By The Associated Press
Reality TV star Kim Kardashian West went to the White House Wednesday to make a star-powered case for prison reform and advocate on behalf of a great-grandmother serving a life sentence.
Kardashian West has urged the president to pardon Alice Marie Johnson, 63, who is serving a life sentence without parole for a nonviolent drug offense.

Kim Kardashian is asking the White House to pardon Alice Marie Johnson (left), who is serving a life sentence. Tretessa Johnson (right), her daughter , has been championing the pardon. (Courtesy photo)
In an interview with Mic, Kardashian West said sheโd been moved by Johnsonโs story after seeing a video by the news outlet.
โI think that she really deserves a second chance at life,โ Kardashian told Mic. โIโll do whatever it takes to get her out.โ
She said in the interview sheโd been in touch with Jared Kushner, President Donald Trumpโs son-in-law and senior adviser, over the case.
โIโve been in communication with the White House and trying to bring her case to the presidentโs desk and figure out how we can get her out,โ she said of Johnson, who has spent over two decades behind bars.
Kushner oversees the administrationโs push to overhaul the nationโs prison system and help former inmates gain skills and more effectively make the transition back into society.
Trump last week granted a rare posthumous pardon to boxingโs first Black heavyweight champion, clearing Jack Johnsonโs name more than 100 years after what many saw as his racially-charged conviction.
The boxerโs pardon had been championed by actor Sylvester Stallone, who brought the story to Trumpโs attention in a spring phone call.
Trump has issued just a handful of other pardons, including one for former Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio, a staunch campaign supporter; one for Scooter Libby, who served as chief of staff to former Vice President Dick Cheney; and one for a U.S. Navy sailor convicted for taking photos of classified portions of a submarine.
Kardashian West supported Trumpโs rival, Democrat Hillary Clinton, during the 2016 election. But her husband, rapper Kanye West, recently offered his support for Trump in a series of tweets, saying they both share โdragon energy.โ
Johnson was convicted in 1996 on eight criminal counts related to a Memphis-based cocaine trafficking operation involving more than a dozen people. The 1994 indictment describes dozens of deliveries and drug transactions, many involving Johnson.
She was sentenced to life in prison in 1997, and appellate judges and the U.S. Supreme Court have rejected her appeals. Court records show she has a motion pending for a reduction in sentence, but federal prosecutors are opposed to a sentence reduction, saying in a court filing that the sentence is in accord with federal guidelines, based on the large quantity of drugs involved. The U.S. Attorneyโs Office in Memphis did not immediately respond to a request for comment Wednesday afternoon.
A criminal justice advocacy site, CAN-DO, and one of Johnsonโs attorneys say a request for clemency was rejected by former President Barack Obama. The reasons are unclear.
A 1997 Associated Press story on Johnsonโs sentencing said she lead a multimillion-dollar drug ring. But Memphis attorney Michael Scholl, who filed the latest court documents in her request for a sentence reduction, said she was not a leader in the cocaine operation.
โWhat is the purpose of putting a lady with no prior criminal record, on a nonviolent drug offense, in jail for her entire life?โ he said in a telephone interview. โSheโs a model inmate.โ
Scholl added that Johnson has admitted her wrongdoing, which is borne out in letters she has written to U.S. District Judge Samuel H. Mays, who now oversees her case.
โJudge Mays Iโm writing to you to express my deep remorse for the crime that I committed over 20 years ago. I made some bad choices which have not only affected my life, but have impacted my entire family,โ she said in a February 2017 letter in the court record.
In a hand-scrawled letter last June she wrote: โIโm a broken woman. More time in prison cannot accomplish more justice.โ

