Porterville Recorder

Trump pardons ex-sheriff Joe Arpaio over federal conviction

- By JACQUES BILLEAUD and DARLENE SUPERVILLE

PHOENIX — President Donald Trump spared former Sheriff Joe Arpaio a possible jail sentence on Friday by pardoning the recent federal conviction stemming from his immigratio­n patrols, reversing what critics saw as a long-awaited comeuppanc­e for a lawman who escaped accountabi­lity for headline-grabbing tactics during his tenure as metropolit­an Phoenix’s top law enforcer.

The White House said the 85-year-old ex-sheriff was a “worthy candidate” for a presidenti­al pardon. It was Trump’s first pardon as president.

“I am pleased to inform you that I have just granted a full Pardon to 85 year old American patriot Sheriff Joe Arpaio. He kept Arizona safe!” Trump tweeted Friday.

The announceme­nt came three days after a rally in Phoenix at which the president signaled his willingnes­s to absolve Arpaio’s misdemeano­r contempt-of-court conviction.

Arpaio was in a celebrator­y mood after the pardon, eating dinner at an Italian restaurant as someone in his party ordered champagne. He told The Associated Press he was thankful for the pardon.

“I appreciate what the president did,” he said. “I have to put it out there: Pardon, no pardon — I’ll be with him as long as he’s president.”

The pardon drew a swift and harsh denunciati­on from Latinos and political leaders in Arizona and beyond. They said the action amounted to an endorsemen­t of racism by wiping away the conviction of a man who has been found by the courts to have racially profiled Latinos in his immigratio­n patrols.

“Pardoning Joe Arpaio is a slap in the face to the people of Maricopa County, especially the Latino community and those he victimized as he systematic­ally and illegally violated their civil rights,” Phoenix Mayor Greg Stanton said.

The White House announced the pardon late Friday after Trump fleshed out the details of his ban on transgende­r individual­s serving in the military, a policy that will cheer his conservati­ve base, and as a powerful Category 4 hurricane threatened to batter Texas with heavy winds and severe flooding.

Arpaio became a nationally known political figure over the past dozen years as he took aggressive action to arrest immigrants in the country illegally. But years of legal issues and costs stemming from his immigratio­n efforts began to take a toll on his political power at home, and he was handily defeated by a Democrat in the 2016 election.

It coincided with Trump winning the White House based in large part on his immigratio­n rhetoric, with Arpaio campaignin­g for him around the country.

Trump has been plagued by poor job approval ratings that currently stand at 34 percent, the lowest mark ever for a president in his first year. His decision on Arpaio may serve to energize Trump supporters dispirited over the president’s decision a week ago to dismiss chief strategist Steve Bannon. But it has angered his opponents even more.

The pardon contradict­s a key theme in the movement for tougher immigratio­n enforcemen­t — that all people, no matter who they are, aren’t above the law. Arizona politician­s have invoked the “rule of law” for more than a decade as the guiding principle in pushing for tougher immigratio­n laws.

 ?? AP PHOTO BY MARY ALTAFFER ?? In this 2016 file photo, then-republican presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump is joined by Joe Arpaio, the sheriff of metro Phoenix, at a campaign event in Marshallto­wn, Iowa.
AP PHOTO BY MARY ALTAFFER In this 2016 file photo, then-republican presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump is joined by Joe Arpaio, the sheriff of metro Phoenix, at a campaign event in Marshallto­wn, Iowa.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States