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TRUMP’S PARDON OF BLACK AMERICAN WHO GIVES PRISONERS HOPE
Less than 24 hours after Black Lives Matter activists torched Kensoha, Wisconsin, in the name of racial justice, President Donald Trump granted a surprise pardon to Jon Ponder, a black man and convicted bank robber who turned his life around and now devotes his work to helping others do the same.
“Jon, we honor your devotion to showing returning citizens that they are not forgotten,” Trump said from the White House. “I will continue to give all Americans, including former inmates, the best chance to build a new life and achieve their own American dream.”
In 2009, Ponder founded a prisoners’ reentry program called Hope for Prisoners in Las Vegas, Nevada. Upon his release after spending much of his life behind bars, Ponder experienced firsthand the challenges of reentering society and decided to do something to change it.
Hope for Prisoners assists men and women in reentering society after prison by providing them long-term support and services, such as job training, mentorship, and counseling. In 2012, as part of the program, Hope for Prisoners formed an unprecedented partnership with the Las Vegas Police Department. The partnership encourages police officers to engage with and mentor former inmates. Today, it involves more than 60 members of the department. . . .
After speaking with Ponder and graduates of his program for Independent Women’s Forum, I learned how this aspect of the Hope for Prisoners’ program is mutually beneficial for both law enforcement officers and those they serve.
Hope for Prisoners enables former inmates to see police officers as human beings who put their lives on the line to fulfill the promise they made to protect and serve. At the same time, it affords police officers the opportunity to learn more about the long, complex, and painful life circumstances that often lead to arrests and incarceration. The partnership fosters empathy on both sides and is a model this nation desperately needs.
The partnership is so successful, some former inmates and cops have become lifelong friends. In May 2012, for example, after being arrested, Lois Hockersmith woke up in a hospital with three people by her side: a doctor, a police officer, and a priest. An undercover officer had picked her up for drugs and prostitution, and she had to deliver her 25-week-old son with whom she was too high to know she was pregnant. Miraculously, he survived.
Hockersmith, who was 35 at the time, grew up hating the cops and never went to them for help. But after realizing this officer saved not only her life but also her unborn son’s, she decided to enroll in Hope for Prisoners and turn her life around. As part of the healing process, Hockersmith set out to thank the officer who arrested her that night.
“Go figure, he turned out to actually be one of our trainers here at Hope,” Hockersmith said. Today, like Ponder and FBI agent Richard Beasley, who arrested and mentored him, the two remain close friends. . . .
Ponder deserved to be pardoned and prominently featured at the RNC. Moreover, it wasn’t about political opportunism. Trump took notice of Ponder far before “defunding the police” and Black Lives Matter became national protests, riots, and debates.
President Trump and Jon Ponder Go Back
Trump first met Ponder two years ago when the latter was a guest on the National Day of Prayer. The president took a liking to Ponder’s story and work and accepted an opportunity to speak at Hope for Prisoners’ graduation ceremony earlier this year. . . .
In pardoning Ponder and featuring him at the RNC, Trump did more than pay lip service to black Americans, who make up more than 38 percent of the inmate population despite representing only 14 percent of the general population. He closed a long, painful chapter in Ponder’s past and honored his role in enabling an estimated 3,000 former inmates to do the same.
Moreover, Trump not only recognized a man that’s giving former inmates a second chance. He shined a spotlight on an effort that’s giving law enforcement a second chance to build meaningful relationships with the communities they serve. If caring about black lives means more than a slogan, let’s hope Ponder’s model is replicated nationwide, with support from both sides.
(Excerpt from The Federalist. Article by Kelsey Bolar. Photo Credit: White House Flickr.)
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Comments
Beautiful! The redemptive power of the Blood of Jesus!
2 Corinthians 5:17
Hallelujah!
May the Lord bless and multiple the work of Mr. and Mrs. Ponder and all the officers who volunteer their time.
Father God, you are the King of Redemption. It is in your heart for everyone to be redeemed by Jesus. Redemption means bought back. Thank you for “buying back” this man’s life from the enemy. Thank you for the hope he has in you. May he know the strength of God, the wisdom of God, the love of God in his life. Extend your grace to his hearers so that they can believe that it can happen to them, too. Raise up more for your army in underserved neighborhoods, that this nation could be unified and stop fighting. Redeem those who even now are committing or planning criminal activity. Show them hope and a better way. In Jesus Name, Amen.
THANK YOU, JESUS.
As the mother of a young woman who did prison time for drug trafficking I am so uplifted by this story. My daughter was saved by Drug Court and has been clean for over 10 years. She graduated Suma Cum Laude from college and is a compassionate and productive member of society who has taught me how important it is to give others a second chance and to see the good in everyone.
God bless President Trump for his pardon to this man. May his program succeed and spread throughout the nation and prove that together we win, divided we fall.
Impressive!
Wow. Praise you, Father, for what you began years ago in this man’s life and his work in service to you. Bless the Hope for Prisoners and use it as a building block for unity and peace in many neighborhoods.