Alaska Democratic Senator Mark Begich’s campaign is pulling a brutal attack ad accusing Republican opponent Dan Sullivan of allowing an alleged murderer and rapist to get off with a light sentence after criticism from a lawyer representing the victims’ families.
The family’s attorney, Bryon Collins, excoriated Begich over the television commercial.
“You are tearing this family apart to the point that your ad was so shocking to them they now want to permanently leave the state as quickly as possible,” Collins wrote in a blistering letter that went on to accuse Begich of “playing pure politics at the expense of my clients.”
Collins also demanded that Sullivan take down a response ad, which his campaign is doing as well.
According to a spokesman for Begich’s campaign, his staff had reached out to family members of the victim as well as members of their Cambodian community in Anchorage before running the ad and received no indication anyone objected to its content. Nonetheless, they are honoring Collins’ request and trying to determine how the miscommunication happened.
Collins had previously told the Washington Examiner that his clients did not respond to messages from the campaign and never gave permission to run the ad. He repeated the claim in a statement on Tuesday night and suggested other individuals purporting to speak for the family may be creating confusion.
“I have a copy of the only text message regarding contact with my client on behalf [of the] Begich campaign asking if Begich campaign could contact my clients,” Collins said. “No one from the campaign called my clients or discussed the ads with them prior to running them. It appears someone other than my office is attempting to speak for the family without authorization. The family requests that this stop immediately.”
It’s an ugly turn for Begich, who has generally been credited by political observers with running an exceptionally strong Senate campaign in a difficult re-election race.
The Begich ad centered around Jerry Active, a convicted sex offender now charged with murdering an elderly man and woman and sexually assaulting their 2-year old granddaughter. Active had previously served time after pleading guilty to sexually abusing an 11-year old, but the attorney general’s office later admitted that the sentence should have been significantly longer under state guidelines because he had a prior felony conviction.
The Begich campaign argued that Sullivan, who was attorney general at the time of the plea deal, bore responsibility for the mistake and that it was part of a larger pattern. In Begich’s commercial, a retired police officer stands by the scene of the crime and tells the viewer that “a lot of sex offenders get off with light sentences” under Sullivan.









