Albuquerque Journal

Ex-Sheriff Joe Arpaio faces reckoning

Prosecutor­s allege he defied judge’s order to stop patrols that targeted immigrants

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PHOENIX — The political career of Joe Arpaio ended last year when the six-term sheriff of metro Phoenix known for cracking down on illegal immigratio­n and housing inmates in tents outside in the desert heat was trounced in an election that focused on his own legal troubles.

Now, the 85-year-old who called himself America’s toughest sheriff will go to court for defying a judge’s order to stop traffic patrols targeting immigrants.

Arpaio’s trial starts Monday on a criminal contempt-ofcourt charge for prolonging the patrols for nearly a year and a half. The judge later found that Arpaio’s officers had racially profiled Latinos.

The former sheriff could face up to six months in jail, though lawyers who have followed his case doubt he would get locked up if convicted.

His critics hope the case will bring a long-awaited comeuppanc­e for the former lawman who led crackdowns that divided immigrant families and escaped accountabi­lity when he regularly flouted the rules.

Attorney Mike Manning, who isn’t involved in the case but has sued Arpaio several times over deaths in the jails, said Arpaio deserves his fate, because he “saluted the court with his middle finger” when he violated the court order.

Jack Wilenchik, an Arpaio attorney, said the former sheriff is charged with a crime for cooperatin­g with federal immigratio­n authoritie­s, which the Trump administra­tion is encouragin­g more police agencies to do.

“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, enforce the law.”

Arpaio, reached by phone last week, declined to comment.

He rode to national prominence by launching highly publicized immigratio­n crackdowns, landing him in court when Hispanic immigrants sued. He was ousted from office last year in the same election that sent Donald Trump to the White House after using some of the same immigratio­n rhetoric that made Arpaio a national name a decade earlier.

The key issue in the trial will be whether Arpaio intentiona­lly violated a judge’s 2011 order to stop the patrols. Arpaio acknowledg­es that he kept up the immigratio­n enforcemen­t but says it was not on purpose. For a conviction, prosecutor­s must prove he intended to disobey the judge.

The judge found that Arpaio ignored the order because he believed his immigratio­n enforcemen­t efforts would help his 2012 re-election campaign. His legal troubles likely contribute­d to his crushing defeat in November to retired Phoenix police Sgt. Paul Penzone.

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Joe Arpaio

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