.
Then they came for the Jews, and I did not speak out — because I was not a Jew.
Then they came for me — and there was no one left to speak for me.
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Mike Beckles is a former Police Detective, businessman, freelance writer, black achiever honoree, and creator of the blog mikebeckles.com.
California Police Mistook a Lighter for Gun and Fatally Shot Black Man In February, Now the City Is Releasing Bodycam Footage to ‘Build and Maintain Trust with the Community
The Fontana Police Department has released body camera footage of an officer fatally shooting an unarmed 28-year-old Black man in February. The release of the footage comes after the city of Fontana, California, agreed to pay $1 million to the family of Daverion Deauntre Kinard, according to The San Bernardino Sun. The footage shows that Kinard was hiding in a portable toilet with a lighter in his hand that officers said they thought was a gun. Kinard’s family had previously asked that the footage of the shooting not be released to protect his dignity. The family recognizes the public and the media’s interest in obtaining and viewing the footage but would appreciate the family’s desire that the footage remains private in order to protect the dignity of Daverion,” the family and city wrote in a joint statement, The Martinsville Bulletin reported.
Police Chief Billy Green said on Thursday that the video was prepared by the department in order to “build and maintain trust with the community.
On Feb. 13, Fontana officers responded to a report of a burglary at a home at around 10:30 p.m. A homeowner’s Ring doorbell had captured a suspect moving around the outside of the home before removing a window screen, leaving, then entering through the open window. When police arrived, they spotted Kinard in the home. He ran out of the backdoor and a foot chase ensued for more than 1,000 feet before officers found Kinard in a portable restroom near a construction site. Footage shows that an officer opened the door and saw Kinard sitting on the toilet. “Hey,” the officer shouted before Kinard lifted his left hand and moved his right hand. The officer closed the door to the portable restroom briefly then opened it again and fired his weapon about two seconds after Kinard first moved his hand. The metallic object in Kinard’s right hand was determined to be a lighter. According to a statement from the police department, “officers immediately rendered aid to Kinard until medical aid arrived. Unfortunately, Kinard was later pronounced deceased at the scene. No weapon was recovered from the scene.”
Kinard was on post-release community supervision after a conviction for burglary at the time. The officer who shot Kinard has been identified as Johnny Tutiavake, who is still on the force. The shooting remains under investigation by the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department, San Bernardino District Attorney’s Office and Fontana Police Department. Although California law requires that video be released within 45 days of a shooting by police or if force is used that causes great bodily injury, the city granted itself several 30-day extensions citing potential interference with ongoing investigations. The video could have been withheld for up to one year, as the chief cited concerns about potential unrest. The $1 million settlement for Kinard’s parents, Kenisha Kinard and Amond Hawkins was approved by the City Council in June after they sued the city and will be paid out from an insurance fund.
Whether the decision to pull out of Afghanistan by President Joe Biden was the correct one, particularly when we see the images coming out of that country, I will leave it up to the experts. This decision, however, will be debated purely from a political standpoint, with Republicans forgetting that Trump intended to pull troops out as well. On Monday, Biden told the nation, he stands squarely behind his decision to pull troops from Afghanistan even as he admitted in his speech that the country’s fall happened faster than he anticipated.
Biden argued that after two decades in that country and over a trillion dollars spent in that country: training their military, creating an air force, equipping that air force, and even paying the salaries of the Afghan military — a force he said rivals NATO partners in size. America, he said, could not give them the will to fight for their country. That is up to them. I concur!!!
As the Taliban approaches, store owners race to remove images of women from their storefronts.
America may have been justified in going into Afghanistan after September 11th, 2001; what happened afterward will forever be debated for centuries long after we are gone. The justification for going inside was the policy of George Bush, Dick Chaney, Donald Rumsfeld administration. Fed by neo-cons, Paul Wolfowitz and Richard Pearl guided America’s decisions in Afghanistan and its misguided decision to enter a sovereign Iraq under the lie that Saddam Hussien, that nation’s president had weapons of mass destruction. Therefore America, as the world’s de facto police, was justified in going in to take them away from him.
The Taliban as they rolled into Kabul.
They never bothered telling the nation at the time. Today, the US concedes that George Bush’s father, Herbert Walker Bush, US president #41, allowed Saddam Hussien to acquire those biological weapons because the calculus was that Iran was a more significant threat. In their minds, Saddam offered a counterbalance to the Islamic régime in Iran that had overthrown the Shah and taken American hostages during the Carter presidency. The authors wrote in a 2002 article written by Christopher Dickey and Evan Thomas, which now forms part of the Congress’ permanent record.
It is hard to believe that, during most of the 1980s,
America knowingly permitted the Iraq Atomic Energy Commission
to import bacterial cultures that might be used to build
biological weapons. But it happened.
America's past stumbles, while embarrassing, are not an
argument for inaction in the future. Saddam probably is the
"grave and gathering danger" described by President Bush in
his speech to the United Nations last week. It may also be
true that "whoever replaces Saddam is not going to be
worse," as a senior administration official put it to
Newsweek. But the story of how America helped create a
Frankenstein monster it now wishes to strangle is sobering.
It illustrates the power of wishful thinking, as well as the
iron law of unintended consequences.
These are the images that occurred on the streets of Saigon as America was forced to cut and run.
The United States learned nothing from its incursion in South Asia, and as we recall the rout in Saigon, it seems that there is a sense of déjà vu.
Bush, Chaney, Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz, Pearl, and others were shoveling a bunch of nonsense down the throats of the ever-gullible public. They lied that they would change hearts and minds despite going in behind guns and bombs, killing and maiming. We heard the news about Afghanistan that the US was greeted as liberators when they went into Iraq. None of this happened because the opposite is that when you barge in with guns, you create enemies.
It was a load of crock then. It is a load of crock now.
You don’t go in and kill, then expect the same people to turn around and accept you with open arms.
That is why the American military never figured out why the Afghans they trained could not stand up to the Taliban?
Answer? They did not want to.!!!
Frantic scenes at Kabul airport as the Taliban approached.
That is why members of the Afghan military America trained, from time to time, turned their weapons on Americans soldiers and murder them.
They never believed, and therein lies the problem. This fact effectively formerly DEBUNKS the ideas that Richard Pearl, Paul Wolfowitz, and others perpetuated to the Republican Party, to George Bush, which became public policy, leading to the Afghan and the Iraq war.
The Taliban on the streets of Kabul.
The lesson of invading a country, then expecting that the natives will suddenly become friends, has been a big lie that has been turned on its head time and again. The United States did not learn that lesson in southeast Asia, and it went into the Middle East to relearn a painful and expensive lesson over again.
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Mike Beckles is a former Police Detective, businessman, freelance writer, black achiever honoree, and creator of the blog mikebeckles.com.
I was shocked to learn that another earthquake had hit Haiti early Saturday morning. My first thought was, Oh my God, not again; how much more can these poor people take? Throughout the day Saturday, I stayed glued to the news hoping that there would be no loss of life. As the day progressed and the death toll started coming in, I reminded myself that praying for something not to happen after they had already happened was a sure-fire way not to have your prayers answered. As that thought ran through my mind, I prayed a quick prayer that there would be no loss of life. By Sunday evening, I believe the full extent of what occurred in Haiti began dawning on the rest of the world; news reporting agencies reported that 1’300 people were confirmed dead and many more missing. The Haitian people were again facing a tragedy as they did just over a decade ago, when a massive earthquake hit, killing hundreds of thousands, injuring untold numbers, and leaving the capital of Port-au-Prince almost leveled.
Reuters new Agency reports that Haitian authorities say the quake reduced churches, hotels, schools, and homes to rubble in the latest tragedy to hit the impoverished Caribbean nation. The 7.2‑magnitude quake, followed by a series of aftershocks, struck 8 km (5 miles) from Petit Trou de Nippes, about 150 km west of Port-au-Prince at a depth of 10 km, the United States Geological Survey said. That made the tremors felt as far away as Cuba and Jamaica, potentially more severe than the magnitude 7 earthquake 11 years ago that killed tens of thousands on the island. As we are once again thrust into mourning for our brothers and sisters in Haiti, we must remain focused on some of the root causes of the Haitian people’s plight.
As a person who has deep beliefs in a higher power, I have no fear that any human being may ridicule me for my beliefs in a Sovereign God.
Nevertheless, as I sometimes ponder whether it is possible that idolatry could cause us divine repercussions, I balance those thoughts against the idea that no sin is greater than the other.
So if God was punishing Haiti for idol worship, why would he not punish.…… say Jamaica for its wanton disregard for human life?
Haiti sits on several tectonic fault lines, meaning it is earthquake-prone.
It is not the earthquakes that are killing Haitians; it is that the poorly constructed cinder-block buildings are killing people when the earthquakes occur, which they do with frequency in Haiti, like fires in California, hurricanes in Florida, snowstorms in New England, or Tornadoes in Oklahoma.
Haiti needs a government that begins the hard task of instituting basic building standards, like Jamaica did after so many homes lost their rooves during hurricane Gilbert in 88.
Let us begin there, and we will begin to see a reduction of earthquake deaths in Haiti.….…Haitians are not cursed; they are not salt; they are not condemned. What they are suffering from is a result of poverty and poor governance.
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Mike Beckles is a former Police Detective, businessman, freelance writer, black achiever honoree, and creator of the blog mikebeckles.com.
Audio Recording On Rasta trimming and Maroon’s nonsense.
Maroons were no heroes to enslaved Jamaicans; they were complicit in prolonging slavery on the Island by colluding with the slavers to return runaway enslaved people. It is time that we stop whitewashing history.
Audio on the plans Donald Trump & Republicans have for America.
Apart from the gross boneheadedness that seems to be sweeping the world where facts are treated as fiction and fiction facts, there are two distinct groups of people in our country. (1) The so-called educated, you know the ones who turned “tappanaris”, in particular, the ones who attend the left-wing UWI University Of The West Indies, otherwise knows as the intellectual ghetto à la the late Mutty Perkins, they are probably the worst of the lot, they are so stush, you know the lot who refers to their university as up by (u wi) ‘in my stush voice’, hahaha. Those folks earn a degree in one discipline, and thereafter you can’t tell them anything because they automatically become an authority on everything. So a medical Doctor gets to tell firemen, Farmers, Teachers, Police officers, and everyone else how to do their jobs because they earned their degree.….….. say it with me.….…” up by u wi.” ha aah. Don’t leave off the fake accent either, please, dwl. Then, of course, there is the not so educated, notice that I said “not so educated,” I did so because I’m at least enlightened enough to understand that being educated does not mean having to set foot on a college or university campus but having spent time honing one’s specific craft in one’s individual field of endeavor. If, of course, one is educated in nothing, then that person has no claim to education, but for this #1 class of people, earning an undergraduate or graduate degree is not about self-improvement; it is about talking and looking down on their contemporaries who were lucky not to be indoctrinated into their leftist ideologies…
The # (2) group, the not so educated, generally know everything without knowing anything. They recite every trope, lie, and old wives’ tales as if they are facts and no amount of data will change their minds because (dem born an liv a Jumeka and nu one can tel dem nutten). Therein lies the problem. And so the up by u wi crowd perpetually speaks down on the can’t tel mi nutten crowds. If there is a third group between the tappanaris and the know-nothings, they need to speak up now to be identified. The recent propaganda campaign being waged by the two classes of Jamaicans surrounding the infantile claim laid by the so-called Maroon people as to their perceived right to self-autonomy is nothing more than a campaign by the opposition People’s National Party and its surrogates as they have learned to do since the early 70’s to destabilize our country using the same tired old subversive tactics Michael Manley and his acolytes used. For those old enough to recall, those tactics were learned from Cuba, which was a satellite of the Soviet Empire. These subversive tactics have nothing to do with truth or data; they are what the Republican party in the United States has resorted to as white supremacy is threatened by changing racial demographic data.
It is important to reconcile that the Maroons in Jamaica have enjoyed Lion status born out of how our history has been taught to us from grade school. We believed that the Maroons were heroes who fought and defeated the British planters and British colonialist military on the Island. In fact, though the Maroons themselves were enslaved runaways who became thorns in the side of the white slavers, the planters devised a plan which made them party to the brutish practice of slavery on their own brothers and sisters. Their origins as distinct from the rest of the Jamaican population can be traced to the pre-British era of Jamaican history. Most scholars placed their inception in 1655 when the British took control of Jamaica from the Spanish. They are reported to have fled with their Spanish masters; these former slaves took to the mountainous interior and formed groups that survived British colonization. So the idea that they have some insulation from independent Jamaican laws is based more on fantasy than reality. Sure they were not slaves to the British, But they were slaves to the Spaniards. Neither of which makes a difference in the greater scheme of things.
According to (aaregistry.org (Before 1700, men who had been born in Africa generally led the Maroon population; many claimed they had been Kings in their homeland. After 1700, Maroon leaders were often Creoles familiar with the ways of Whites and with African methods. The leader of the Maroon community in Jamaica was Captain Cudjoe (Kojo). During the 18th century, the Maroons became more powerful and settled in, among other places, the mountains of Jamaica. Carving out a significant area of influence, their threat to the system of slavery was clear; hence, the white planters signed a treaty with the Maroons in 1738. This treaty was an unlikely concession during the eighteenth century, given the dominance of the British class across the Caribbean. The treaty did not exclusively serve White interests. Article three of the treaty stated that the Maroons were given 1,500 acres of Crown land.
Article eight of the treaty stated: “that if any white man does any manner of injury to Cudjoe, his successors or any of his or their people shall apply to any commanding officer or magistrate in the neighborhood for justice.” This showed some equity under the law between the Maroons and White plantation owners. In brief, the British were willing to divide themselves equally among the Maroons. In general, the articles of pacification also attempted to limit Maroon attacks against the system of slavery. Article thirteen required that the Maroons continue to help clear roads from Trelawny Town to Westmoreland and, if possible, from St. James to St. Elizabeth. This was biased because, as free men, the Maroons were not required to labor for the planters showing a White view that the Maroons were inferior.
Another bias in the treaty includes article fourteen, which affirms that two White men shall live with the Maroons “to maintain a friendly correspondence with the inhabitants of this island.” This was to encourage a friendly relationship between the two but gave Whites first-hand knowledge of the state of affairs in the Maroon community. Most importantly, the treaty also required the Maroons to act as a police force for the planters, returning future runaways to the plantations and drafting them to fight against future rebellions. Overall, this treaty recognized the Maroons and their needs and revealed that the British feared the Maroons’ capabilities and ever-rising power. (Reference:Harvard.edu)
As part of the peace treaties, one signed with Cudjoe in the west and another subsequently signed with Quao in the east, Maroons agreed to hunt and return future runaway slaves and, amongst other things, aid the suppression of internal and external threats. In return, the British recognized Maroon freedom, granted the communities land in the interior, and allowed Maroons to sustain themselves through small-scale trading at markets supplemented by wild boar hunting. This suggests that many colonists were very much aware of this and came to rely on the Maroons for security. In essence, the British colonist came to rely on the Maroons for protection as mutual recognition of the benefits of an alliance emerged. And so, I ask the Jamaican people who have long lionized and adored the Maroons, and even bestowed hero status on Maroon leaders like Nanny and Cudjoe and made them national heroes; how have these facts lined up with the rest of you whose ancestors have been forced to endure slavery at the hands of the white slavers and their Maroon allies?
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Mike Beckles is a former Police Detective, businessman, freelance writer, black achiever honoree, and creator of the blog mikebeckles.com.
A white woman confronted her Black neighbor about a ‘Winnie the Pooh’ flag on her porch, according to a viral TikTok
A viral TikTok video shows a woman dubbed a “neighborhood Karen” approaching another woman’s front door to say she didn’t like a flag outside her house with the “Winnie the Pooh” character Tigger.
“I want to talk about this Tigger flag. I don’t like it,” the woman, whom Bishop calls a “neighborhood Karen” in the caption, said in the video. The woman went on to say the neighborhood had rules but she didn’t want to “have to go find out what they are.” When Bishop responded that the neighborhood wasn’t under a homeowners’ association, the woman said “there’s rules for the community” and reiterated that she didn’t like the flag.
Two Cleveland Women Charged With The Same Crime Receive Vastly Different Sentence
Two Cleveland, Ohio, women who were both arrested and charged with stealing thousands, received vastly different outcomes.
Debbie Bosworth, a white former town’s clerk, was charged with embezzling nearly $250,000 from the city over two decades. For her crime, county court Judge Hollie Gallagher sentenced her to two years of probation, according to local publication Cleveland.
According to WKYC, Bosworth started working for the city in 1997, overseeing payments and other accounting duties.
The judge said Bosworth didn’t deserve to go to jail because she repaid the money she stole before Monday’s hearing. The mayor also did not request she serve a prison sentence in a letter he wrote to the court.
In the same county, however, Judge Rick Bell sentenced a Black woman to serve 18 months in prison for a similar crime. Karla Hopkins was charged with stealing more than $40,000 from school money intended for Maple Heights High School’s graduating class of 2018. Debbie Bosworth, white and Karla Hopkins, black appeared in the same courthouse and this is what happened. Not driving while black. In court while black.
Hopkins was the former secretary at the school at the time of the incident.
Hopkins was charged with stealing almost $200,000 less than Bosworth. Despite that vast difference, officials called for the former school employee to be sentenced to up to 12 months in prison.
Hopkins has no prior criminal history and had been described as struggling with her mental health along with a gambling addiction. She later pleaded guilty in June to one count of theft in office.
Since being arrested, she has completed an eight-week rehab program and enrolled in a job development program. She has also started to repay the money that she stole with an initial payment of $5,000.
Despite her efforts to turn her life around, the judge told her “I think even your pastor would agree there has to be some consequences for your actions.”
Hopkins has also offered her apologies and expressed her remorse for he actions.
“I want to pay the Maple Heights city students back,” she said. “I’m so sorry to Maple Heights City Schools for not living up to the trust that they entrusted in me. I had a lot of friends there. I’m so sorry to them all.”
Bosworth, who pleaded no contest to 22 criminal counts, including theft in office and money laundering, spoke in court saying she “may have had reasons for what I did.”
Her attorney also shared that she used a majority of the stolen money to pay for her children’s education.
In America, a successful Governor gets run out of office largely by his own party (yet unproven allegations of improper advances toward women). Still, a one-term twice impeached failed president who treasonously planned a coup to overthrow the established Government to install himself is charged with nothing after losing an election.
He gets to run around grifting to attempt another takeover of the Government.
Way to set out principled priorities for the rest of the world to emulate.
Sickening on all fronts.……
And I’m not even a Cuomo fan.
Those of you who would come for me, “I said what I said.
It is remarkable how Democrats are weak and feckless, how quickly they turn on each other at the drop of a hat. Imagine how quickly they turned on Andrew Cuomo while the other party coalesced around their [criminals] who commit far worse crimes, up to treason, things Governor Cuomo could never imagine. And while we are at it, let me say unequivocally that I do not support any sexual assault against anyone. Not men on women, not women on men, not men on men, not women on women. No unwanted sexual advances of any kind; in fact, I recommend to all concerned that there be no sexual contact of any kind. To be safe, do not say anything to anyone, do not say anything to your women co-workers that could remotely be construed to be sexual or flirtatious in nature. Make your conversations be only about work. If you are a male manager, CEO, or in any leadership position in a company or organization and you must speak to female subordinates, please have another female employee present and, where possible, to be on the safe side, record your conversations with them. [Me Too] is hyper-feminism on steroids. It is an unforgiving crusade determined to cancel without due process, anyone unfortunate enough to elicit their ire at any given time. The truth is that it isn’t even about accountability because some of the worst offenders who have confessed have suffered no consequence. In fact, the chief serial offender went on to be president of the United States.
Do not invite female subordinates to any social event. If there are company socials, delegate planning to a female to avoid any semblance of impropriety. There is a change in the matrix of what is acceptable in the workplace today. Just as we frown at smoking in indoor spaces today, something that was a staple a mere five years ago, men must adjust to the new realities of what is and isn’t acceptable behavior related to women in the workplace, particularly if you are in a supervisory role… We are in a transition period. It’s like a place where several rivers meet. It is a place that becomes a whirlpool; in that whirlpool, it is pretty easy to get sucked in. No one should have to surrender their dignity to secure or maintain a job. On the other hand, many of the accusers of men today will not bother to mention that they used every feminine wile they possessed to get what they want, only to cry foul to get more, usually wads of cash, usually through civil lawsuits…
Many men are afraid to speak out, petrified of incurring the wrath of the feminist cancel horde. Me, I am not. Go ahead and cancel me for speaking the truth. You cannot cancel someone who has no power or is not a clout chaser. It is for those reasons that I speak my mind without regard for popular sentiments. I do not write for likes. I write because it is what’s inside me. This tirade is in no way a defense of Andrew Cuomo. I have no way of determining whether Governor Cuomo is guilty or not. Neither do you. What we have are allegations of impropriety, and they are yet unproven. The words of elven women words have not yet been tested in a court of law. So, like Al Franken, Andrew Cuomo has been canceled without even having a chance to defend himself in a court of law. Guilty or not.
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Mike Beckles is a former Police Detective, businessman, freelance writer, black achiever honoree, and creator of the blog mikebeckles.com.
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