PardonGranted 2026-02-12

Travis Henry

Pardon by Donald J. Trump

The Case

Facts on file from the DOJ Office of the Pardon Attorney

Offense
Conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute cocaine
District
District of Montana
Original Sentence
36 months' imprisonment; five years' supervised release (July 15, 2009)
Clemency Type
Pardon full forgiveness, restores civil rights

Case Overview & Context

Plain-English summary of the case and the legal context for this type of clemency

Case Overview

Travis Henry was convicted in the District of Montana of conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute cocaine. He was sentenced on July 15, 2009, to 36 months' imprisonment followed by five years of supervised release.

Pardon Context

A pardon is an act of executive clemency that forgives the offense and restores civil rights such as voting and firearm ownership, though the conviction remains part of the recipient's criminal record. Under Article II of the Constitution, the presidential pardon power is absolute for federal offenses and requires no judicial review or approval from any other branch of government. The president's personal reasoning for this specific grant is not publicly documented.

AI-generated summary based on public clemency records. The president's specific personal reasoning for this grant is not publicly documented.

Constitutional authority: Article II, Section 2 of the Constitution grants the President “Power to grant Reprieves and Pardons for Offenses against the United States.” This power is absolute for federal crimes — Congress cannot override it, and no judicial review is required. The president is not required to publish reasons for individual grants.

Read the official DOJ recordOffice of the Pardon Attorney →