Source: Associated Press Pubdate: Sat, 26 Dec 1998 Copyright: 1998 Associated Press Note: The Reconsider website is at: http://www.reconsider.org/ CRITICS LAUNCH AD CAMPAIGN OPPOSING ROCKEFELLER DRUG LAWS ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) - A bipartisan coalition opposing New York's Rockefeller drug laws launched radio advertisements Sunday calling for an overhaul of the rigid 25-year-old sentencing guidelines. The 60-second radio spots tell the true stories of people unable to be with their families over the holidays because they are serving lengthy prison sentences for relatively low-level drug offenses under the New York laws, which are among the harshest in the nation. The ads will run in Buffalo, Rochester and on Long Island through the end of the year. "Lucy Brady wished she too could be with her family. But she can't. Not this year. Maybe not for many years to come," one of the ads said. "Her crime? She was just there, young, in an apartment where drugs were sold. Her sentence? 15 years to life." Lobbying against the Rockefeller drug laws, which mandate 15-years-to-life for possessing 4 ounces of a drug or selling 2 ounces, is nothing new. But the radio ad campaign turns up the pressure at a time when the Pataki administration is said to be seriously weighing giving the laws a second look. Patrick McCarthy, a spokesman for Gov. George Pataki, would say only that the governor was considering a host of crime-related issues for the coming legislative session. But some sources say high-level talks are taking place on reforming the Rockefeller drug laws. Many say Pataki has the tough-on-crime credentials to make changes to the laws. "It is widely recognized that this is the political moment to do it," said Robert Gangi, executive director of the Correctional Association of New York State. He said that polls and editorial boards showed widespread support for the changes. The fact that it is a non-election year is also helpful, he added. "No political figure will defend them," Gangi said. "The political climate is ready." Indeed, among those on the coalition calling for changes to the laws are one of its original sponsors, former state Sen. H. Douglas Barclay, of Syracuse. Also on board is Warren Anderson, who was state Senate Majority Leader when the laws were enacted in 1973. Also involved in the campaign is John Dunne, a former state senator and a former assistant U.S. attorney general, and former the Rev. Floyd Flake, a former New York City congressman. All are on the Campaign For Effective Criminal Justice, which comprises conservative criminal justice experts, religious leaders, former judges as well as activists in minority and women's issues. The ads are also sponsored by Reconsider, a not-for-profit group concerned with the national drug policies. The ads come after Pataki for the first time announced that he would not be granting any clemencies this year. Of the 13 prison sentences Pataki has handed down since taking office in 1994, 11 have been for those convicted under the Rockefeller drug laws. Some, disappointed with his failure to do so again this year, were hopeful he might instead be prepared to make changes to the law itself. "It is my hope that something good will come of this," said Deborah Small, of Research ad Policy Reform Inc. "It is long past time to move in a new direction." - --- Checked-by: Richard Lake