Former Baltimore State’s Attorney Marilyn Mosby was not among those on Thursday included on a list of more than 1,500 people who received a presidential pardon or sentence commutation.

President Joe Biden announced that he was pardoning 39 people convicted of nonviolent crimes and commuting the sentences of 1,499 others who were put on home confinement during the COVID-19 pandemic.

The White House described those actions as the “largest single-day grant of clemency in modern history” and indicated that there was “more to come.”

“I will take more steps in the weeks ahead,” Biden said in a statement. “My Administration will continue reviewing clemency petitions to advance equal justice under the law, promote public safety, support rehabilitation and reentry, and provide meaningful second chances.”

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Mosby, 44, a Democrat who served two terms as the city’s top prosecutor from 2015 to 2023, was found guilty at separate trials in U.S. District Court in Greenbelt of two counts of perjury and one count of making a false statement on a loan application related to her purchase of two luxury vacation homes in Florida.

U.S. District Judge Lydia Kay Griggsby later sentenced Mosby to three years of supervised release, with one year on home detention, and ordered her to perform 100 hours of community service.

She maintains her innocence and has appealed her convictions to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit.

Her attorney, Federal Public Defender James Wyda, could not immediately be reached for comment.

In 2020, Mosby twice certified on a form under the penalty of perjury that she experienced adverse financial consequences to withdraw a total of $90,000 from a retirement account through a provision in the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act, or CARES Act. She otherwise would not have been able to access that money.

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Mosby then bought a home in Kissimmee, Florida, close to Walt Disney World, and a condo in Longboat Key, Florida, on the state’s Gulf Coast.

A jury determined that she lied on those forms.

A separate jury concluded that she also lied when she submitted a letter to the mortgage company that claimed her husband at the time, Nick, had agreed to gift her $5,000 at closing for the condo. They’ve since divorced.

Before her sentencing, Mosby embarked on a media blitz and pushed for a pardon. She rallied support from a number of high-profile media personalities, attorneys and civil rights organizations.

Supporters have included the NAACP, Congressional Black Caucus and civil rights attorney Ben Crump. That’s along with Bernice King, the youngest daughter of Martin Luther King Jr. and Coretta Scott King.

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More than 93,000 people have also signed a petition calling for a pardon.

“President Biden has to evaluate these things on a case-by-case basis, but at the same time, go as big as possible — including looking at examples of aggressive prosecutions as it relates to people like Marilyn Mosby,” House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, a Democrat from New York, recently said on “TheReidOut” with Joy Reid on MSNBC.

Mosby rose to national prominence in 2015 when she charged six Baltimore Police officers in the death of Freddie Gray, a 25-year-old Black man. He died from injuries that he sustained in custody.

None of those cases resulted in convictions.