Politics & Government

President Obama Commutes Sentences of 111 Federal Inmates Including 3 from NE Ohio

Obama has now issued reduced sentences for 673 people, more than the past 10 presidents combined.

CLEVELAND, OH — Three federal inmates from northeast Ohio now have reduced sentences thanks to President Obama. On Tuesday, Obama commuted the the prison sentences of the three men and 107 other inmates.

The northeast Ohio men are:

  • Hal Q. Mincy, of Cleveland, was serving a 20-year sentence for possession with the intent to distribute crack. Mincy's sentence was commuted to expire in December.
  • Eddie James Davis, of Bedford, was serving a 20-year sentence for possession with the intent to distribute cocaine. Davis' sentence was commuted to expire in December.
  • James Dillehay, of Akron, was serving a life sentence for conspiracy to possess and distribute cocaine. Dillehay's sentence was commuted to 30 years.

The inmates were in prison for non-violent drug offenses, and 11 people also had been convicted of firearms offenses. Of the 111 announced Tuesday, 56 people will be freed by the end of the year. The others will be released early, in 2017 and 2018. A separate group will be freed before their sentences are up but after 2018.

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The White House says Obama's 673 commutations are more than the past 10 presidents combined. But that statistic is a bit misleading.

While the president has been liberal in commuting sentences, he has been reluctant to issue full pardons. The 70 pardons he has issued during his presidency are the fewest for any president since James Garfield, who was assassinated fewer than seven months into his first term.

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A pardon essentially wipes clean the slate of a convicted criminal. A commutation only lessens the punishment.

In May, Obama lessened sentences for 56 people. Earlier this month, he announced commutations for 214 people.

Since the so-called "War on Drugs" began in the 1980s, the number of people in jail for drug offenses increased from 41,000 in 1980 to nearly a half-million in 2014, according to The Sentencing Project, and one in nine people are serving life sentences. Advocates for reducing prison populations say that sentences of nonviolent offenses should be capped at 20 years.

Image via White House, Flickr

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