Updated at 4 p.m. ETA former officer for the Central Intelligence Agency, Sabrina De Sousa, was released from custody today after Italy's president granted her partial clemency over a 2003 kidnapping that was part of the agency's extraordinary rendition program.De Sousa was convicted in absentia — along with 25 other Americans — by an Italian court in the abduction of radical Egyptian cleric Abu Omar off a street in Milan. Several of those convicted have since been pardoned.As NPR has previously reported, De Sousa left the CIA in 2009 and moved to Portugal in 2015, where she was detained on a European arrest warrant. She was soon released but remained in Portugal.Last year, Portugal's highest court ruled that De Sousa should be extradited to Italy.De Sousa was moments from stepping onto a plane to Italy when President Sergio Mattarella announced his decision last night to reduce her four-year prison sentence by a year. NPR's Mary Louise Kelly reported that, now, De Sousa may not go to prison at all, and could instead perform community service, although it is unclear in which country that would happen."Peter Hoekstra, former chair of the House Intelligence Committee, has been in contact with De Sousa's husband and layers," she reported.Hoekstra told NPR that the Italian warrant for De Sousa's arrest had been lifted and that she was negotiating with Italian authorities about potentially doing community service in Portugal, where she lives with her family.The 2003 kidnapping for which De Sousa was charged was part of the CIA's extraordinary rendition program, under which the agency permitted its employees to seize people they suspected of ties to terrorist activity and fly them to be interrogated at CIA-controlled sites.But as NPR's Daniel Schorr put it in 2007, "European governments don't take kindly to kidnapping."Although De Sousa would have known about the program in her capacity as a CIA officer — she condemned the program as "totally counterproductive" in an interview with the BBC — she has maintained that she did not take part in the 2003 kidnapping.As Mary Louise reported: