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At the Lectern

“Newsom grants clemency, but freedom isn’t certain”

February 13, 2023

Mackenzie Mays wrote in the Los Angeles Times last week about Governor Gavin Newsom’s nuanced approach to commuting prison sentences — the commutations often don’t lead to releases from custody, but only to potential releases from custody. Newsom “sends prisoners to the parole board, allowing its commissioners — who include attorneys, former wardens and correctional officers — to decide their fate.”

The in-depth piece mentions the Supreme Court’s role in the clemency process. The state constitution requires a governor to get an affirmative court recommendation before granting a pardon to, or commuting the sentence of, anyone who has been “twice convicted of a felony.”

Newsom’s most recent clemency recommendation requests to the court (see here) reflect his concept of conditional mercy. Several requests asked permission to commute life-without-parole sentences. However, in cover letters to the court, the governor’s deputy legal affairs secretary wrote, “The Governor is contemplating a commutation of sentence that would make [the prisoner] eligible for a parole suitability hearing.”

Related:

The Supreme Court’s part in any possible commutation of all California death sentences

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