Obama commutes Chelsea Manning’s sentence News
Obama commutes Chelsea Manning’s sentence

US President Barack Obama granted [White House blog] 64 pardons and 209 commutations yesterday, including commuting the sentence of Chelsea Manning. Manning worked as a low-level intelligence analyst where she leaked documents regarding the Iraq and Afghanistan wars in 2010 to WikiLeaks which exposed abuses of detainees and civilian deaths. The commutation will release Chelsea Manning on May 17. Several Republican leaders have criticized the commutation, including Representative Mac Thornberry, Senator John McCain, and Speaker Paul D. Ryan, stating that Manning’s actions risked national security. Manning’s lawyers stated that “Her 35-year sentence for disclosing information that served the public interest and never caused harm to the United States was always excessive, and we’re delighted that justice is being served in the form of this commutation.” A White House Petition [text] received more than 100,000 signatures in December to commute Manning’s sentence.

Manning was originally sentenced [JURIST report] to 35 years in prison for espionage in 2013 after being arrested in 2010. In September Manning was sentenced [JURIST report] to two weeks of solitary confinement over a suicide attempt and the possession of a banned book. Earlier in September, Manning ended a five-day hunger strike after the Army agreed to allow her to undergo gender reassignment surgery [JURIST reports]. In May Manning appealed [JURIST report] her 35-year prison sentence. In 2013 Manning filed for a presidential pardon of the 35-year sentence. In Feburary 2013 Manning pleaded guilty [JURIST report] to 10 of the 22 charges against her for providing classified materials to WikiLeaks.