President Joe Biden has commuted the sentences of 37 federal death row inmates, replacing their death penalties with life imprisonment without the possibility of parole. This decision dramatically reduces the federal death row population to just three, marking a significant milestone in Biden’s stance against capital punishment.


What Is Sentence Commutation?

Sentence commutation involves reducing the severity of a sentence while maintaining the original conviction. For the 37 individuals, this means they will no longer face execution but will instead serve life terms in federal prison.

These commutations apply only to federal inmates and do not affect the approximately 2,200 individuals on death row in state prisons nationwide.

Who’s on Biden’s Commutes Sentences List?

Joe Biden commutes sentences White House Fact Sheet explaining his thought process about the move. (Image Source: White House)

The 37 individuals granted clemency include a mix of convictions, ranging from murders committed during bank robberies to prison killings:

                      NameReg. No.
SHANNON WAYNE AGOFSKY06267-045
 
BILLIE JEROME ALLEN
 
26901-044
 
AQUILIA MARCIVICCI BARNETTE
 
12599-058
 
BRANDON LEON BASHAM
 
98940-071
 
ANTHONY GEORGE BATTLE
 
11451-056
 
MEIER JASON BROWN
 
11364-021
 
CARLOS DAVID CARO
 
37786-079
 
WESLEY PAUL COONCE, JR.
 
30011-039
 
BRANDON MICHAEL COUNCIL
 
63961-056
 
CHRISTOPHER EMORY CRAMER
 
10422-081
 
LEN DAVIS
 
24325-034
 
JOSEPH EBRON
 
08655-007
 
RICKY ALLEN FACKRELL
 
12324-081
 
EDWARD LEON FIELDS, JR.
 
04136-063
CHADRICK EVAN FULKS16617-074
 
MARVIN CHARLES GABRION, II
 
09184-055
 
EDGAR BALTAZAR GARCIA
 
28132-177
 
THOMAS MOROCCO HAGER
 
08596-007
 
CHARLES MICHAEL HALL
 
03766-036
 
NORRIS G. HOLDER
 
26902-044
 
RICHARD ALLEN JACKSON
 
16669-058
 
JURIJUS KADAMOVAS
 
21050-112
 
DARYL LAWRENCE
 
66476-061
 
IOURI MIKHEL
 
23675-112
 
RONALD MIKOS
 
20716-424
 
JAMES H. ROANE, JR.
 
32923-083
 
JULIUS OMAR ROBINSON
 
26190-177
 
DAVID ANTHONY RUNYON
 
57997-083
 
RICARDO SANCHEZ, JR.
 
75820-004
 
THOMAS STEVEN SANDERS
 
15967-043
 
KABONI SAVAGE
 
58232-066
 
MARK ISAAC SNARR
 
11093-081
 
REJON TAYLOR
 
41070-074
 
RICHARD TIPTON
 
32922-083
 
JORGE AVILA TORREZ
 
16054-084
 
DANIEL TROYA
 
75817-004
 
ALEJANDRO ENRIQUE RAMIREZ UMAÑA
 
23077-058

The commutations spare these individuals from execution, ensuring they spend the remainder of their lives behind bars.

These commutations do not apply to three high-profile cases:

  1. Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, the Boston Marathon bomber.
  2. Dylann Roof, who murdered nine Black churchgoers in South Carolina.
  3. Robert Bowers, convicted of killing 11 worshippers in the 2018 Tree of Life Synagogue shooting.

Biden emphasized that cases involving terrorism and hate-motivated mass killings remain excluded from his clemency policy.


An Ending to Federal Executions ?

This decision reflects Biden’s long-standing opposition to the death penalty. Early in his administration, he issued a moratorium on federal executions, reversing the policies of his predecessor, Donald Trump, who oversaw 13 executions in 2020 alone.

Mixed Reactions to the Decision

The commutations have sparked both praise and criticism:

  • Advocacy groups and religious leaders, including Pope Francis, applauded the move as a step toward justice reform.
  • Critics, however, voiced strong opposition. Senator Tom Cotton described it as “an affront to victims,” while a Trump spokesperson called it “a mockery of justice.”

Addressing Racial Disparities

Biden’s decision also sheds light on the racial inequities tied to capital punishment. Black Americans make up 38% of federal death row inmates despite being only 14% of the U.S. population. Advocates view the commutations as progress toward addressing systemic discrimination in the justice system.


Expanding Clemency Efforts

This action is part of Biden’s broader agenda for criminal justice reform. He previously pardoned thousands of individuals convicted of marijuana possession and granted clemency to hundreds serving long sentences for nonviolent offenses.

His administration has also tried to tackled other injustices, such as disparities in sentencing laws and discrimination against LGBTQ+ service members. To varying degree of success, as is DEI administration because of how non-institutional that DEI has been implemented.

The Death Penalty Debate

The U.S. remains divided on the death penalty. Twenty-three states have abolished it, while six others have halted its use through moratoriums. Biden’s actions highlight a growing trend away from capital punishment at the federal level, though the broader debate persists.


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