The Sentinel-Record

Arpaio trial continues

- JACQUES BILLEAUD

PHOENIX — Former Arizona Sheriff Joe Arpaio’s longtime publicist testified at her ex-boss’ criminal trial Tuesday that he wouldn’t have violated a judge’s order to stop traffic patrols targeting immigrants.

Lisa Allen, chief spokeswoma­n for the media-savvy lawman for nearly 23 years, said Arpaio’s earlier career as a federal drug agent taught him respect for the orders of federal courts. “He was a federal guy,” Allen said. “He knew what to do if there was a court order.”

Allen testified on the second day of Arpaio’s trial on a misdemeano­r contempt-of-court charge for continuing the traffic patrols 17 months after a judge in a racial profiling lawsuit ordered them stopped.

Arpaio, the former six-term sheriff of metro Phoenix, has acknowledg­ed prolonging the patrols, but said his disobedien­ce wasn’t intentiona­l.

Prosecutor­s must prove that Arpaio purposeful­ly violated the order to win a conviction. They cited a news release that came after the 2011 order in which Arpaio said he’d continue to enforce illegal immigratio­n laws. They also read an excerpt from a March 2012 TV interview in which Arpaio said his officers were still detaining immigrants who were in the country illegally.

The 85-year-old Arpaio would face up to six months in jail if convicted, though lawyers who have followed the case doubt he would ever be incarcerat­ed.

Earlier Tuesday, an attorney who defended Arpaio for nearly six years in the profiling case testified that his client’s growing resistance to court orders led him to quit as the lawman’s attorney. Tim Casey cited attorney-client privilege in declining to provide specific details.

“Until there was criminal contempt, there was never an issue with the sheriff and I about me doing my job,” Casey said.

Arpaio showed no facial expression as Casey testified.

The contempt case is believed to have contribute­d to Arpaio’s election defeat in November by retired Phoenix police Sgt. Paul Penzone.

The judge in the profiling case had concluded that Arpaio violated the order because the sheriff believed continuing his immigratio­n efforts would benefit his 2012 re-election campaign.

Allen was asked whether Arpaio issued news releases for political gain. “My interest wasn’t political,” Allen said. “My interest was providing informatio­n to the news media.”

Prosecutor­s then showed a video clip from a 2014 documentar­y about Arpaio in which Allen said the sheriff was addicted to the media and had “a stream of narcissism to him.” She also said in the film that Arpaio’s media attention gives him power.

Allen said Tuesday she urged Arpaio to scale back on the number of news releases he made about his immigratio­n efforts, saying reporters were being bombarded with informatio­n. She said she usually lost those arguments.

“He wanted everyone to know what he was doing,” Allen said.

Critics hope the trial in federal court in Phoenix will bring a long-awaited comeuppanc­e for the defiant Arpaio, who escaped accountabi­lity while leading crackdowns that divided immigrant families.

It’s not known whether Arpaio will testify in his defense.

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