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29 Fed. Sent'g Rep. 234 (2016-2017)
Clemency: An inside Story from a Progressive Advocate

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Clemency: An Inside Story from a Progressive Advocate


NKECHI TAIFA,
ESQ.*
Advocacy Director
for Criminal Justice,
Open Society
Foundations


In 1998, I authored an article for the Federal Sentencing
Reporter (FSR), Reflections From the Frontlines,' which
chronicled my view of the evolution of the campaign to
eliminate the disparity in federal sentencing between crack
and powder  cocaine. I continued the account in 2010, when
I penned  A Bittersweet Moment in History,2 written on
the cusp of the passage of the Fair Sentencing Act, which
reduced that disparity. Now, nearly 20 years from my first
FSR  article, I continue the odyssey with this inside story on
clemency-the   newest frontier in the ongoing drug war
saga, from my perspective as a progressive advocate.
    President Obama signed the Fair Sentencing Act into
law in 2010. I worked on the issue for 17 long years, over-
lapping my work  with three different employers-the
ACLU   Washington  Legislative Office, Howard University
School of Law, and the Open Society Foundations.
Although  the Fair Sentencing Act reduced the disparity in
penalty between crack and powder cocaine offenses, it was
prospective only, not applying to people already sentenced
at the time of its passage. Since the bill had bipartisan
support, progressive advocates strategically chose to keep
the retroactivity issue off the table because we felt attaching
it would have been legislative suicide.
   But the lack of retroactivity was fundamentally unfair-
sentences should not be based on a fluke-whether one is
lucky enough to have committed a drug crime after
August  3, 2010, the effective date of the Act, as opposed to
a mere day before. If the disparity is wrong today, it was
wrong  yesterday. Fairness means that the new law had to
apply retroactively, particularly since it was the egregious- .
ness of the sentences of people already incarcerated that
inspired the change in the law. Now that the bill had passed
and the storm had blown over, I knew there had to be
a solution to this nonsensical conundrum. Always on
a quest for justice, I scrambled to come up with a remedy.

I. The Beginning
I have it! I shrieked, several months after passage of the
2010 bill as I breathlessly blurted my master plan to col-
leagues. Mass clemency for those who did not benefit
from the Fair Sentencing Act!
   Unfortunately, my excitement was short-lived. Nkechi,
don't be ridiculous, a close colleague chided. Be realistic,
that will never happen, another admonished. Although
this proposed remedy was shot down by coalition members
as unrealistic, I knew I was on the right track. I just needed
to find the right mechanism and fashion a winning


    Federal Sentencing Reporter, Vol. 29, No. 5, PP. 234-246, ISSN 1053-9867, electronic ISSN 1533-8363.
    @ 2017 Vera Institute of Justice. All rights reserved. Please direct requests for permission to photocopy
or reproduce article content through the University of California Press's Reprints and Permissions web page,
     http://www.ucpress.edu/journals.php?p=reprints. DOI: https://doi.org/IO.1525/fsr.2017.29.5.234.


FEDERAL   SENTENCING REPORTER  * VOL. 29, NO. 5  * JUNE 2017


narrative that would provide critical cover in a politically
volatile criminal punishment regime.
    The following year someone handed me  an article
 co-written by Mark Osler,3 an unknown-to-me law professor
 from Minnesota's University of St. Thomas Law School.
 My eyes got big and my brain started racing.
    This is really it! I confidently proclaimed to myself.
 This is it, and hallelujah, it's coming from a White former
 prosecutor turned professor who established the first law
 school clemency clinic in the country. Perfect. The article
 provided a framework for a solution to my problem. It
 focused on nearly 14,000 people convicted of anti-draft
 offenses whose sentences were commuted  through a fed-
 eral clemency commission established by President Gerald
 Ford in the wake of the Viet Nam War. It also described
 President Jimmy Carter's amnesty for draft dodgers that
 followed. I was obsessed as I scrutinized this possible pre-
 cedent. Hmmm,   in the clemency commission approach,
 each case was individually reviewed, a remedy that was not
 seen as the proverbial get out of jail free card, and
 a strategy that would alleviate current fears of releasing
 those who could pose a threat to public safety. It sounded
 like a plausible model to replicate, and I was excited.
    I needed a platform to introduce Professor Osler's Ford
 Clemency Commission   model as a serious pursuit, espe-
 cially since my mass clemency brainchild idea failed to
 pass the laugh test, even amongst some of my progressive
 peers. As I usually do when stuck and needing to generate
 attention to an issue and garner buy-in from colleagues,
 I contemplated an educational policy event.
   This approach worked at the onset of the crack disparity
campaign  I led in 1993 while at the ACLU, when the bud-
*ding C-SPAN broadcast our day-long symposium,4 helping
to thrust the issue into the national consciousness. It was
likewise successful as I sought to revive the campaign in
2006  with an historic thematic hearing before the Inter-
American  Commission   on Human   Rights. This hearing
included a riveting testimony from Judge Patricia Wald,
who  castigated long and punitive sentences, stating that not
only did they approach the cruel and unusual level, but that
sentences she saw imposed  on war crimes perpetrators
responsible for the deaths and sufferings of innocent civi-
lians often did not come near those imposed in my own
country for dealing in a few bags of illegal drugs.5
   I teamed up with Kanya Bennett, a former Congressio-
nal Black Caucus fellow who had recently joined the staff of
the American  Constitution Society for Law and Policy. We


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