

End Death-by-Incarceration: Commute Sean K. Davis’s Life Sentence


End Death-by-Incarceration: Commute Sean K. Davis’s Life Sentence
The Issue
Sean K. Davis has spent 35 years in a Pennsylvania prison serving life without the possibility of parole, also known as DEATH BY INCARCERATION.
Nothing can undo the harm that was caused, and nothing in this campaign seeks to erase that harm. Accountability matters. At the same time, our justice system must ask whether death by incarceration is the only way to honor accountability when someone has spent decades taking responsibility and working to change.
Sean does not deny his past. He has chosen to confront it honestly and use his time to grow, reflect, and contribute positively to those around him. Over the course of over three decades, he has become a mentor, motivational speaker, and restorative justice advocate within the prison system. His efforts are grounded in responsibility, not excuses, and in service, not self-interest.
As Bryan Stevenson reminds us, “Each of us is more than the worst thing we have ever done".
Sean is seeking to commute his sentence from life in prison to life on parole. This request is not a demand for release. It is a request for review. It allows the justice system to evaluate who Sean is today after 35 years of accountability, growth, and service rather than defining him only by a single moment from decades ago.
Sean hopes to continue this work beyond prison by supporting young people who face many of the same challenges he once did. These include growing up in poverty, in a single-parent household, and surrounded by violence and instability. Through mentorship and honest connection, he believes he can help others avoid the path that led to his own incarceration. Sean believes that meaningful accountability includes giving back to the community, not remaining incarcerated until death.
Support the commutation of Sean K. Davis’s sentence so that accountability and humanity can both have a place in the justice process.
#secondchance4sean
See Sean’s accomplishments, leadership, and service during incarceration HERE

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The Issue
Sean K. Davis has spent 35 years in a Pennsylvania prison serving life without the possibility of parole, also known as DEATH BY INCARCERATION.
Nothing can undo the harm that was caused, and nothing in this campaign seeks to erase that harm. Accountability matters. At the same time, our justice system must ask whether death by incarceration is the only way to honor accountability when someone has spent decades taking responsibility and working to change.
Sean does not deny his past. He has chosen to confront it honestly and use his time to grow, reflect, and contribute positively to those around him. Over the course of over three decades, he has become a mentor, motivational speaker, and restorative justice advocate within the prison system. His efforts are grounded in responsibility, not excuses, and in service, not self-interest.
As Bryan Stevenson reminds us, “Each of us is more than the worst thing we have ever done".
Sean is seeking to commute his sentence from life in prison to life on parole. This request is not a demand for release. It is a request for review. It allows the justice system to evaluate who Sean is today after 35 years of accountability, growth, and service rather than defining him only by a single moment from decades ago.
Sean hopes to continue this work beyond prison by supporting young people who face many of the same challenges he once did. These include growing up in poverty, in a single-parent household, and surrounded by violence and instability. Through mentorship and honest connection, he believes he can help others avoid the path that led to his own incarceration. Sean believes that meaningful accountability includes giving back to the community, not remaining incarcerated until death.
Support the commutation of Sean K. Davis’s sentence so that accountability and humanity can both have a place in the justice process.
#secondchance4sean
See Sean’s accomplishments, leadership, and service during incarceration HERE

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Petition created on January 19, 2026