By Jenny Whidden
Granite State News Collaborative
Gathered together at Hope for Recovery in Manchester recently, a dozen activists began assembling a quilt. On each patch, they plan to carefully stitch the name of a woman incarcerated in New Hampshire seeking clemency.
“I know how it feels when you’re in there and somebody says your name,” Danielle Metz, an organizer with the National Council for Incarcerated & Formerly Incarcerated Women & Girls, said. “That’s what’s going to give them hope.”
At 26-years-old, Metz was given multiple federal life sentences for non-violent drug offenses. She had two children, ages three and seven. After 23 years in prison, Metz was granted clemency by former President Barack Obama in 2016.
The day after the quilting event, chants of “Free her!” and “603-217-2121” — the number for the Office of the Governor — rang across the State House square. Community and national activists gathered to call on Gov. Chris Sununu to take action and employ what they call an underutilized tool.
Clemency is the ability the president of the United States and state governors have to grant a person convicted of a criminal offense relief from a punitive measure — essentially either one’s sentence is reduced or they are completely pardoned.
“We’re putting pressure on the governor,” organizer Sharon Smith said into the microphone outside the Capitol building. “Christopher, listen. Clemency is in your hands man. You have to understand that this is important to us, important to our families, our children, our communities. Let our women go.”
The rally was part of the New England ClemencyWorks tour, an awareness campaign organized by the National Council for Incarcerated & Formerly Incarcerated Women & Girls. The council partnered with a handful of community groups, including the American Friends Service Committee of New Hampshire and New Hampshire Women’s Foundation.
Smith, who is a national organizer with the council, and several other speakers shared with the crowd their experiences being formerly incarcerated.
“I felt like I was going to die in there,” she said. “They don’t care nothing about us. They just throw us in cages and leave us there, our children left suffering.”
Organizers said clemency is an option that many incarcerated women who are elderly, sick, disabled, long-time incarcerated and “survived and punished” — incarcerated due to self-defense — are unaware of. The campaign is two pronged: bring awareness of clemency to potential recipients and ask state leaders to grant it.
“We’re here because we believe in second chances,” Joseph Lascaze, smart justice organizer at ACLU of NH, said. “Pardons are granted from the governor and the Executive Council, both of which positions are elected.”
Pardons have been rare in the state, with New Hampshire governors granting clemency to 11 people since 1986, according to a 2011 report from the Associated Press.
Metz asked rallygoers to support the movement by reaching out and connecting with people who are in prison, remarking how it feels “like you’re dead on the inside when you have no support on the outside.”
Jenny Whidden is a Report For America Corps Member. These articles are being shared by partners in The Granite State News Collaborative as part of our race and equity project. For more information visit collaborativenh.org.
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