SEATTLE — President Joe Biden pardoned three people from Washington state for nonviolent drug offenses as part of his sweeping order Thursday granting 39 pardons and nearly 1,500 commutations — the largest single-day act of clemency in modern history.
Terence Anthony Jackson, 36, of Seattle, was pardoned for a federal felony conviction for selling cocaine when he was 23 years old. In the years since, he has gone to college and worked as a paralegal — developing skills he put to use in securing the pardon.
Jackson got the welcome news while vacationing in Mexico.
“Just because you have a felony, your life isn’t over,” Jackson said in a phone interview Thursday morning. He said he gives a “pep talk” to others facing criminal sentences, advising them “don’t let it define you.”
Jackson said he’d worked hard to put his conviction behind him, obtaining a college degree and working toward a law degree. Unable to find an attorney to file a petition seeking a pardon, he did it himself.