Yuma Sun

Arpaio hits snag in bid to erase criminal conviction

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PHOENIX — Former Sheriff Joe Arpaio has hit a snag in his bid to get the courts to erase his criminal record now that President Donald Trump has pardoned his conviction for intentiona­lly disobeying a judge’s order.

An appeals court on Monday issued an order questionin­g whether it has jurisdicti­on over Arpaio’s appeal of an Oct. 19 ruling in which a judge refused to throw out a decision that explains why the retired sheriff was found guilty of contempt of court.

The order issued by the clerk of the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals explained the pardon was issued before Arpaio’s case came to an official conclusion at the lower-court level and cited a case that concluded appeals courts are generally barred from reviewing cases until after a person is convicted and sentenced.

The developmen­t points out a paradox for Arpaio: The pardon led the judge to call off his sentencing and dismiss the case, but it also could thwart his name-clearing efforts in the courts and stop his appeal because it never reached the “final judgment” phase that usually occurs at sentencing.

The appeals court has given Arpaio three weeks to say why his appeal shouldn’t be dismissed.

Daniel Kobil, a pardon expert who is a professor at Capital University Law School in Columbus, Ohio, said Arpaio’s lawyers could argue that the case fits into a narrow exception to the rule that cases aren’t appealable until they are final. But Kobil characteri­zed such an effort as an uphill battle.

“The courts are going to be very reluctant,” Kobil said.

But Arpaio lawyer Jack Wilenchik said he expects the retired sheriff to clear this legal hurdle, which he described as a routine step by the court to weed out appeals that have been filed too early. “We are in a very unique situation here, and that needs to be explained to the court clerk,” Wilenchik said.

The conviction stemmed from Arpaio’s disobedien­ce of a 2011 court order that barred his traffic patrols that targeted immigrants. Prosecutor­s had accused Arpaio of prolonging the patrols for 17 months to boost his successful 2012 reelection campaign.

Arpaio, who endorsed Trump and appeared alongside him at rallies during the 2016 campaign, has acknowledg­ed continuing the patrols but insisted his disobedien­ce wasn’t intentiona­l.

His lawyers have said they want to appeal the Oct. 19 rulings by U.S. District Judge Susan Bolton, who said pardons don’t erase conviction­s or the facts of the case. She said the pardon only called off any possible punishment­s Arpaio might have faced.

Bolton had previously ruled the pardon would stand despite protests from critics who said the clemency would encourage government officials to flout similar court orders in the future.

Arpaio’s lawyers want Bolton’s blistering 14-page decision that explains the reasons behind the verdict thrown out in a bid to clear his name and prevent attorneys from using it in future court cases as an example of a prior bad act.

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 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? IN THIS JAN. 26, 2016, FILE PHOTO, Republican presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump is joined by Joe Arpaio, the sheriff of metro Phoenix, at a campaign event in Marshallto­wn, Iowa.
ASSOCIATED PRESS IN THIS JAN. 26, 2016, FILE PHOTO, Republican presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump is joined by Joe Arpaio, the sheriff of metro Phoenix, at a campaign event in Marshallto­wn, Iowa.

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