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<!-- META_DESCRIPTION: Discover Alice Marie Johnson's 21-year federal prison journey and historic clemency. Now serving as Trump's pardon czar after Kim Kardashian's advocacy. -->
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            "text": "In February 2025, President Trump appointed Alice Marie Johnson as the nation's first 'pardon czar,' tasking her with identifying federal prisoners deserving of executive clemency and making recommendations directly to the President. She previously founded the Taking Action for Good Foundation to help incarcerated individuals seek clemency."
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{{Infobox Person
{{Infobox Person
|name = Alice Marie Johnson
|name = Alice Marie Johnson
|image = alice-marie-johnson.png
|birth_date = May 30, 1955
|birth_date = May 30, 1955
|birth_place = Olive Branch, Mississippi
|birth_place = Olive Branch, Mississippi
|charges = Drug conspiracy, Money laundering, Structuring
|charges = Drug conspiracy, Money laundering, Structuring
|sentence = Life without parole (commuted)
|conviction_date = 1996
|sentence = Life without parole (commuted 2018; pardoned 2020)
|release_date = June 6, 2018
|facility = FCI Aliceville
|facility = FCI Aliceville
|status = Released (Pardoned)
|judge = Julia Smith Gibbons
}}
|case_number = W.D. Tenn.
'''Alice Marie Johnson''' (born May 30, 1955) is an American criminal justice reform advocate, author, and former federal prisoner who served nearly 22 years in federal prison after being convicted in 1996 for her involvement in a Memphis, Tennessee-based cocaine trafficking organization.<ref name="npr-pardonczar">NPR, "Who is Alice Marie Johnson, Trump's newly appointed 'pardon czar'?," February 25, 2025, https://www.npr.org/2025/02/25/nx-s1-5307330/trump-pardon-czar-who-is-alice-marie-johnson.</ref> Originally sentenced to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole as a first-time nonviolent drug offender, Johnson's case gained national attention when reality television star Kim Kardashian advocated for her release, ultimately leading President Donald Trump to commute her sentence in June 2018.<ref name="wapo-clemency">The Washington Post, "Trump has commuted the life sentence of Alice Marie Johnson," June 6, 2018, https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/trump-has-commuted-the-life-sentence-of-alice-marie-johnson.</ref> Trump granted Johnson a full presidential pardon in August 2020, and in February 2025, during his second term, appointed her as the administration's first-ever "pardon czar" to identify candidates for executive clemency.<ref name="cbs-pardonczar">CBS News, "Trump names Alice Johnson, pardoned in his first term, to be 'pardon czar'," February 2025, https://www.cbsnews.com/news/trump-alice-johnson-pardon-czar/.</ref>
|status = Released/Pardoned
 
}}'''Alice Marie Johnson''' (born May 30, 1955) is an American criminal justice reform advocate and author. She served nearly 22 years of a life sentence in federal prison after a 1996 conviction in the Western District of Tennessee for her role in a Memphis cocaine trafficking organization.<ref name="npr-pardonczar">{{cite news |title=Who is Alice Marie Johnson, Trump's newly appointed 'pardon czar'? |url=https://www.npr.org/2025/02/25/nx-s1-5307330/trump-pardon-czar-who-is-alice-marie-johnson |work=NPR |date=2025-02-25 |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref> Johnson was a first-time, nonviolent offender. The trial judge had little room to depart from federal mandatory minimums and imposed life without parole.<ref name="aclu">{{cite web |title=President Commutes Life-Without-Parole Sentence of Alice Marie Johnson |url=https://www.aclu.org/press-releases/president-commutes-life-without-parole-sentence-alice-marie-johnson |publisher=American Civil Liberties Union |date=2018-06-06 |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref>
== Summary ==
 
Alice Marie Johnson's journey from life imprisonment to presidential pardon to White House advisor represents one of the most remarkable clemency stories in modern American history. Born into a family of sharecroppers in rural Mississippi, Johnson relocated to Memphis as a young woman, where she built a career at FedEx before personal tragedies and financial difficulties led her into the drug trade in the early 1990s. Her 1996 conviction on eight federal counts resulted in a mandatory life sentence that many critics viewed as disproportionately harsh for a nonviolent first-time offender.<ref name="npr-pardonczar" />
 
During her nearly 22 years of incarceration at the Federal Medical Center in Carswell, Texas, and later at Federal Correctional Institution Aliceville in Alabama, Johnson transformed her life behind bars. She became an ordained minister, certified hospice worker, playwright, and mentor to fellow inmates, maintaining an exemplary disciplinary record that earned the support of prison staff including her warden in letters supporting her clemency petition.<ref name="cando-clemency">CAN-DO Clemency, "Alice Marie Johnson - FREE AT LAST," https://www.candoclemency.com/alice-marie-johnson/.</ref>
 
Johnson's case became a focal point in national debates over mandatory minimum sentencing and criminal justice reform. Her release, followed by her visible advocacy work and close relationship with the Trump administration, positioned her as a prominent voice in the movement to reform federal sentencing practices. She founded the Taking Action for Good Foundation to assist other incarcerated individuals seeking clemency and published a memoir detailing her experiences, "After Life: My Journey from Incarceration to Freedom," in 2019.<ref name="amazon-afterlife">Amazon, "After Life: My Journey from Incarceration to Freedom," by Alice Marie Johnson, HarperCollins 2019, https://www.amazon.com/After-Life-Journey-Incarceration-Freedom/dp/0062936107.</ref>
 
== Background ==
 
Alice Marie Johnson was born on May 30, 1955, in Olive Branch, Mississippi, one of nine children raised by sharecropper parents. Her early life was marked by the poverty and limited opportunities common to rural African American families in the mid-twentieth century South. As a sophomore in high school, Johnson became pregnant, an experience that shaped her early adult years. Despite these challenges, she pursued education and eventually relocated to Memphis, Tennessee, in 1979, seeking greater economic opportunity.<ref name="npr-pardonczar" />
 
In Memphis, Johnson found stable employment at FedEx, where she worked for approximately ten years and established herself as a reliable employee. She married, raised children, and built what appeared to be a solid middle-class life. However, a series of personal catastrophes in the late 1980s and early 1990s unraveled her stability. Johnson developed a gambling addiction that contributed to her losing her job at FedEx. This was followed by a divorce and, most devastatingly, the death of her youngest son in a motorcycle accident.<ref name="heavy-facts">Heavy.com, "Alice Marie Johnson: 5 Fast Facts You Need to Know," May 2018, https://heavy.com/news/2018/05/alice-marie-johnson/.</ref>
 
Facing mounting financial pressures, Johnson filed for bankruptcy in 1991, and foreclosure on her home followed shortly thereafter. Desperate for income, she became involved with a Memphis-based cocaine trafficking organization, serving as a communications coordinator who relayed coded messages between drug dealers. Though she never personally handled drugs, her role in the conspiracy was substantial enough to attract federal attention.<ref name="cando-clemency" />
 
== Indictment, Prosecution, and Sentencing ==
 
=== Federal Charges ===
 
Johnson was arrested in 1993 as part of a broader federal investigation into the Memphis cocaine trafficking ring. After a lengthy legal process, she was convicted in 1996 on eight federal criminal counts related to her involvement in the drug conspiracy. The charges included drug conspiracy, money laundering, and structuring—the latter charge stemming from her purchase of a house with a down payment deliberately structured to avoid the $10,000 reporting threshold that triggers mandatory bank reporting to federal authorities.<ref name="npr-pardonczar" />
 
The drug organization Johnson was connected to dealt in substantial quantities of cocaine. At her sentencing hearing, U.S. District Judge Julia Gibbons characterized Johnson as "the quintessential entrepreneur" in an operation that handled between 2,000 and 3,000 kilograms of cocaine. Despite Johnson's nonviolent role in the conspiracy and her status as a first-time offender, federal mandatory minimum sentencing laws left Judge Gibbons with limited discretion.<ref name="cando-clemency" />
 
=== Life Sentence ===
 
In 1997, Judge Gibbons sentenced Johnson to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole. The sentence reflected the harsh mandatory minimums that Congress had enacted during the "War on Drugs" era, which required lengthy sentences based on drug quantities regardless of a defendant's personal culpability, role in the offense, or prior criminal history. Johnson's case became emblematic of what critics characterized as the disproportionate punishment meted out to low-level participants in drug conspiracies, particularly African American defendants.<ref name="wapo-clemency" />


The sentence meant that, absent executive clemency, Johnson would die in federal prison. She was 41 years old at the time of sentencing, with no prior criminal record, facing permanent separation from her children and grandchildren for a nonviolent offense.
Her case drew national attention after reality television personality Kim Kardashian took it up and brought it to the White House in 2018. President Donald Trump commuted Johnson's sentence on June 6, 2018, and she walked out of FCI Aliceville the same day.<ref name="wapo-clemency">{{cite news |last=Wagner |first=John |title=Trump commutes life sentence of Alice Marie Johnson |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/trump-has-commuted-the-life-sentence-of-alice-marie-johnson |work=The Washington Post |date=2018-06-06 |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref> Two years later, on August 28, 2020, one day after Johnson spoke at the Republican National Convention, Trump granted her a full pardon. The pardon erased the conviction itself, not just the remaining sentence.<ref name="pbs-pardon">{{cite news |title=Trump pardons Alice Johnson, who praised him in RNC speech |url=https://www.pbs.org/newshour/politics/trump-pardons-alice-johnson-who-praised-him-in-rnc-speech |work=PBS NewsHour |date=2020-08-28 |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref>


== Prison Experience ==
After her release Johnson became a public advocate for sentencing reform and clemency. She founded a foundation, published a memoir in 2019, and spoke widely about her case. In February 2025, during Trump's second term, he named her to a new advisory role he called "pardon czar." She is the first person to hold the title. The job is to review federal clemency cases and make recommendations to the president.<ref name="cbs-pardonczar">{{cite news |title=Trump names Alice Johnson, pardoned in his first term, to be 'pardon czar' |url=https://www.cbsnews.com/news/trump-alice-johnson-pardon-czar/ |work=CBS News |date=2025-02-21 |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref>


Johnson began serving her sentence at the Federal Medical Center in Carswell, Texas, the federal prison hospital for women, where she trained and became a certified hospice worker, caring for dying inmates. She was subsequently transferred to Federal Correctional Institution Aliceville in Alabama to be closer to her family in Memphis.<ref name="cando-clemency" />
== Early Life ==


During her nearly 22 years of incarceration, Johnson underwent a profound personal transformation while maintaining an exemplary institutional record. She never received a single disciplinary infraction throughout her imprisonment—a remarkable achievement over such an extended period. Her conduct and character earned the respect of prison staff at every level, culminating in virtually unprecedented support from institutional officials for her clemency petition. Her warden, case manager, captain, and vocational training instructor all submitted letters supporting her bid for early release, a level of institutional endorsement rarely seen in clemency cases.<ref name="cando-clemency" />
Johnson was born on May 30, 1955, in Olive Branch, Mississippi. She was one of nine children. Her parents were sharecroppers, and the family had little money.<ref name="npr-pardonczar" /> She became pregnant while in high school. In 1979 she moved to Memphis, Tennessee, looking for work.<ref name="cando-clemency">{{cite web |title=Alice Marie Johnson - FREE AT LAST |url=https://www.candoclemency.com/alice-marie-johnson/ |publisher=CAN-DO Clemency |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref>


Johnson channeled her energy into self-improvement and service to others. She became an ordained minister, receiving ordination through proxy at God's Millennium Women's Conference and later through an in-prison Horn of Oil Ceremony. She wrote and produced plays that engaged fellow inmates in theatrical productions, coordinated the first-ever Special Olympics event for prisoners at her facility, taught classes, and mentored countless women struggling with their own circumstances. Her hospice work brought comfort to dying inmates who might otherwise have faced their final days alone.<ref name="localmemphis-memoir">Local Memphis, "Alice Marie Johnson discusses her journey to freedom in new memoir," https://www.localmemphis.com/article/news/local/alice-marie-johnson-discusses-her-journey-to-freedom-in-new-memoir.</ref>
In Memphis she found a job at FedEx and stayed about a decade. She married and raised children. The arrangement held for years. Then it came apart fast. She developed a gambling habit and lost the FedEx job. A divorce followed. Her youngest son was killed in a motorcycle accident.<ref name="heavy-facts">{{cite news |title=Alice Marie Johnson: 5 Fast Facts You Need to Know |url=https://heavy.com/news/2018/05/alice-marie-johnson/ |work=Heavy.com |date=2018-05 |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref>


"I started writing plays and getting the women involved in dance, in theater, and artists emerged," Johnson later recalled of her time incarcerated. Her deep Christian faith sustained her throughout her imprisonment and informed her ministry to fellow inmates.
Money problems followed. She filed for bankruptcy in 1991, and her home went into foreclosure. With no steady income, she took up with a Memphis cocaine trafficking ring. Her role was relaying coded phone messages between members of the operation. She did not handle the drugs herself. Her part in the conspiracy was still large enough to bring federal charges.<ref name="cando-clemency" />


== Campaign for Clemency ==
== Conviction and Life Sentence ==


=== Kim Kardashian's Advocacy ===
A federal grand jury in the Western District of Tennessee indicted Johnson on January 21, 1993, along with 15 other defendants. The charge was conspiracy to run a multimillion-dollar cocaine operation out of Memphis.<ref name="cando-clemency" /> She was arrested in 1993.


Johnson's case gained national visibility through an unexpected advocate. In 2017, the digital media company Mic produced a video documentary about Johnson's case that went viral on social media. Reality television star and businesswoman Kim Kardashian saw the video and was moved by what she described as the unfairness of Johnson's life sentence for a nonviolent first offense. Kardashian posted about Johnson's case on social media, calling the sentence "so unfair," and began working behind the scenes to secure Johnson's release.<ref name="harpersbazaar-kim">Harper's Bazaar, "Who Is Alice Marie Johnson? Kim Kardashian Meets Donald Trump About Prison Reform," 2018, https://www.harpersbazaar.com/celebrity/latest/a20968667/who-is-alice-marie-johnson-kim-kardashian-prison-reform/.</ref>
A jury convicted her in 1996 on eight federal counts. The counts covered drug conspiracy, attempted possession of cocaine, money laundering, and structuring. The structuring charge came from a house purchase. She had broken the down payment into amounts under the $10,000 threshold that forces banks to report cash transactions to the federal government.<ref name="npr-pardonczar" />


Kardashian partnered with Jared Kushner, President Trump's son-in-law and senior advisor, who had made criminal justice reform a policy priority partly due to his own father's federal prosecution and imprisonment years earlier. Together, they worked to bring Johnson's case directly to the President's attention. In late May 2018, Kardashian traveled to Washington and met with President Trump in the Oval Office to personally advocate for Johnson's clemency.<ref name="wapo-clemency" />
The organization moved large amounts of cocaine. At sentencing, U.S. District Judge Julia Smith Gibbons described Johnson as "the quintessential entrepreneur" in an operation that handled between 2,000 and 3,000 kilograms of cocaine.<ref name="cando-clemency" /> The drug weight drove the sentence. Under the mandatory minimum scheme Congress passed during the 1980s and 1990s drug enforcement push, the quantity set the floor regardless of a defendant's role or record.


=== Presidential Clemency and Pardon ===
In 1997 Gibbons sentenced Johnson to life imprisonment without parole.<ref name="aclu" /> Johnson was 41. She had no prior record. Absent a presidential act, the sentence meant she would die in prison.


On June 6, 2018, President Trump commuted Alice Marie Johnson's sentence, effective immediately, ordering her release from FCI Aliceville. Johnson had served 21 years, seven months, and six days in federal prison. The commutation meant her sentence was reduced to time served, but she retained her federal conviction and the associated civil disabilities.<ref name="npr-release">NPR, "Woman Released After Trump Commutes Life Sentence For Nonviolent Drug Offense," June 6, 2018, https://www.npr.org/2018/06/06/617513060/president-trump-commutes-sentence-of-grandmother-serving-life-in-prison.</ref>
== Incarceration and Advocacy ==


On August 28, 2020—one day after Johnson delivered a speech at the Republican National Convention praising President Trump's criminal justice reform efforts—Trump granted her a full presidential pardon. The pardon eliminated her federal conviction entirely, restoring her full civil rights. "We're giving Alice a full pardon. I just told her," Trump announced from the Oval Office with Johnson present.<ref name="cnn-pardon">CNN, "Trump grants Alice Johnson a full pardon," August 28, 2020, https://www.cnn.com/2020/08/28/politics/donald-trump-alice-johnson-pardon/index.html.</ref>
Johnson began her term at the Federal Medical Center in Carswell, Texas, the federal prison hospital for women. There she trained as a hospice volunteer and sat with dying prisoners.<ref name="cando-clemency" /> She was later moved to FCI Aliceville in Alabama, closer to her family in Memphis.


== Post-Release Career ==
She drew no disciplinary infractions across more than two decades inside. That record carried weight when she sought clemency. Her warden, her case manager, a captain, and a vocational instructor each wrote letters backing her petition. Letters from facility staff at that level are uncommon in clemency files.<ref name="cando-clemency" />


=== Criminal Justice Reform Advocacy ===
Johnson kept busy inside. She was ordained as a minister. She wrote and staged plays and pulled other women into the productions. She organized a Special Olympics event at her facility. She taught classes and mentored other prisoners. She has said her Christian faith carried her through the years.<ref name="localmemphis-memoir">{{cite news |title=Alice Marie Johnson discusses her journey to freedom in new memoir |url=https://www.localmemphis.com/article/news/local/alice-marie-johnson-discusses-her-journey-to-freedom-in-new-memoir |work=Local Memphis |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref>


Following her release, Johnson dedicated herself to criminal justice reform advocacy, drawing on her personal experience to argue for changes to mandatory minimum sentencing laws and expanded clemency opportunities for nonviolent offenders. She became a visible supporter of the First Step Act, bipartisan legislation that Trump signed into law in December 2018. The law reformed certain federal sentencing provisions and expanded early release opportunities, representing the most significant federal criminal justice reform legislation in a generation.<ref name="npr-pardonczar" />
Her case reached a national audience in 2017. The digital media company Mic produced a short video about her sentence, and it spread on social media. Kim Kardashian saw it. Kardashian posted about the case, called the sentence "so unfair," and began working to get Johnson out.<ref name="harpersbazaar-kim">{{cite news |title=Who Is Alice Marie Johnson? Kim Kardashian Meets Donald Trump About Prison Reform |url=https://www.harpersbazaar.com/celebrity/latest/a20968667/who-is-alice-marie-johnson-kim-kardashian-prison-reform/ |work=Harper's Bazaar |date=2018-06 |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref>


Johnson founded the Taking Action for Good Foundation (TAG), a nonprofit organization dedicated to helping other incarcerated individuals navigate the clemency process and advocating for systemic sentencing reform. Through TAG, she has assisted numerous federal prisoners in preparing clemency petitions and raising awareness of their cases.<ref name="tag-mission">Taking Action for Good, "Our Mission," https://takingactionforgood.org/our-mission/.</ref>
Kardashian worked with Jared Kushner, Trump's son-in-law and senior advisor, who had made sentencing reform a White House priority. In late May 2018 Kardashian met Trump in the Oval Office and pressed Johnson's case in person.<ref name="wapo-clemency" />


=== Author and Speaker ===
== Commutation and Pardon ==


In May 2019, HarperCollins published Johnson's memoir, "After Life: My Journey from Incarceration to Freedom," co-written with author Nancy French and featuring a foreword by Kim Kardashian. The book recounts her childhood, the circumstances that led to her involvement in drug trafficking, her decades of imprisonment, and her unlikely path to freedom. A Kirkus review described the work as "a moving, inspirational story that makes a powerful argument for sentencing reform."<ref name="amazon-afterlife" />
On June 6, 2018, Trump commuted Johnson's sentence and ordered her release that day. By the count cited in news coverage, she had served 21 years, seven months, and six days.<ref name="npr-release">{{cite news |title=Woman Released After Trump Commutes Life Sentence For Nonviolent Drug Offense |url=https://www.npr.org/2018/06/06/617513060/president-trump-commutes-sentence-of-grandmother-serving-life-in-prison |work=NPR |date=2018-06-06 |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref> A commutation ends a sentence. It does not erase the conviction. Johnson left prison still carrying her federal record and the civil disabilities that come with it.


Johnson has become a sought-after speaker, addressing audiences about her experiences, faith, and advocacy work. She was featured by UN Women as part of its "Courage to Question" series ahead of International Women's Day 2019, highlighting her advocacy for including women's voices in criminal justice reform discussions.<ref name="councilcj">Council on Criminal Justice, "Alice Marie Johnson," https://counciloncj.org/ccj-directory/alice-marie-johnson/.</ref>
She spoke at the Republican National Convention on August 27, 2020, and praised Trump's work on criminal justice. The next day, August 28, Trump granted her a full pardon from the Oval Office with Johnson present. "We're giving Alice a full pardon," he said.<ref name="nbc-pardon">{{cite news |title=Trump gives Alice Johnson a full pardon a day after her RNC speech |url=https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/donald-trump/trump-gives-alice-johnson-full-pardon-day-after-her-rnc-n1238726 |work=NBC News |date=2020-08-28 |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref> The pardon wiped out the conviction and restored her civil rights.<ref name="pbs-pardon" />


== Role as Pardon Czar ==
After the RNC appearance, some commentators questioned whether Johnson had become a campaign prop. She rejected the framing. She said she was "not a prop or puppet" and that she would vote her conscience.<ref name="cbs-prop">{{cite news |title=Alice Johnson says she's not a "pawn" for Trump after RNC speech |url=https://www.cbsnews.com/news/trump-alice-johnson-rnc-speech-pardon-vote-november/ |work=CBS News |date=2020-08-29 |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref>


On February 20, 2025, during a Black History Month observance at the White House, President Donald Trump appointed Johnson to the newly created position of "pardon czar," making her the first person in American history to hold such a role.<ref name="foxnews-pardonczar">Fox News, "Trump appoints Alice Marie Johnson 'pardon czar' during Black History Month event at White House," February 2025, https://www.foxnews.com/politics/trump-appoints-alice-marie-johnson-pardon-czar-black-history-month-event-white-house.</ref> The position tasks Johnson with identifying federal prisoners deserving of executive clemency and making recommendations directly to the President. To assume this role, Johnson resigned from her position at Taking Action for Good (TAG), the criminal justice reform foundation she had founded following her own release from prison.<ref name="tag-website">Taking Action for Good, https://takingactionforgood.org/.</ref>
== Criminal Justice Reform Work ==


The appointment formalized Johnson's ongoing advisory relationship with the Trump administration on clemency matters. During Trump's first term, Johnson had already submitted over 100 clemency petitions and helped secure freedom for nearly 50 individuals, working closely with figures including Ivanka Trump, Jared Kushner, and current Attorney General Pam Bondi.<ref name="actionnews5">Action News 5, "Mid-South native Alice Marie Johnson appointed as Pres. Trump's Pardon Czar," February 24, 2025, https://www.actionnews5.com/2025/02/24/mid-south-native-alice-marie-johnson-appointed-pres-trumps-pardon-czar/.</ref> The new role gave her an official capacity to continue this work from within the White House itself.
After her release Johnson turned to advocacy full time. She argued against mandatory minimum sentences for nonviolent drug offenses and pushed for wider use of clemency. She backed the First Step Act, the sentencing reform bill Trump signed in December 2018, and appeared at events tied to it.<ref name="npr-pardonczar" />


Johnson has described the position as coming with "specific marching orders" from President Trump, who instructed her to "find people just like you that should not—this should not have happened."<ref name="newsweek-pardonczar">Newsweek, "Who is Alice Johnson? Trump's new 'pardon czar'," February 24, 2025, https://www.newsweek.com/who-alice-johnson-trump-pardon-czar-2035375.</ref> Her role specifically focuses on identifying candidates who have been "victims of lawfare," reflecting the administration's broader priorities regarding what it characterizes as prosecutorial overreach.<ref name="cbs-pardonczar" />
She founded the Taking Action for Good Foundation, a nonprofit that helps prisoners prepare clemency petitions and raises public attention on individual cases.<ref name="tag-mission">{{cite web |title=Our Mission |url=https://takingactionforgood.org/our-mission/ |publisher=Taking Action for Good |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref>


=== Appointment Context and Reception ===
HarperCollins published her memoir, ''After Life: My Journey from Incarceration to Freedom'', in May 2019. She co-wrote it with Nancy French, and Kim Kardashian wrote the foreword. The book covers her childhood, her path into the drug trade, her years in prison, and her release.<ref name="amazon-afterlife">{{cite web |title=After Life: My Journey from Incarceration to Freedom |url=https://www.harpercollins.com/products/after-life-alice-marie-johnson |publisher=HarperCollins |date=2019 |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref> She became a frequent speaker on her case and on sentencing policy.


President Trump announced Johnson's appointment during remarks at the White House, telling her: "You've been an inspiration to people, and we're going to be listening to your recommendation on pardons."<ref name="newsweek-pardonczar" /> Johnson accepted the position with gratitude, writing on social media: "I am deeply grateful for the opportunity to serve as Pardon Czar and for the trust placed in me to help those impacted by our criminal justice system. This role is a chance to offer second chances and restore hope to individuals who have paid their debt to society."<ref name="johnson-x-announcement">Alice Marie Johnson (@AliceMarieFree), X post, February 21, 2025, https://x.com/AliceMarieFree/status/1892962653141696900.</ref>
=== Pardon Czar ===


The appointment received praise from some quarters, including former Obama advisor Van Jones, who called it "very good" and noted that Johnson was "somebody who has actually been incarcerated, been in the federal system, understands how the Department of Justice screws over people who should be coming home."<ref name="vj-praise">Yahoo News, "Van Jones praises Trump for 'very good' choice with new pardon czar pick," February 26, 2025, https://www.yahoo.com/news/van-jones-praises-trump-very-210012848.html.</ref>
On February 20, 2025, at a Black History Month event at the White House, Trump named Johnson to a new role he called "pardon czar." She is the first person to hold the title.<ref name="foxnews-pardonczar">{{cite news |title=Trump appoints Alice Marie Johnson 'pardon czar' during Black History Month event at White House |url=https://www.foxnews.com/politics/trump-appoints-alice-marie-johnson-pardon-czar-black-history-month-event-white-house |work=Fox News |date=2025-02-21 |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref> The job is advisory. She reviews federal clemency cases and recommends candidates to the president. "Czar" is an informal label in American politics for an official who oversees one policy area. It is not a cabinet post or a statutory office. To take the role, Johnson stepped down from her foundation.<ref name="cbs-pardonczar" />


However, the unprecedented nature of the position has also raised questions among criminal justice reform advocates. Insha Rahman of the Vera Institute of Justice noted that having a pardon czar "should cause some concern for people in the criminal justice reform" community, given the lack of clarity around the role's formal responsibilities and relationship to the established Office of the Pardon Attorney at the Department of Justice.<ref name="capitalb-pardonczar">Capital B News, "Trump Names Alice Marie Johnson as the Nation's First 'Pardon Czar,'" February 28, 2025, https://capitalbnews.org/trump-alice-marie-johnson-pardon-czar/.</ref> Andrea James, founder of the National Council for Incarcerated and Formerly Incarcerated Women and Girls, expressed cautious optimism: "We're excited that one of us, a formerly incarcerated woman, has received this new position. But we aren't quite sure how to engage with it."<ref name="capitalb-pardonczar" />
The appointment put a formal title on work she had already been doing. During Trump's first term she had submitted more than 100 clemency petitions and helped secure release for close to 50 people, working with Ivanka Trump, Jared Kushner, and others.<ref name="actionnews5">{{cite news |title=Mid-South native Alice Marie Johnson appointed as Pres. Trump's Pardon Czar |url=https://www.actionnews5.com/2025/02/24/mid-south-native-alice-marie-johnson-appointed-pres-trumps-pardon-czar/ |work=Action News 5 |date=2025-02-24 |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref>


=== Stated Priorities and Criteria ===
Johnson has described her instructions from Trump as "specific marching orders" to "find people just like you that should not, this should not have happened."<ref name="newsweek-pardonczar">{{cite news |title=Who is Alice Johnson? Trump's new 'pardon czar' |url=https://www.newsweek.com/who-alice-johnson-trump-pardon-czar-2035375 |work=Newsweek |date=2025-02-24 |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref> She has said she screens for community safety, real reentry plans, demonstrated rehabilitation, and people who have served substantial time. She has also said part of the focus is on those she views as "victims of lawfare."<ref name="cbs-pardonczar" />


Johnson has outlined several key priorities for her clemency recommendations:
Reaction split. Van Jones, a former Obama advisor, called the pick "very good" and noted Johnson "has actually been incarcerated."<ref name="vj-praise">{{cite news |title=Van Jones praises Trump for 'very good' choice with new pardon czar pick |url=https://www.yahoo.com/news/van-jones-praises-trump-very-210012848.html |work=Yahoo News |date=2026-02-26 |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref> Others in the reform field raised concerns about an advisory channel that sits outside the Justice Department's Office of the Pardon Attorney. Insha Rahman of the Vera Institute of Justice said the arrangement "should cause some concern" given the lack of clarity around the role.<ref name="capitalb-pardonczar">{{cite news |title=Trump Names Alice Marie Johnson as the Nation's First 'Pardon Czar' |url=https://capitalbnews.org/trump-alice-marie-johnson-pardon-czar/ |work=Capital B News |date=2026-02-28 |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref>


* '''Community Safety''': Johnson has emphasized that ensuring "safety in the communities" where prisoners may be released is a top priority when making pardon recommendations.<ref name="npr-pardonczar">NPR, "Who is Alice Marie Johnson, Trump's newly appointed 'pardon czar'?," February 25, 2025, https://www.npr.org/2025/02/25/nx-s1-5307330/trump-pardon-czar-who-is-alice-marie-johnson.</ref>
In May 2025 Johnson marked a batch of 26 clemencies and pardons. She described her working relationship with the DOJ pardon attorney as "tag teaming freedom."<ref name="thehill-clemency">{{cite news |title=Trump gives clemency to more than 20 people, including political allies |url=https://thehill.com/homenews/administration/5323686-trump-clemency-chrisley-hoover-rowland-grimm/ |work=The Hill |date=2026-05-29 |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref> Some of those grants drew criticism. Reality television figures Todd and Julie Chrisley, convicted of bank fraud and tax evasion in 2022, received pardons. Johnson defended the move and called the couple victims of "a weaponized justice system."<ref name="cnn-chrisley">{{cite news |title=Todd and Julie Chrisley can thank their daughter Savannah Chrisley and advocate Alice Johnson for their pardons |url=https://www.cnn.com/2025/05/28/entertainment/todd-julie-chrisley-savannah-chrisley-alice-johnson |work=CNN |date=2026-05-28 |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref> Critics noted that several of the white-collar and politically connected grants did not match her stated focus on nonviolent offenders.<ref name="thegrio-token">{{cite news |title=Alice Johnson, Trump's pardon czar, seen by some as Black political 'token' amid controversial pardons |url=https://thegrio.com/2025/05/29/alice-johnson-trump-pardon-czar-black-political-token/ |work=TheGrio |date=2026-05-29 |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref>


* '''Reentry Support''': Rather than simply securing release, Johnson aims to guarantee that those who receive commuted sentences have "their best chance of success." She has stated: "I don't want to help people come home and then at the same time they're set up for failure."<ref name="npr-pardonczar" />
== Frequently Asked Questions ==
 
* '''Follow-up Check-ins''': Johnson has indicated that clemency recipients would receive ongoing support and check-ins—not conducted to "catch them doing something wrong but to make sure that they have things that will help them make right decisions," including mental health support and family and faith-based resources.<ref name="npr-pardonczar" /><ref name="foxnews-priorities">Fox News, "Trump 'pardon czar' Alice Marie Johnson outlines priorities for new role," February 24, 2025, https://www.foxnews.com/media/trumps-newly-appointed-pardon-czar-outlines-specific-marching-orders-role.</ref>
 
* '''Solid Reentry Programs''': Johnson has noted that President Trump "wanted to know if they have a solid reentry program in place" when considering clemency cases.<ref name="foxnews-priorities" />
 
* '''Focus on Nonviolent Offenders''': Johnson has stated her intention to find people who "deserve this second chance who are similarly situated, not just like me, but who have served enough time, who have paid their debt to society."<ref name="lisa-legalinfo">Legal Information Services Associates, "Pardon News Continues Unabated – Update for May 20, 2025," May 20, 2025, https://lisa-legalinfo.com/2025/05/20/pardon-news-continues-unabated-update-for-may-20-2025/.</ref>
 
Johnson has also indicated that she collaborates with Pastor Paula White Cain, who is involved in Trump's "Faith Office" promoting Christianity-based prisoner support initiatives.<ref name="pln-pardonczar">Prison Legal News, "Former Prisoner Appointed President's Pardon 'Czar,'" May 1, 2025, https://www.prisonlegalnews.org/news/2025/may/1/former-prisoner-appointed-presidents-pardon-czar/.</ref>
 
=== Notable Cases and Progress ===
 
Since assuming her position, Johnson has been involved in numerous clemency decisions. In late May 2025, she celebrated a batch of 26 clemencies and pardons, writing on social media: "Today 26 deserving individuals were granted clemencies and pardons. Each one represents a story of redemption, rehabilitation, and resilience. Their second chance is a second shot at life."<ref name="johnson-26pardons">Alice Marie Johnson (@AliceMarieFree), X post, May 28, 2025, https://x.com/AliceMarieFree/status/1927872266601165291.</ref> Johnson described her working relationship with DOJ Pardon Attorney Ed Martin as "tag teaming freedom."<ref name="thehill-clemency">The Hill, "Trump gives clemency to more than 20 people, including political allies," May 29, 2025, https://thehill.com/homenews/administration/5323686-trump-clemency-chrisley-hoover-rowland-grimm/.</ref>
 
Notable cases associated with Johnson's recommendations include:
 
* '''[[Carlos_Watson|Carlos Watson]]''' (March 2025): The Ozy Media founder thanked Johnson for her role in securing a commutation of his sentence hours before he was scheduled to report to prison.<ref name="wiki-amj">Wikipedia, "Alice Marie Johnson," https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alice_Marie_Johnson.</ref>
 
* '''[[Todd_Chrisley|Todd]] and [[Julie_Chrisley|Julie Chrisley]]''' (May 2025): Johnson was credited by President Trump for making possible the pardons of the reality television stars, who had been convicted of financial fraud and tax evasion in 2022. Johnson defended the pardons by claiming the couple were victims of "a weaponized justice system."<ref name="wiki-amj" /><ref name="thegrio-token">TheGrio, "Alice Johnson, Trump's pardon czar, seen by some as Black political 'token' amid controversial pardons," May 29, 2025, https://thegrio.com/2025/05/29/alice-johnson-trump-pardon-czar-black-political-token/.</ref>
 
* '''Larry Hoover''' (May 2025): Johnson was involved in the commutation of the federal life sentence of the Chicago Gangster Disciples co-founder. Hoover's son and rapper NBA YoungBoy both credited Johnson for the clemency.<ref name="wiki-amj" /><ref name="tmz-hoover">TMZ, "'Pardon Czar' Alice Marie Johnson Hopes Illinois Gov Will Release Larry Hoover," May 29, 2025, https://www.tmz.com/2025/05/29/alice-marie-johnson-larry-hoover-presidential-commutation-illinois-governor-sentence/.</ref> Hoover remains in state prison serving a 200-year sentence for a separate murder conviction.
 
* '''NBA YoungBoy (Kentrell Gaulden)''' (May 2025): The Louisiana-based rapper received a pardon for weapons charges. Johnson told Fox News that her office considered Gaulden's upbringing in an impoverished neighborhood and the circumstances surrounding the firearms charges before recommending the pardon.<ref name="deseret-pardons">Deseret News, "Here's who Trump pardoned this week," May 30, 2025, https://www.deseret.com/politics/2025/05/30/heres-who-trump-pardoned-this-week/.</ref>
 
==== Criticism and Controversy ====
 
Johnson's role has attracted scrutiny, particularly regarding some of the clemency decisions with which she has been associated. Some political strategists have characterized her position as symbolic, with Ameshia Cross noting that Trump is "using somebody who can speak to the Black community, but it's also as a symbol."<ref name="thegrio-token" /> Critics have pointed to pardons of white-collar criminals and political allies that appear to deviate from Johnson's stated focus on nonviolent offenders who have rehabilitated themselves.<ref name="thegrio-token" />
 
Former DOJ Pardon Attorney Elizabeth Oyer, who was dismissed in March 2025, has been critical of the broader clemency process under the current administration, testifying before the Senate in April 2025 about alleged "ongoing corruption" and claiming that the DOJ leadership "appears to value political loyalty above the fair and responsible administration of justice."<ref name="wiki-clemency-list">Wikipedia, "List of people granted executive clemency in the second Trump presidency," https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_people_granted_executive_clemency_in_the_second_Trump_presidency.</ref>
 
=== How to Contact Alice Marie Johnson or Submit a Clemency Petition ===
 
There are multiple pathways for submitting clemency petitions or seeking Johnson's attention:
 
==== Official DOJ Process ====
 
The traditional method for seeking federal clemency remains through the Department of Justice's Office of the Pardon Attorney:
 
* '''Pardon applications''' (for those who have completed their sentences): Available at https://www.justice.gov/pardon/apply-clemency
* '''Commutation applications''' (for those currently serving sentences): Also available through the same DOJ website
* '''Mailing address''': Office of the Pardon Attorney, Department of Justice, Washington, DC 20530<ref name="doj-pardon">U.S. Department of Justice, Office of the Pardon Attorney, https://www.justice.gov/pardon.</ref>
 
Note: Standard DOJ guidelines suggest waiting at least five years after release from confinement before applying for a pardon, though these requirements may be waived in exceptional circumstances.
 
==== Taking Action for Good Foundation ====
 
Although Johnson resigned her formal role at TAG upon becoming Pardon Czar, the organization continues to operate and may serve as a resource:
 
* '''Website''': https://takingactionforgood.org/
* '''Contact form''': https://takingactionforgood.org/contact/
* '''Mailing address''': Taking Action For Good, 5865 Ridgeway Center Pkwy., Suite #300, Memphis, TN 38120<ref name="tag-contact">Taking Action for Good, Contact page, https://takingactionforgood.org/contact/.</ref>
 
==== Social Media ====
 
Johnson maintains an active social media presence and has historically engaged with clemency cases brought to her attention through these platforms:
 
* '''X (formerly Twitter)''': @AliceMarieFree (https://x.com/AliceMarieFree)<ref name="johnson-x">Alice Marie Johnson on X, https://x.com/AliceMarieFree.</ref>
 
==== White House Contact ====
 
General White House correspondence may be directed to:
* '''White House website''': https://www.whitehouse.gov/contact/
* '''Mailing address''': The White House, 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20500
 
=== Frequently Asked Questions ===


{{FAQPage|
{{FAQPage|
{{FAQ
{{FAQ
|question = What is a "pardon czar" and is this an official government position?
|question = What did Alice Marie Johnson do?
|answer = The term "czar" is informally used in American politics to describe officials appointed by the president to oversee specific policy issues. The pardon czar position is not a formal cabinet position or established government office but rather an advisory role created by President Trump in February 2025. Johnson is the first person to hold this title. Her role involves making clemency recommendations to the President, working alongside but separately from the Department of Justice's Office of the Pardon Attorney.<ref name="newsweek-pardonczar" />
|answer = A federal jury in the Western District of Tennessee convicted Johnson in 1996 on eight counts tied to a Memphis cocaine trafficking organization. The counts covered drug conspiracy, money laundering, and structuring. Prosecutors described her role as relaying coded messages among members of the operation. She was a first-time, nonviolent offender.<ref name="npr-pardonczar" />
}}
}}


{{FAQ
{{FAQ
|question = Does Alice Marie Johnson have the authority to grant pardons?
|question = How long was Alice Marie Johnson's sentence?
|answer = No. Under Article II, Section 2 of the U.S. Constitution, only the President has the power to grant pardons and commutations for federal offenses. Johnson's role is advisory—she reviews cases and makes recommendations to President Trump, who makes all final clemency decisions.<ref name="capitalb-pardonczar" />
|answer = Judge Julia Smith Gibbons sentenced her in 1997 to life imprisonment without parole. The drug quantity, between 2,000 and 3,000 kilograms of cocaine, triggered a mandatory minimum that set the sentence. She served about 21 years and 7 months before her release.<ref name="aclu" /><ref name="npr-release" />
}}
}}


{{FAQ
{{FAQ
|question = What types of cases does Johnson prioritize for clemency recommendations?
|question = Where was Alice Marie Johnson incarcerated?
|answer = Johnson has stated she focuses on individuals who: (1) have served substantial time and "paid their debt to society"; (2) are nonviolent offenders; (3) have demonstrated rehabilitation; (4) have solid reentry support systems in place; (5) pose no threat to community safety; and (6) may have been victims of "lawfare" or prosecutorial overreach. She has also expressed interest in cases involving excessive mandatory minimum sentences.<ref name="npr-pardonczar" /><ref name="foxnews-priorities" />
|answer = She started at the Federal Medical Center in Carswell, Texas, the federal prison hospital for women. She was later moved to FCI Aliceville in Alabama, where she was held until her 2018 release.<ref name="cando-clemency" />
}}
}}


{{FAQ
{{FAQ
|question = How is Johnson's role different from the Office of the Pardon Attorney?
|question = When was Alice Marie Johnson released?
|answer = The Office of the Pardon Attorney (OPA) is an official Department of Justice office that has existed since 1894. It processes clemency applications through a formal review process involving FBI background checks and input from prosecutors and victims. Johnson's pardon czar role operates outside this traditional system, allowing the President to receive recommendations through an alternative channel. President Trump has frequently bypassed the OPA process during his administrations.<ref name="wiki-opa">Wikipedia, "Office of the Pardon Attorney," https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Office_of_the_Pardon_Attorney.</ref>
|answer = Trump commuted her sentence on June 6, 2018, and she was released from FCI Aliceville the same day. The commutation ended her sentence but left the conviction in place. A full pardon followed on August 28, 2020.<ref name="wapo-clemency" /><ref name="pbs-pardon" />
}}
}}


{{FAQ
{{FAQ
|question = Can state prisoners apply to Johnson for clemency?
|question = What is the difference between her commutation and her pardon?
|answer = No. Presidential clemency power extends only to federal criminal offenses. Individuals convicted of state crimes must seek clemency from their state's governor or pardon board. For example, Larry Hoover received a federal commutation but remains incarcerated on a separate Illinois state conviction.<ref name="tmz-hoover" />
|answer = The 2018 commutation reduced her sentence to time served and freed her, but she kept her federal conviction and the civil disabilities tied to it. The 2020 full pardon erased the conviction itself and restored her civil rights.<ref name="pbs-pardon" />
}}
}}


{{FAQ
{{FAQ
|question = What is Taking Action for Good (TAG) and is it still connected to Johnson?
|question = What is a "pardon czar"?
|answer = Taking Action for Good is a nonprofit foundation that Johnson created after her 2018 release to help incarcerated individuals obtain clemency and support reentry. Johnson resigned from her role at TAG when she became Pardon Czar in February 2025 to avoid conflicts of interest. The organization continues to operate independently and may be a resource for those seeking clemency assistance.<ref name="tag-website" />
|answer = "Czar" is an informal term in American politics for an official the president appoints to oversee one policy area. The pardon czar role is advisory and is not a cabinet post or a statutory office. Johnson reviews federal clemency cases and recommends candidates to the president, who makes all final decisions under Article II of the Constitution.<ref name="cbs-pardonczar" />
}}
}}


{{FAQ
{{FAQ
|question = Does Johnson charge fees for clemency assistance?
|question = Can Alice Marie Johnson grant pardons?
|answer = Johnson has not publicly discussed fees associated with her work as Pardon Czar, which is a White House position. The DOJ Office of the Pardon Attorney does not charge fees to submit clemency applications. However, the broader clemency landscape has seen the emergence of private attorneys and lobbyists who charge substantial fees to advocate for pardons on behalf of clients.<ref name="wiki-clemency-list" />
|answer = No. Only the president can grant federal pardons and commutations. Johnson's role is to review cases and make recommendations. The president decides.<ref name="capitalb-pardonczar" />
}}
}}


{{FAQ
{{FAQ
|question = How long does the clemency process take?
|question = Can state prisoners apply to her for clemency?
|answer = Processing times vary significantly. Traditional DOJ applications can take years to receive a decision. Cases brought directly to the President through alternative channels like Johnson's recommendations may move more quickly, though there are no guaranteed timelines. Some clemency grants during the current administration have come relatively quickly after cases gained attention.<ref name="lisa-legalinfo" />
|answer = No. The president's clemency power covers federal offenses only. People convicted of state crimes must seek relief from their state's governor or pardon board.<ref name="capitalb-pardonczar" />
}}
}}
}}
}}
== Public Statements and Positions ==
Johnson has consistently credited her Christian faith for sustaining her through imprisonment and facilitating her release, which she attributes to divine intervention. She has described the series of events leading to her clemency—the viral video, Kim Kardashian's intervention, the meeting with President Trump—as providential.
On criminal justice reform, Johnson has been an outspoken advocate for ending mandatory minimum sentences for nonviolent drug offenses, arguing that such sentences are disproportionate and counterproductive. "I am proof that you can serve time, be rehabilitated, and come out and give back to society," she has stated in numerous public appearances.
Johnson has praised the First Step Act while noting that more reform is needed, particularly for those sentenced under the harsh drug laws of previous decades who remain incarcerated. "This legislation reformed sentencing laws that have wrongly and disproportionately harmed the African-American community," she said of the law.
In her memoir and public speaking, Johnson emphasizes the importance of maintaining hope and using incarceration productively. She encourages currently incarcerated individuals to develop skills, help others, and prepare for eventual reentry into society.
== Terminology ==
* '''Clemency''': Executive action by the President to reduce or eliminate punishment for federal crimes, including commutation of sentences and pardons.
* '''Commutation''': A form of clemency that reduces a sentence, including release from imprisonment, while leaving the underlying conviction intact.
* '''Pardon''': A form of clemency that forgives the offense entirely, eliminating the conviction and restoring civil rights lost as a consequence of the conviction.
* '''Mandatory Minimum''': A statutorily required minimum sentence that judges must impose regardless of mitigating circumstances, limiting judicial discretion in sentencing.
* '''Structuring''': The federal crime of breaking up financial transactions to avoid triggering the $10,000 reporting threshold for currency transactions.
* '''[[First_Step_Act:_Overview_and_Implementation|First Step Act]]''': The 2018 federal criminal justice reform law that modified certain sentencing provisions and expanded early release programs.
== See also ==
* [[Prison_Consultants|Prison Consultants]]
* [[First_Step_Act:_Overview_and_Implementation|First Step Act: Overview and Implementation]]
* [[Presidential_Clemency_and_Pardons|Presidential Clemency and Pardons]]
* [[Federal_Good_Time_Credit_Policies|Federal Good Time Credit Policies]]


== References ==
== References ==
<references />
<references />


{{DEFAULTSORT:Johnson, Alice Marie}}
[[Category:High-Profile_Federal_Offenders]]
[[Category:High-Profile_Federal_Offenders]]
[[Category:Clemency_Recipients]]
[[Category:Drug_Offenses]]
[[Category:Released]]
 
{{#seo:
|title=Alice Marie Johnson — Drug Conspiracy Case, Commutation, Pardon, Pardon Czar | Prisonpedia
|title_mode=replace
|description=Alice Marie Johnson served nearly 22 years of a life drug sentence before her 2018 commutation and 2020 pardon. Full case file, clemency, and 2025 pardon czar role.
|keywords=Alice Marie Johnson, Alice Johnson pardon, Alice Johnson commutation, pardon czar, Memphis cocaine conspiracy, Kim Kardashian clemency, FCI Aliceville, mandatory minimum
|type=ProfilePage
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{{MetaDescription|Alice Marie Johnson — criminal justice reform advocate who served nearly 22 years of a federal life drug sentence before her 2018 commutation and 2020 pardon, later named White House pardon czar.}}

Latest revision as of 13:26, 3 June 2026

Alice Marie Johnson
Born: May 30, 1955
Olive Branch, Mississippi
Charges: Drug conspiracy, Money laundering, Structuring
Sentence: Life without parole (commuted 2018; pardoned 2020)
Facility: FCI Aliceville
Status: Released/Pardoned

Alice Marie Johnson (born May 30, 1955) is an American criminal justice reform advocate and author. She served nearly 22 years of a life sentence in federal prison after a 1996 conviction in the Western District of Tennessee for her role in a Memphis cocaine trafficking organization.[1] Johnson was a first-time, nonviolent offender. The trial judge had little room to depart from federal mandatory minimums and imposed life without parole.[2]

Her case drew national attention after reality television personality Kim Kardashian took it up and brought it to the White House in 2018. President Donald Trump commuted Johnson's sentence on June 6, 2018, and she walked out of FCI Aliceville the same day.[3] Two years later, on August 28, 2020, one day after Johnson spoke at the Republican National Convention, Trump granted her a full pardon. The pardon erased the conviction itself, not just the remaining sentence.[4]

After her release Johnson became a public advocate for sentencing reform and clemency. She founded a foundation, published a memoir in 2019, and spoke widely about her case. In February 2025, during Trump's second term, he named her to a new advisory role he called "pardon czar." She is the first person to hold the title. The job is to review federal clemency cases and make recommendations to the president.[5]

Early Life

Johnson was born on May 30, 1955, in Olive Branch, Mississippi. She was one of nine children. Her parents were sharecroppers, and the family had little money.[1] She became pregnant while in high school. In 1979 she moved to Memphis, Tennessee, looking for work.[6]

In Memphis she found a job at FedEx and stayed about a decade. She married and raised children. The arrangement held for years. Then it came apart fast. She developed a gambling habit and lost the FedEx job. A divorce followed. Her youngest son was killed in a motorcycle accident.[7]

Money problems followed. She filed for bankruptcy in 1991, and her home went into foreclosure. With no steady income, she took up with a Memphis cocaine trafficking ring. Her role was relaying coded phone messages between members of the operation. She did not handle the drugs herself. Her part in the conspiracy was still large enough to bring federal charges.[6]

Conviction and Life Sentence

A federal grand jury in the Western District of Tennessee indicted Johnson on January 21, 1993, along with 15 other defendants. The charge was conspiracy to run a multimillion-dollar cocaine operation out of Memphis.[6] She was arrested in 1993.

A jury convicted her in 1996 on eight federal counts. The counts covered drug conspiracy, attempted possession of cocaine, money laundering, and structuring. The structuring charge came from a house purchase. She had broken the down payment into amounts under the $10,000 threshold that forces banks to report cash transactions to the federal government.[1]

The organization moved large amounts of cocaine. At sentencing, U.S. District Judge Julia Smith Gibbons described Johnson as "the quintessential entrepreneur" in an operation that handled between 2,000 and 3,000 kilograms of cocaine.[6] The drug weight drove the sentence. Under the mandatory minimum scheme Congress passed during the 1980s and 1990s drug enforcement push, the quantity set the floor regardless of a defendant's role or record.

In 1997 Gibbons sentenced Johnson to life imprisonment without parole.[2] Johnson was 41. She had no prior record. Absent a presidential act, the sentence meant she would die in prison.

Incarceration and Advocacy

Johnson began her term at the Federal Medical Center in Carswell, Texas, the federal prison hospital for women. There she trained as a hospice volunteer and sat with dying prisoners.[6] She was later moved to FCI Aliceville in Alabama, closer to her family in Memphis.

She drew no disciplinary infractions across more than two decades inside. That record carried weight when she sought clemency. Her warden, her case manager, a captain, and a vocational instructor each wrote letters backing her petition. Letters from facility staff at that level are uncommon in clemency files.[6]

Johnson kept busy inside. She was ordained as a minister. She wrote and staged plays and pulled other women into the productions. She organized a Special Olympics event at her facility. She taught classes and mentored other prisoners. She has said her Christian faith carried her through the years.[8]

Her case reached a national audience in 2017. The digital media company Mic produced a short video about her sentence, and it spread on social media. Kim Kardashian saw it. Kardashian posted about the case, called the sentence "so unfair," and began working to get Johnson out.[9]

Kardashian worked with Jared Kushner, Trump's son-in-law and senior advisor, who had made sentencing reform a White House priority. In late May 2018 Kardashian met Trump in the Oval Office and pressed Johnson's case in person.[3]

Commutation and Pardon

On June 6, 2018, Trump commuted Johnson's sentence and ordered her release that day. By the count cited in news coverage, she had served 21 years, seven months, and six days.[10] A commutation ends a sentence. It does not erase the conviction. Johnson left prison still carrying her federal record and the civil disabilities that come with it.

She spoke at the Republican National Convention on August 27, 2020, and praised Trump's work on criminal justice. The next day, August 28, Trump granted her a full pardon from the Oval Office with Johnson present. "We're giving Alice a full pardon," he said.[11] The pardon wiped out the conviction and restored her civil rights.[4]

After the RNC appearance, some commentators questioned whether Johnson had become a campaign prop. She rejected the framing. She said she was "not a prop or puppet" and that she would vote her conscience.[12]

Criminal Justice Reform Work

After her release Johnson turned to advocacy full time. She argued against mandatory minimum sentences for nonviolent drug offenses and pushed for wider use of clemency. She backed the First Step Act, the sentencing reform bill Trump signed in December 2018, and appeared at events tied to it.[1]

She founded the Taking Action for Good Foundation, a nonprofit that helps prisoners prepare clemency petitions and raises public attention on individual cases.[13]

HarperCollins published her memoir, After Life: My Journey from Incarceration to Freedom, in May 2019. She co-wrote it with Nancy French, and Kim Kardashian wrote the foreword. The book covers her childhood, her path into the drug trade, her years in prison, and her release.[14] She became a frequent speaker on her case and on sentencing policy.

Pardon Czar

On February 20, 2025, at a Black History Month event at the White House, Trump named Johnson to a new role he called "pardon czar." She is the first person to hold the title.[15] The job is advisory. She reviews federal clemency cases and recommends candidates to the president. "Czar" is an informal label in American politics for an official who oversees one policy area. It is not a cabinet post or a statutory office. To take the role, Johnson stepped down from her foundation.[5]

The appointment put a formal title on work she had already been doing. During Trump's first term she had submitted more than 100 clemency petitions and helped secure release for close to 50 people, working with Ivanka Trump, Jared Kushner, and others.[16]

Johnson has described her instructions from Trump as "specific marching orders" to "find people just like you that should not, this should not have happened."[17] She has said she screens for community safety, real reentry plans, demonstrated rehabilitation, and people who have served substantial time. She has also said part of the focus is on those she views as "victims of lawfare."[5]

Reaction split. Van Jones, a former Obama advisor, called the pick "very good" and noted Johnson "has actually been incarcerated."[18] Others in the reform field raised concerns about an advisory channel that sits outside the Justice Department's Office of the Pardon Attorney. Insha Rahman of the Vera Institute of Justice said the arrangement "should cause some concern" given the lack of clarity around the role.[19]

In May 2025 Johnson marked a batch of 26 clemencies and pardons. She described her working relationship with the DOJ pardon attorney as "tag teaming freedom."[20] Some of those grants drew criticism. Reality television figures Todd and Julie Chrisley, convicted of bank fraud and tax evasion in 2022, received pardons. Johnson defended the move and called the couple victims of "a weaponized justice system."[21] Critics noted that several of the white-collar and politically connected grants did not match her stated focus on nonviolent offenders.[22]

Frequently Asked Questions


Q: What did Alice Marie Johnson do?

A federal jury in the Western District of Tennessee convicted Johnson in 1996 on eight counts tied to a Memphis cocaine trafficking organization. The counts covered drug conspiracy, money laundering, and structuring. Prosecutors described her role as relaying coded messages among members of the operation. She was a first-time, nonviolent offender.[1]



Q: How long was Alice Marie Johnson's sentence?

Judge Julia Smith Gibbons sentenced her in 1997 to life imprisonment without parole. The drug quantity, between 2,000 and 3,000 kilograms of cocaine, triggered a mandatory minimum that set the sentence. She served about 21 years and 7 months before her release.[2][10]



Q: Where was Alice Marie Johnson incarcerated?

She started at the Federal Medical Center in Carswell, Texas, the federal prison hospital for women. She was later moved to FCI Aliceville in Alabama, where she was held until her 2018 release.[6]



Q: When was Alice Marie Johnson released?

Trump commuted her sentence on June 6, 2018, and she was released from FCI Aliceville the same day. The commutation ended her sentence but left the conviction in place. A full pardon followed on August 28, 2020.[3][4]



Q: What is the difference between her commutation and her pardon?

The 2018 commutation reduced her sentence to time served and freed her, but she kept her federal conviction and the civil disabilities tied to it. The 2020 full pardon erased the conviction itself and restored her civil rights.[4]



Q: What is a "pardon czar"?

"Czar" is an informal term in American politics for an official the president appoints to oversee one policy area. The pardon czar role is advisory and is not a cabinet post or a statutory office. Johnson reviews federal clemency cases and recommends candidates to the president, who makes all final decisions under Article II of the Constitution.[5]



Q: Can Alice Marie Johnson grant pardons?

No. Only the president can grant federal pardons and commutations. Johnson's role is to review cases and make recommendations. The president decides.[19]



Q: Can state prisoners apply to her for clemency?

No. The president's clemency power covers federal offenses only. People convicted of state crimes must seek relief from their state's governor or pardon board.[19]


References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 "Who is Alice Marie Johnson, Trump's newly appointed 'pardon czar'?".NPR.2025-02-25.Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 "President Commutes Life-Without-Parole Sentence of Alice Marie Johnson". American Civil Liberties Union. Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 "Trump commutes life sentence of Alice Marie Johnson".Wagner, John.The Washington Post.2018-06-06.Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 "Trump pardons Alice Johnson, who praised him in RNC speech".PBS NewsHour.2020-08-28.Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 "Trump names Alice Johnson, pardoned in his first term, to be 'pardon czar'".CBS News.2025-02-21.Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 6.5 6.6 "Alice Marie Johnson - FREE AT LAST". CAN-DO Clemency. Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  7. "Alice Marie Johnson: 5 Fast Facts You Need to Know".Heavy.com.2018-05.Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  8. "Alice Marie Johnson discusses her journey to freedom in new memoir".Local Memphis.Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  9. "Who Is Alice Marie Johnson? Kim Kardashian Meets Donald Trump About Prison Reform".Harper's Bazaar.2018-06.Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  10. 10.0 10.1 "Woman Released After Trump Commutes Life Sentence For Nonviolent Drug Offense".NPR.2018-06-06.Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  11. "Trump gives Alice Johnson a full pardon a day after her RNC speech".NBC News.2020-08-28.Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  12. "Alice Johnson says she's not a "pawn" for Trump after RNC speech".CBS News.2020-08-29.Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  13. "Our Mission". Taking Action for Good. Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  14. "After Life: My Journey from Incarceration to Freedom". HarperCollins. Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  15. "Trump appoints Alice Marie Johnson 'pardon czar' during Black History Month event at White House".Fox News.2025-02-21.Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  16. "Mid-South native Alice Marie Johnson appointed as Pres. Trump's Pardon Czar".Action News 5.2025-02-24.Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  17. "Who is Alice Johnson? Trump's new 'pardon czar'".Newsweek.2025-02-24.Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  18. "Van Jones praises Trump for 'very good' choice with new pardon czar pick".Yahoo News.2026-02-26.Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  19. 19.0 19.1 19.2 "Trump Names Alice Marie Johnson as the Nation's First 'Pardon Czar'".Capital B News.2026-02-28.Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  20. "Trump gives clemency to more than 20 people, including political allies".The Hill.2026-05-29.Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  21. "Todd and Julie Chrisley can thank their daughter Savannah Chrisley and advocate Alice Johnson for their pardons".CNN.2026-05-28.Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  22. "Alice Johnson, Trump's pardon czar, seen by some as Black political 'token' amid controversial pardons".TheGrio.2026-05-29.Retrieved 2026-06-03.