Pubdate: Tue, 17 Dec 2002 Source: Buffalo News (NY) Copyright: 2002 The Buffalo News Contact: http://www.buffalonews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/61 Author: Tom Precious RACIAL ISSUES RAISED IN BATTLE OVER DRUG LAWS ALBANY - The battle over the state's tough, Rockefeller-era drug laws turned nasty Monday, with reform advocates claiming that race has played an issue in who is granted clemency each December by the Pataki administration. With efforts to reform the laws still at an impasse, advocates have turned their immediate lobbying effort to persuading Gov. George E. Pataki to grant clemency to a few dozen inmates sentenced to long prison terms for nonviolent, drug possession charges under the 1970s provisions. New York governors traditionally grant clemency at the end of December. But Randy Credico, one of the founders of Mothers of the New York Disappeared, a family group whose members include parents trying to get their children released from prison, accused Pataki of only granting clemency to one black male during his eight years in office. "Make your own extrapolation," Credico said when asked if he was accusing Pataki of being racist. He said the Pataki administration's clemency process has had "a racial overtone and undertone to it." The Pataki administration lashed out at Credico, calling his comments "disgraceful, shameful and wrong." "He should be ashamed of himself for selling out the families to pursue his own political agenda instead of working with the Senate and governor to enact sensible reforms," said Pataki spokesman Joseph Conway. Conway said dozens of families that Credico says he represents could have seen children or spouses released from jail had a Pataki plan for reforming the Rockefeller drug laws been approved. Administration officials disputed Credico's claims that only one black male has ever gotten clemency since Pataki took office in 1995. Of the 26 clemency requests Pataki has granted, three have gone to black males. Another six went to black women and seven went to Latinos. "The bottom line is decisions are based solely on the facts involved in individual cases, not on the color of one's skin," Conway said. Eighty percent of the state prison population is either black or Latino, according to the state Department of Correctional Services. Of the 66,710 inmates, 33,653 are black, 19,865 are Latino, and 11,847 are white. The agency could not provide a breakdown by males and females. The Rockefeller drug law issue has divided Albany for several years now. Pataki has made proposals to reform the law that has sent away thousands of individuals for nonviolent, drug possession convictions, but his proposals have fallen far short of what advocates and Democrats in the Assembly say is necessary. Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver, D-Manhattan, criticized Pataki and Senate Republicans for not coming to the negotiating table. With the state facing a multibillion-dollar budget deficit, he added a new reason: He said the Assembly's Rockefeller drug reform plan would save the state $160 million per year, mostly in prison-related expenses. With Credico at his side in a Capitol press room, Silver sought to stay away from the race issue. "I don't think anybody here called the governor a racist," Silver said. But Assemblyman Jeffrion Aubry, D-Queens, who also came into the press room along with family members of people convicted under Rockefeller drug laws, said the drug issue "is all about race." Aubry said the issue is not about controlling drug use in society. "It has to do with who gets policed for using drugs in society," he said of drug arrests that target minority neighborhoods. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth