Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Hearing to look at claim against sheriff

- By Jacques Billeaud

PHOENIX — A Nov. 26 court hearing will examine a claim that Maricopa County Sheriff Paul Penzone isn’t meaningful­ly complying with a requiremen­t in a racial profiling case to engage community members in a bid to restore public confidence in the agency.

The hearing also is expected to focus on an expert’s characteri­zation of the agency’s latest traffic stop study, which concluded that drivers who are Hispanic and black are often treated differentl­y from other drivers.

The sheriff ’s office is required to participat­e in quarterly community meetings and produce an annual traffic stop study in response to a 2013 verdict that found sheriff ’s officers racially profiled Latinos in then-Sheriff Joe Arpaio’s patrols that targeted immigrants.

Molly Brizgys, one of the lawyers pressing the case against the agency, took issue with Penzone’s absence during a key portion of an Oct. 15 community meeting in the Maryvale neighborho­od in Phoenix. Penzone was at the meeting but left before community members could pose questions to him.

While other sheriff ’s employees fielded the questions in Penzone’s place, the sheriff didn’t comply with a requiremen­t to give 30 days’ notice that a staff member would be speaking on his behalf at such meetings, Brizgys said in court records.

The sheriff ’s office declined to comment Friday on the complaint against Penzone.

This summer, the federal judge presiding over the case transferre­d control of the community meetings from Penzone to an official who monitors the agency on behalf of the court.

The change was made after the judge raised questions about how Penzone’s office was conducting meetings, such as scheduling one gathering during a weekday morning, rather than holding it in the evenings when more people would be available. The agency later moved the start time to the evening.

It marked the second time in the profiling case that responsibi­lity for the meetings was transferre­d to the court monitor.

Five years ago, the monitor took over that duty after the sheriff ’s office, under Arpaio’s leadership, opposed having to hold the meetings. At the time, the agency was criticized for scheduling the meetings at times and locations where the public wasn’t as likely to attend.

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Paul Penzone

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