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He Went to Prison. Now He Is in Charge of Them.
Josh Smith’s mission is to use what he learned on the inside of the federal prison system, and what he accomplished after getting out, to improve the Bureau of Prisons as much as he can. (Alyssa Schukar for The Free Press)
Josh Smith spent five years behind bars, turned his life around, and now is trying to deliver on Trump’s criminal-justice reforms.
By P.G. Sittenfeld
06.25.26 — U.S. Politics
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Josh Smith, 51, spent this past Christmas in prison. Just like he did for five years after being caught at the age of 21 in possession of a kilogram of cocaine and 150 pounds of marijuana. The difference? Smith wasn’t behind bars anymore. A year ago this month, he was sworn in as deputy director of the federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP), one of the world’s largest prison systems.

During the holidays, he made three unannounced prison visits with his wife to thank corrections officers for reporting to work and sacrificing their family time. Just showing up also meant that prison wardens didn’t have a chance “to start painting any walls” or do other tidying up before Smith arrived, he told me.

The next big stop of the holidays was another sign of how much Smith’s life has turned around: He rang in the new year at Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort in Palm Beach, Florida. It was the president who pardoned Smith in 2021 during the last week of Trump’s first term, almost two decades after Smith completed his prison sentence.

The White House said Smith had “dedicated his life to his faith and to his community” and to “making prison ‘a place of transformation’ ” through his Fourth Purpose Foundation, which advocates for criminal justice reform. The pardon was supported by Tennessee’s governor, other top state officials, and “numerous other community and faith leaders.”

“What stood out from the beginning was not just that he rebuilt his own life, but how seriously he has taken the responsibility to help others do the same,” said Alice Marie Johnson, another former federal inmate who received a pardon from Trump in 2020 and is now the White House “pardon czar.”

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P.G. Sittenfeld
P.G. Sittenfeld is a contributor to The Free Press, and his recent work has also been published in The New York Times, The Washington Post, Esquire, Slate, Outside, The Hill, America Magazine, and Princeton Alumni Weekly. His journey has taken him from Princeton University to politics to prison to successful Supreme Court petitioner. He regularly speaks around the country at law schools and law firms, in private sector settings, and in American prisons. He enjoys writing about the U.S. legal and criminal justice system, faith, and fatherhood, and he lives with his wife and three young sons in Cincinnati.
Tags:
Donald Trump
Crime
Republicans
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