go long. welcome back. the trump-kim summit is producing results. no, not that kim. this one. president trump commuting the sentence of alice murray johnson, a first time nonviolen weem kahian west lobbied president trump on behalf of johnson in the oval office and the white house has started the paperwork to pardon 30 other people. pamela brownor from the white house. reporter: president tru considering dozens of new pardons. that as he commutes the life sentence ofce johnson, a first time drug offender who served 21 years of a life sentence on charges of cocaine possession. that decision following a personal oval office request
trying to release the clemency for johnson for the cocaine possession. there was skepticism of a celebrity engaging with the president on this. what did you find was it spectacle or more to it? i mean, it s the biggest story of the week, right? no i think that the president is open to, you know, anybody of her stature who wants to come and speak with him. i think somebody like kim kardashian west in her own way has influence on par with the president, in some ways. and she was touched by the story of alice johnson and went to the president and said, this is the kind of person you should be pardoning. this is the kind of life you should be saving. not somebody who has pled guilty to campaign finance law violation. you know, the kind of person kikim kardashian west is advocating for is somebody president obama might have looked at and
what you want with women, but the laws don t apply to you. the tkpwraoeut aarogreat irony, they shun. they don t apply to people like me. that s where. and secondly, the pardons, as we were talking about, go to this idea that he will use his pa tour don t cooperate, don t cooperate. there were controversial pardons. roger clinton, his half-brother, drug trafficking, cocaine possession. suzanne mcdougall, content of court for her whitewater silence. henry cisneros, hud secretary who lied to the fbi. marc rich, ex-husband of a clinton donor, big huge donor,
of course, we re only authorized 18, so. it s a highly coveted job and position here at santa rosa. they re not getting paid. they get game time for their pay, but they like working here. it s a good atmosphere, a good environment. we attempt to recycle 100% of everything we have. if the uniform goes bad, we ll make belts out of it, we ll make whatever is required. inmate johnny brewster, serving three years for cocaine possession, lends his formidable sewing skills to the prison s recycling efforts. sometimes i get teased about it by these guys here. right now, i m making belts from pant leg material. as you see, we start off by joining the two pieces. usually i make one large spool approximately 35 foot every two to three days.
money. todd: the reason i wouldn t go has nothing to do with space, i don t do anything unless i can get points for it. jillian: i wonder if you get points for that? todd: let s research that. jillian: a runaway school bus. the brand new dash cam video showing a teen taking police for a wild ride. todd: not good. jillian: no. todd: it must have been a windy day for a woman arrested for cocaine possession. apparently, she says the drugs weren t hers, they belong to mother nature. the most outrageous arrest excuse you may have ever heard in your life.