Lawmakers pump money into clemency process

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The idea is for more cases to be reviewed.

Florida lawmakers are setting aside money to help alleviate the state’s heavy clemency caseload and speed up the process in which felons’ rights can be restored.

Top House and Senate budget writers have agreed to provide $750,000 to the Florida Commission on Offender Review during the upcoming fiscal year to help with the investigative portion of the process that leads to decisions by the Board of Executive Clemency.

That money will help Gov. Ron DeSantis and Cabinet members, who act as the clemency board, to chip away at nearly 24,000 clemency cases that had not been resolved as of April 1.

Initially, the commission asked legislative leaders for $500,000, but Senate Appropriations Chairman Rob Bradley, a Fleming Island Republican, said the House and Senate agreed to provide $750,000 after being “encouraged” by how new leaders have handled the clemency process compared to the past eight years when former Gov. Rick Scott was at the helm.

“There’s been disappointment from many of us over the last several years (in) the system that was in place with the Cabinet before and how they handled clemency petitions,” Bradley said when explaining his reasons for the additional funding.

The clemency process has long been controversial, with Scott and the Cabinet in 2011 imposing new rules that made it harder for felons to get their rights restored.

Last year, the commission also looked for funding to address its clemency caseload, but lawmakers zeroed out their request. The decision came after Chief U.S. District Judge Mark Walker of Tallahassee ruled the state’s process for restoring felons’ rights was “nonsensical” and unconstitutional.

The state appealed that ruling, and the case is pending at the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

The money boost to the commission this year comes as state lawmakers work to finalize an implementation plan for Amendment 4, a ballot measure approved by voters in November that is designed to restore voting rights to hundreds of thousands of felons who have fulfilled terms of their sentences.

While the outcome of how Amendment 4 will be implemented remains to be seen, budget writers say they want to aid the process for restoring felons’ rights through the clemency board. The clemency process also includes other issues, such as granting pardons.

“We were very encouraged by the new Cabinet and their probably more open-minded approach when considering these types of petitions, and they need money to be able to review people’s background and records and be able to make informed decisions,” Bradley said.

Details on how that money will be used remain to be determined, but Kelly Corder, a spokeswoman for the Commission on Offender Review, said the money will go toward hiring more staff to handle the clemency workload.

“Ultimately leading to more cases being reviewed,” Corder said.

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Republished with permission of The News Service of Florida.

Ana Ceballos

Ana covers politics and policy Before joining the News Service of Florida she wrote for the Naples Daily News and was the legislative relief reporter for The Associated Press and covered policy issues impacting immigration, the environment, criminal justice and social welfare in Florida. She holds a B.A. in journalism from San Diego State University. After graduating in 2014, she worked as a criminal justice reporter for the Monterey Herald and the Monterey County Weekly. She has also freelanced for The Washington Post at the U.S.-Mexico border covering crime in the border city of Tijuana, where she grew up. Ana is fluent in Spanish and has intermediate proficiency in Portuguese.


2 comments

  • beth cioffoletti

    May 1, 2019 at 7:45 pm

    There are many, many inmates in Florida who are serving brutally long sentences and who are deserving of clemency. I hope that they will be able to get on the docket in a timely manner and that their cases will be given the consideration that they deserve.

  • Mary Metts

    May 2, 2019 at 3:07 pm

    It is agreed that inmates in Fl are serving too long of sentences.So how does this clemency work or does it if so who does it effect.My daughter is one of so many who is serving lengthy sentence (5yrs) for vop,she needed rehab so many others do too.Florida inmates need second chances but is it possiable that inmates will get a review on their sentences and might get out earlier for their unjust sentences. Or is it just talk Florida is a corrupt state they or should I say the government doesn’t care about inmates and the help they need they dont care about corrupt law inforcement or bad judges nor the probation officers that just don’t care.Where will clemency be and how long?

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