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Pennsylvania’s Board of Pardons should show mercy to more people like me | Opinion

I was the second commutation in nearly three decades for a woman in the state serving a life without parole sentence. Now I work to help others receive the same grace.

More than two dozen supporters of Charles Goldblum, a Pittsburgh man incarcerated since 1976 for stabbing to death George Wilhelm, testify before the Pennsylvania Board of Pardons including Attorney General Josh Shapiro (left) and Lt. Gov. John Fetterman (center).
More than two dozen supporters of Charles Goldblum, a Pittsburgh man incarcerated since 1976 for stabbing to death George Wilhelm, testify before the Pennsylvania Board of Pardons including Attorney General Josh Shapiro (left) and Lt. Gov. John Fetterman (center).Read moreSAMANTHA MELAMED / Staff

Until last year, I was one of the more than 5,400 Pennsylvanians serving mandatory life without parole sentences, condemned to die in prison.

Pennsylvania’s mandatory life without parole sentences for both first- and second-degree murder means that everyone with these convictions receives the same sentence — death by incarceration — without considering level of culpability or an individual’s circumstances. But it doesn’t need to be that way.

Until 1997, the Pennsylvania Board of Pardons operated under a simple 3-2 majority vote requirement to advance a person sentenced to life without parole or death to the governor’s desk for commutation. After a man whose sentence had been commuted was convicted of a high-profile series of violent offenses, the legislature changed this to a unanimous requirement, and Pennsylvanians in prison have borne the consequences since.

Thankfully, our state’s Board of Pardons granted me that unanimous vote in recognition of my extensive efforts of rehabilitation over my 37 years of time served. Through my efforts, and with the help of the From Cell to Home program, I was the second commutation in nearly three decades for a woman in the state serving a life without parole sentence. Now I work to help others receive the same grace, helping streamline the process of getting people’s cases before the Board of Pardons.

But there are legislative solutions that would help afford more people the grace I was afforded. There are current legislative efforts to change the Board of Pardons’ vote requirement from unanimous to a 4-1 vote (proposed in SB 884), or a return to a simple 3-2 majority (proposed in HB 2262) in order to advance to the governor’s desk for approval — both of which would allow the opportunity for more deserving people to return home to their loved ones.

The unanimous requirement for recommending commutation has contributed to the dramatic surge of aging and ill people living in our prisons, which rank among the highest in the nation for those serving life without parole. For most of these individuals and their loved ones, the commutation process is their only hope of relief from these excessive sentences.

As of December 2018, there were more than 10,000 people over the age of 50 serving sentences in Pennsylvania’s Department of Corrections and more than 20,000 over the age of 40. The Department of Corrections spends $2.9 million each month on medications for people over age 50 alone.

» READ MORE: Commutations can relieve costs of sick and aging prison population — and reverse decades of bad policy | Editorial

Many of these folks, like me, have already served decades in prison, have long since rehabilitated, and pose little to no risk of recidivism. The Justice Policy Institute studied a group of life-sentenced people who were released after serving decades in prison for violent offenses. They found that when provided comprehensive reentry support, this population had a recidivism rate of less than 3% after five years.

While we work to advance legislative solutions to our mass incarceration crisis, we must ask members of the Board of Pardons to support more people’s applications for second chances and to move them to Gov. Tom Wolf’s desk for approval.

We should not let the abhorrent behavior of a few deter mercy and grace for the many deserving people in Pennsylvania. We should be focusing on people like me — people who have been extended grace and are using their second chances to help those still fighting for relief from excessive sentences.

Naomi Blount served 37 years of a mandatory life sentence before having her sentence commuted in 2019. She now works as a commutation specialist under Lt. Gov. John Fetterman. Celeste Trusty, the Pennsylvania state policy director for the criminal justice reform nonprofit FAMM and previously a longtime advocate for justice reform in Pennsylvania, contributed research to this piece.