Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Clarke withdraws his name for federal post

- MICHELLE LIU

Milwaukee County Sheriff David A. Clarke Jr. has withdrawn his name for an assistant secretary position at the Department of Homeland Security — a job he said a month ago he had accepted.

Clarke formally withdrew from considerat­ion of the job late Friday by notifying Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly, according to a statement from Craig Peterson, a close adviser to the sheriff.

“Sheriff Clarke is 100 percent committed to the success of President Trump and believes his skills could be better utilized to promote the president’s agenda in a more aggressive role,” Peterson said in the statement.

“Sheriff Clarke told Secretary Kelly he is very appreciati­ve of the tremendous opportunit­y the secretary was offering, and expressed his support for the secretary and the agency,” the statement continued.

Trump met with Clarke during his Wisconsin stop in Milwaukee Tuesday, Peterson said, when they talked about alternativ­e roles for Clarke.

Clarke’s withdrawal from considerat­ion for the Homeland Security job was first reported by the Washington Post.

At least publicly, the job had never been offered. And as of Friday, Clarke had not resigned from his sheriff’s post.

Clarke had said then he would work in the department’s Office of Partnershi­p and Engagement as a liaison with state, local and tribal law enforcemen­t and government­s. It would be an extension of the role Clarke has already taken on as a defender of police on media outlets like Fox News and would follow the campaignin­g he did for Trump around the country last year.

But when Clarke put out the news of his appointmen­t on his own last month, it quickly drew a rebuke in an agency tweet that said “no such announceme­nt” had been made. Agency spokeswoma­n Jenny Burke repeated the language of the tweet almost word for word Friday, the Journal Sentinel reported Saturday.

“The position mentioned is a secretaria­l appointmen­t. Such senior positions are announced by the department when made official by the secretary,” Burke said in an email. “No such announceme­nt with regard to the Office of Partnershi­p and Engagement has been made.”

Clarke was expected to start a job with the department at the end of June. But a source close to the administra­tion told the Washington Post that Clarke’s appointmen­t was subject to delays that spurred his withdrawal.

Another source told the Journal Sentinel that the sheriff attended the Tuesday night fundraiser that Trump hosted for Gov. Scott Walker at the Hyatt Regency in Milwaukee.

That source said Clarke was conspicuou­sly seen asking administra­tion officials about talking to Reince Priebus, Trump’s chief of staff and a former state Republican Party chairman. The source did not see whether Clarke and Priebus

eventually talked.

Clarke and the Milwaukee County Jail that he oversees have faced controvers­y.

An inquest jury last month found probable cause to charge five correction­s officers, a jail lieutenant and the jail’s former commander with abuse of an inmate stemming from the April 2016 death of Terrill Thomas. Thomas died from dehydratio­n after he went without water for seven days because of blunders by jail staff.

The jury’s findings were advisory and it is up to Milwaukee County District Attorney John Chisholm to decide whether to charge anyone.

Witnesses at the inquest said jail staff turned off the water in Thomas’

solitary confinemen­t cell, then forgot to turn it back on. During the seven days Thomas went without water, officers failed to get him medical help.

Prosecutor­s have said Thomas’ mental illnesses — he suffered from bipolar disorder and was in the throes of a breakdown — prevented him from asking for help. Other inmates have said they asked jail staff to help Thomas.

Last month, the Naval Postgradua­te School removed Clarke’s 2013 master’s thesis from its website and said it was reviewing his work after CNN reported the thesis included large sections that matched the work of others word for word. There were no quotation marks around the passages, but the sources were cited in footnotes.

Clarke has said CNN has exaggerate­d the importance of what he calls “a formatting error.”

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