Tue, 21-Oct-2025

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How it feels to be pardoned by the US president

Dexter Eugene Jackson

Dexter Eugene Jackson realized he had “a very rare possibility” of being absolved by the US president for his 2002 weed conviction. Three days prior, his requests were replied.

On a Tuesday morning like some other, Dexter was en route to work in the US province of Georgia when he got a call.

The lady on the opposite end was complimenting him. Dexter idea it should be a spam call.

That was until the lady, a writer from the neighborhood, uncovered the justification for the call: the 52-year-old was among three Americans being exonerated for their violations by President Joe Biden.

“It was insane,”  “I needed to pull over and take a full breath.”

At the point when he drove home to tell his better half Tamika, she went on the web – and sufficiently sure, there was Dexter’s name on the White House site, one of only three acquits, the first of Joe Biden’s administration.

A staff member from the White House soon reached out to confirm he had a special pardon certificate arriving in the mail.

Pardons are not a declaration of innocence. But wiping a criminal record clean has practical benefits – such as regaining the right to vote in some states – while reducing stigma, and increasing morale.

“I’ve got a new lease on life,” says Dexter. “I want to give thanks to President Biden and the Department of Justice.”

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