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President Trump gives full pardon to Alice Johnson

trump johnson

Alice Johnson smiles as President Trump holds up the executive order for her full pardon.

Alice Johnson is the face of a growing cross-section of Black America rarely given a voice in the media. A person of color who loves President Trump for how he has personally improved her life and that of her community.

Johnson is the woman sentenced to life in prison for a first-time drug offense who was later freed by Trump in 2018. She has since become an outspoken activist in favor of the Trump administration’s prison reform efforts and work in the Black community.

The grandmother was on of dozens of African Americans who spoke at 2020 Republican National Convention. But few were as emotional as Johnson.

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“I was once told that the only way I would be reunited with my family as a corpse,” Johnson said Thursday at the RNC.

Watch Alice Johnson speak about Trump policies at the convention

She had been imprisoned, in part, because of legislation co-authored by then Senator Joe Biden. That legislation, prison reform activists contend, unfairly imprisoned first-time, non-violent offenders for life.

“But through the grace of God and the love and compassion of President Donald John Trump, I stand before you tonight and I assure you, I am not a ghost. I am alive, I am whole and most importantly, I am free.”

On Friday, Trump issued a full pardon. Johnson, 65, wiped tears from her eyes but did not speak to reporters at the unscheduled event.

“I’m so proud of you and we’re giving Alice a full pardon,” Trump said in the Oval Office. “That’s the ultimate thing that can happen. That means you can do whatever you want in life, and just keep doing the great job you’re doing.”

READ: Alice Johnson praises God for prison release

“Alice has done an incredible job since she’s been out and recommending other people,” Trump said.

“We said, how many people are there like you? There’s only one Alice, as far as I’m concerned. But how many people are like you or your circumstance, where they were given a massive sentence and they’re good people, great people? And she said, ‘So many. They’re in jail. So many.’ And she’s looking for those people. And she’s recommending those people. We’ve already done some… and they’ve done really well since they’ve been out.”

In 1997, Johnson was sentenced to life in prison with no parole as a first-time, non-violent offender for her role in a large cocaine-dealing ring.

She spent 22 years in jail and unsuccessfully appealed the Obama-Biden administration to commute her sentence before reality TV star Kim Kardashian became interested in her case.

Kardashian lobbied Trump to free Johnson and in 2018, he officially commuted her sentence.

“When President Trump heard about me and the injustice of my story, he saw me as a person. He had compassion,” she said at the RNC.

Alice Johnson

Trump spoke about Johnson in his 2019 State of the Union address, saying he had been “deeply moved” by her story and described her as a “terrific woman.”

Johnson was only sentenced to life because of a 1986 drug act co-authored by Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden, which drastically increased cocaine sentencing guidelines.

The mom-of-six has now become a criminal justice advocate and the face of the Trump administration’s criminal reforms.

Trump advisers, and even some opponents, say he could boost support among minorities by talking about criminal justice reform, including his role in passing the 2018 First Step Act, which implemented various prison reforms and sentencing reductions and expanded compassionate release.

Clemency advocates have cheered Trump’s sporadic prison commutations and pardons, but hope for even more aggressive uses of his presidential powers before he leaves office.

After winning Johnson‘s freedom, Kardashian made a second visit to the Oval Office in late 2018 to plead for Chris Young, then 30 years old, who was arrested at 22 for drug dealing and sentenced to life as a habitual offender.

Young received a life sentence due to the “three strikes” provision in another Biden-authored law, the 1994 crime bill, because he had two prior felony convictions.

Kardashian brought former US District Judge Kevin Sharp to the Oval Office. He told Trump that as a judge his hands were tied and the penalty was unjust. Two years later, Young remains in prison.

The Trump-signed First Step Act eases the federal three strikes rule. Now, a third serious felony results in a mandatory 25 year sentence. But the change was not retroactive.

Trump faces a delicate balancing act pumping criminal justice reform while also pushing a “law and order” message, specifically in regard to recent violent protests following the Minnesota police killing of George Floyd in May.

Some polls this spring had President Trump’s approval rating as high as 44% in the African American community. Pollsters say that Democrats need to reduce that support to less than 6 percent if Joe Biden is to win the November election.

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-Wire services

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