Prez Trump appoints justice-involved individual, who he pardoned in 2021, to help run Bureau of Prisons
As noted in this post, in 2021 I urged then-Prez Biden to consider nominating to the US Sentencing Commission multiple persons with diverse, direct experiences with U.S. justice systems. Four years later, as detailed in this new NBC News article, Prez Trump picks up the thread with a notable new appointment to the federal Bureau of Prisons. Here are the details:
A former federal inmate who was pardoned by President Donald Trump in his first term for drug trafficking crimes more than two decades ago has been tapped as deputy director of the federal Bureau of Prisons, according to bureau spokesperson Kristie Breshears.
Joshua J. Smith, a Tennessee businessman who founded an inmate advocacy and rehabilitation nonprofit foundation, the Fourth Purpose, will be second in command in the bureau.
The BOP has never had a formerly incarcerated inmate work as an employee at any level, according to a senior bureau official. “Josh brings to this role something our agency has never had before at this level, a perspective shaped by lived experience, proven innovation and national impact,” Director William K. Marshall III said in a memo to staff Thursday.
“His firsthand understanding of our facilities — of the tension, the risk and the importance of trust — makes him uniquely positioned to advocate for the resources and reforms front-line staff need to do their jobs safely and effectively,” added Marshall, a former prison commissioner in West Virginia whom Trump selected as BOP director in April….
Trump granted a full pardon to Smith, who had been convicted of conspiracy to possess drugs with intent to distribute. Indictments were filed in 1997 for marijuana- and cocaine-related charges, and the court docket shows he pleaded guilty. The court recommended he go to the Federal Correctional Institution Manchester in Kentucky and boot camp for a 60-month sentence. He was also set to have five years supervised release, substance abuse treatment and a $12,500 fine.
The bureau, in recent years, has been roiled by accusations of cronyism and corruption, widespread staffing shortages, and violence and misconduct in prisons. Its leadership must manage a massive $8 billion-plus budget, more than 143,000 federal inmates across 122 prisons, and a workforce of more than 35,000 as the Justice Department’s largest employer.
In deciding to pardon Smith, the White House said in 2021 that, after his release from prison in 2003, he “dedicated his life to his faith and to his community,” founded Fourth Purpose and “mentored incarcerated individuals and taught business classes to those in prison — including at the prison where he was incarcerated.”