Alice Johnson, the former inmate who reality TV star Kim Kardashian pushed President Donald Trump to free, spoke during the final night of the Republican Nation Convention.
'When President Trump heard about me - about the injustice of my story - he saw me as a person. He had compassion. And he acted,' Johnson said.
Johnson had been convicted in 1996 for involvement in a Memphis cocaine trafficking scheme, which came with a life sentence, seen by Kardashian and other criminal justice reform advocates as much too tough for a non-violent offender.
Alice Johnson, the former inmate who reality TV star Kim Kardashian pressured President Donald Trump to free, spoke before the Republican National Convention Thursday night
Alice Johnson said President Trump 'saw me as a person. He had compassion. And he acted,' during her RNC address at the Andrew W. Mellon auditorium in Washington, D.C.
President Trump commuted Alice Johnson's life sentence in June 6 and six months later signed the First Step Act, a bipartisan criminal justice reform bill
Kim Kardashian's (left) first trip to the Trump White House came in May 2018, with President Trump (right) commuting the sentence of Alice Johnson days later
Kardashian first came to the White House in May 2018 to tell Trump Johnson's story. White House adviser and presidential son-in-law Jared Kushner was on board.
The president commuted Johnson's sentence on June 6.
She was a guest of Trump at his 2019 State of the Union address.
And she continues to tout Trump's work passing the First Step Act, a landmark, bipartisan criminal justice reform bill in late 2018.
'I was once told that the only way I would ever be reunited with my family would be as a corpse,' Johnson said on the RNC stage. 'But by the grace of God and the compassion of President Donald John Trump, I stand before you tonight. And I assure you, I’m not a ghost! I am alive, I am well, and most importantly, I am free.'
Johnson said that sentencing should be 'fair and just' and argued that hers wasn't.
She said she made the best of her 21 years behind bars.
'While in prison, I became a playwright, a mentor, a certified hospice volunteer, an ordained minister, and received the Special Olympics Event Coordinator of the year award for my work with disabled women,' she said. 'Because the only thing worse than unjustly imprisoning my body, is trying to imprison my mind.'
'My transformation was described as extraordinary. Truth is, there are thousands of people just like me who deserve the opportunity to come home.'
She added that her Christian faith kept hope alive.
'When I was released on June 6, 2018, I ran across that road and hugged my grandchildren for the first time. I’ll never forget that feeling!' she said.
'Free in body thanks to President Trump. But free in mind thanks to the almighty God,' Johnson said.
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