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Texas board withdraws pardon recommendation for George Floyd

Sunday, December 26, 2021

AUSTIN (AP) — A Texas board that unanimously supported a posthumous pardon for George Floyd over a 2004 drug arrest in Houston has withdrawn that recommendation over “procedural errors" after sending it to Republican Gov. Greg Abbott's desk, his office said Thursday.

The unusual reversal announced by Abbott's office two days before Christmas — around the time he typically doles out pardons — drew outrage from a public defender who had submitted the pardon application for Floyd, who spent much of his life in Houston before his death in 2020 in the custody of a white Minneapolis police officer.

Floyd's name was withdrawn along with two dozen other clemency recommendations that had been submitted by the Texas Board of Pardon and Paroles. In a letter dated Dec. 16, the board told Abbott that it had identified “unexplained departures” from its process of issuing pardons and needed to reconsider some recommendations, including the one for Floyd.

“As a result of the Board’s withdrawal of the recommendation concerning George Floyd, Governor Abbott did not have the opportunity to consider it,” Abbott spokeswoman Renae Eze said in a statement.

Allison Mathis, a Houston public defender who submitted the pardon application on behalf of Floyd, called the last-minute reversal a “ridiculous farce.”

“It really strains credibility for them to say now that it's out of compliance, after the board has already voted on it,” she said.

Floyd grew up and was laid to rest in Houston. In June, former Minneapolis police Officer Derek Chauvin was sentenced to 22 1/2 years in prison for Floyd's murder.

Pardons restore the rights of the convicted and forgive them in the eyes of the law. But in Floyd’s case, his family and supporters said a posthumous pardon in Texas would show a commitment to accountability.

Texas’ parole board — whose members were all appointed by Abbott — unanimously recommended the pardon for Floyd, and the district attorney in Houston also urged the governor to act.

This story was edited for length.

San Marcos Record

(512) 392-2458
P.O. Box 1109, San Marcos, TX 78666