A nonprofit leader who supports at-risk New Orleans youth. A social worker who fosters animals. A postdoctoral researcher.
They are among the roughly 1,540 people whose sentences were commuted or who were pardoned by President Joe Biden on Thursday in what was the largest single-day act of clemency in modern history.
But not everyone was pleased by Biden's decisions. A Republican state senator said a commutation for a woman who stole $54 million from a small town in Illinois was ''a slap in the face'' to residents. The Democratic governor of Pennsylvania said Biden "got it absolutely wrong'' when he commuted the sentence of a judge who orchestrated a scheme to send children to for-profit jails in exchange for kickbacks.
Here are some of their stories:
TRYNITHA FULTON, 46, OF NEW ORLEANS
Fulton was pardoned after pleading guilty to participating in a payroll fraud scheme while serving as a New Orleans middle school teacher in the early 2000s. She was convicted of a felony and sentenced to three years of probation in 2008.
Fulton, who has two children and works as an elementary school teacher, said that for years she had lived with ''a sense of embarrassment and shame'' about the felony conviction.
Even though she completed a master's degree in educational leadership in 2017, Fulton felt that her criminal record disqualified her from applying for principal positions she felt she could handle.