Country music sensation Jelly Roll received a pardon from Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee on Thursday for past charges of robbery and drug possession, restoring some freedoms to the Grammy-nominated artist and completing a redemption arc that has come to define his songwriting, brand, and advocacy.
Lee’s decision came after an outpouring of support from family, friends, and community members for the Nashville-based rapper-singer, whose birth name is Jason Deford. The Republican governor followed the guidance of the Tennessee Board of Parole, which on Tuesday voted unanimously to issue a nonbinding recommendation in favor of clemency.
“His story is remarkable, and it’s a redemptive, powerful story — which is what you look for and what you hope for,” Lee told reporters.
At Tuesday’s one-hour-and-45-minute Board of Parole hearing, several witnesses spoke on the singer’s behalf, including Nashville Sheriff Daron Hall. Reflecting on his time behind bars, Deford told the board that incarceration ultimately led him to fall in love with music.
“It started as a passion project that felt therapeutic and ended up changing my life in ways I never dreamed imaginable, opening doors I never thought possible,” he said.
In Tennessee, a pardon serves as an acknowledgment of contrition and an act of forgiveness, restoring certain civil rights to formerly incarcerated individuals. With the pardon, Deford will face fewer restrictions on international travel, allowing him to tour abroad and participate in Christian missionary work.
As Jelly Roll, Deford has spoken openly about his criminal past, addressing concert audiences and inmates during prison visits about his regrets over a checkered history that includes a 2002 robbery conviction, for which he was sentenced to one year in prison, and a 2008 drug possession charge. In that case, according to the Associated Press, marijuana and crack cocaine were found in his possession. He also has two misdemeanor convictions for driving without a license and possession of drug paraphernalia.
“I want to be an inspiration for people who are now where I used to be — to let them know that change is truly possible,” Deford told board members. “One of the reasons I’m asking for this pardon is because I want to take my message of redemption, through the power of music and faith, to the rest of the world.”
Deford was one of 33 clemency petitions granted by Lee this week. The governor has made a tradition of issuing pardons and commutations ahead of the holiday season.
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