The Niagara Falls Review

Ex-sheriff goes on trial

- JACQUES BILLEAUD

PHOENIX — The immigratio­n rhetoric and crackdowns pushed by U.S. President Donald Trump have a familiar ring in Arizona, where former sheriff Joe Arpaio once used similar tactics to become a national figure.

Now, Arpaio is on trial on a criminal charge stemming from those immigratio­n enforcemen­t actions.

His eight-day trial that began Monday in federal court in Phoenix, Ariz., will determine whether the 85-year-old retired lawman is guilty of misdemeano­ur contempt of court for disobeying a judge’s order to stop traffic patrols that targeted immigrants. The judge later found his officers racially profiled Latinos.

Arpaio’s legal troubles played a major role in voters turning him out of office in November after a campaign in which he appeared alongside Trump at several rallies in Arizona.

The former six-term sheriff of metro Phoenix has acknowledg­ed defying the judge’s 2011 order in a racial profiling lawsuit by prolonging the patrols for months. But he insists it was not intentiona­l. To win a conviction, prosecutor­s must prove he violated the order on purpose. If convicted, Arpaio could face up to six months in jail, though lawyers who have followed his case doubt that a man of his age would be put behind bars.

For nine of his 24 years in office, Arpaio did the sort of local immigratio­n enforcemen­t that Trump has advocated. To build his highly touted deportatio­n force, Trump is reviving a long-standing program that deputizes local officers to enforce federal immigratio­n law.

His immigratio­n powers were eventually stripped away by the courts and federal government, culminatin­g with the 2013 ruling that Arpaio’s officers profiled Latinos.

Arpaio’s defence centres around what his attorneys said were weaknesses in the court order that failed to acknowledg­e times when deputies would detain immigrants and later hand them over to federal authoritie­s.

Jack Wilenchik, an Arpaio attorney, said the former sheriff is charged with a crime for co-operating with U.S. immigratio­n officials, which the Trump administra­tion now encourages.

“This is really just a fight about immigratio­n law and what it means ,” Wilenchik said. “And Arpaio is trying to do what a good cop does, which is to enforce the law.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? The trial for ex-sheriff Joe Arpaio on charges he ignored a judge’s orders to stop targeting Latino immigrants began on Monday. Arpaio could face six months in prison if he is found guilty.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES The trial for ex-sheriff Joe Arpaio on charges he ignored a judge’s orders to stop targeting Latino immigrants began on Monday. Arpaio could face six months in prison if he is found guilty.

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