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House speaker vote update: Johnson wins showdown with GOP hard-liners; President Biden and the First Lady to travel to New Orleans on Monday; Hunger-fighting groups try to prevent cuts to CA food-bank funding; Mississippians urged to donate blood amid critical shortage; Rural telehealth sees more policy wins, but only short-term.

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Federal officials present more information about the New Orleans terrorist attack and the Las Vegas cybertruck explosion. Mike Johnson prepares for a House speakership battle, and Congress' latest budget stopgap leaves telehealth regulations relaxed.

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The humble peanut got its '15 minutes of fame' when Jimmy Carter was President, America's rural households are becoming more racially diverse but language barriers still exist, farmers brace for another trade war, and coal miners with black lung get federal help.

Advocates urge broader clemency despite Biden’s death row commutes

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Thursday, December 26, 2024   

In one of his final acts in the White House, President Joe Biden has commuted the sentences of 37 people with federal death row convictions to life sentences without parole.

Groups working on justice system reform said it is a start, but they think clemency should also be extended to others serving unfairly long sentences due to outdated policies.

Zoë Towns, executive director of FWD.US, a group that works on immigration and criminal justice reform, pointed to changes in laws and sentencing practices making many older sentences inconsistent with today's standards.

"There's actually been quite a few laws that have changed," Towns explained. "A lot of practice that has changed in the last 15 years, based on the huge shift in public opinion about mass incarceration, the harms of long sentences."

Earlier this month, Biden also granted clemency to nearly 1,500 people in a single day, the largest number ever. It includes sentence reductions for people on home confinement during the COVID-19 pandemic and pardons for 39 individuals convicted of nonviolent crimes.

Towns noted unequal sentencing stems from policies introduced during the war on drugs in the 1990s. While today's laws no longer impose the same harsh penalties for similar crimes, many people sentenced back then remain behind bars. She added the sentences have disproportionately affected Black people, particularly Black men.

"I think you're probably familiar with the disparity in how crack and powder cocaine were sentenced," Towns outlined. "There was 100-to-one disparity, basically, which had very racially disparate consequences, and people, Black people, went to federal prison for way longer terms."

Polling by FWD.US found more than 80% of voters support expanding clemency, with many Americans having direct experience with incarceration in their families.

Towns stressed it is up to governors to act, citing state-level successes like Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt's mass clemency initiatives as evidence of such reforms.


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