DENVER – Today, Governor Jared Polis announced that he has granted a commutation to Rogel Aguilera-Mederos, with his original sentence of 110 years reduced now to 10 years.

The Governor disclosed that he learned that a relative of Aguilera-Mederos’s attorney works in the Governor’s office. This person had no involvement in the commutation process and works in an unrelated capacity to this matter as well as was unaware of the Governor’s decision. 

To read past coverage regarding Aguilera-Mederos, see the following links below:

He also issued two other commutations, fifteen individual pardons and signed an Executive Order granting 1,351 pardons for convictions of possession of two ounces or less of marijuana. 

The Executive Orders and clemency letters can be found here (letters) and here (Executive Orders). 

The Governor granted commutations to Ronald Johnson and Nicholas Wells. Mr. Johnson is granted parole effective Jan. 15, 2022, with terms and conditions of parole to be set by the Parole Board. Mr. Wells is parole eligible on Jan. 15, 2022.

Governor Polis re-created the Executive Clemency Advisory Board in 2019. The Board reviews clemency applications and makes recommendations to the Governor for commutations and pardons. 

Governor Polis signed House Bill 2021-1090 on May 20, 2021, increasing the amount of marijuana that adults 21 and older in Colorado can legally possess from one ounce to two ounces. This bill builds on precedent set by Amendment 64 passed in 2012 and the bipartisan House Bill 20-1424, authorizing the Governor to grant pardons to a class of defendants convicted of the possession of up to two ounces of marijuana. 

The marijuana pardon applies to state-level convictions of possession for two ounces or less of marijuana, as identified by the Colorado Bureau of Investigation. The individuals with these convictions did not need to apply for pardons, and the Governor’s Office has not conducted individual assessments of the people who have been pardoned. Those convicted of municipal marijuana crimes, or individuals arrested or issued a summons without a conviction, are not included.  

Those who are unsure whether a conviction on their record has been pardoned may fill out a form to request confirmation of a pardon on the Colorado Bureau of Investigations website. To obtain their entire criminal history, people can visit CBIRecordsCheck.com. Once a conviction is pardoned, it will not appear on a criminal history obtained on the records check website. 

“It’s unfair that 1,351 additional Coloradans had permanent blemishes on their record that interfered with employment, credit, and gun ownership, but today we have fixed that by pardoning their possession of small amounts of marijuana that occurred during the failed prohibition era,” said Governor Polis.

The Governor granted pardons to Travis Cleveland, Anthony Formby, Rudolph Garcia, Stephanie Gssime, Michael Jordan, Timothy Lewis, Reginald McGriff, Henry Moreno, Joseph Murillo, Michael Navarro, Ryan Nguyen, Shawn Phillips, Armando Solano, Mohammed Suleiman, and Theresa Yoder.

For further questions, visit the FAQ document

Visit coloradomarijuanapardons.com for more information.