The unreasonable part was that it was a death sentence for a 71-year-old with comorbitities to be put in prison; the courts should have granted a stay of incarceration pending the outcome of appeals, then we wouldn’t have a commutation.
I can imagine therefore that the commutation might not cover the supervised probation, or it might have just ended the entire sentence.
The court certainly needs this information; i’m surprised that the paperwork wouldn’t already be sent to the court.
Federal prisons are filled with people like that. Are they all gonna get a commutation now or sent out to the public?
Stone is 67, not 71.