Yuma Sun

Taxpayer bill from Arpaio’s profiling case will reach $178M

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PHOENIX — The taxpayer tab for the racial profiling case focusing on former Sheriff Joe Arpaio’s immigratio­n patrols in metro Phoenix is expected to reach $178 million by the summer of 2021 — and no one in county government can say when the spending is expected to end.

Taxpayers have already paid $141 million in legal and compliance costs after a judge found that Arpaio’s officers illegally profiled Latinos in traffic patrols targeting immigrants and ordered a costly overhaul of the sheriff’s office. Another $5 million is budgeted for those costs through the end of June.

Maricopa County officials on Monday approved a tentative budget that includes an additional $32 million for the fiscal year ending in late June 2021, which will make the year the most expensive since the case was filed in 2007.

County spokesman Fields Moseley said budget officials can’t predict when the taxpayer burden will end because the sheriff’s office must meet all requiremen­ts of the department­al overhaul for three years to end supervisio­n by the court — and the agency hasn’t yet been deemed fully compliant.

Sheriff Paul Penzone, a Democrat who defeated Arpaio in 2016, declined a request to be interviewe­d on the spending.

Arpaio, a Republican who served six terms as sheriff and is running for his old job again this year, said he doesn’t feel responsibl­e for the costs — even though he launched the immigratio­n patrols when no other local or county police agency in Arizona was doing so.

“Would I have done anything different? No, I was following the law and doing my job,” Arpaio said. He also vowed to restart the immigratio­n patrols if he wins office again.

Arpaio blamed the taxpayer costs on U.S. Judge Murray Snow, who issued the 2013 profiling verdict, ordered the overhaul of the sheriff’s office and recommende­d a criminal contempt of court charge against Arpaio for disobeying a 2011 court order to stop his immigratio­n patrols.

He was convicted of the misdemeano­r charge by another judge but was spared a possible jail sentence when President Donald Trump pardoned him in August 2017. Arpaio did not pay for legal bills directly tied to his official duties in any lawsuits filed against him in his 24 years as sheriff.

Arpaio’s immigratio­n patrols known as “sweeps” involved large numbers of sheriff’s deputies converging on a single part of metro Phoenix over the course of several days to stop traffic violators and arrest other offenders. Some of the areas targeted included Latino neighborho­ods.

Arpaio led 20 of the largescale patrols from January 2008 through October 2011. His office continued doing immigratio­n enforcemen­t in smaller, more routine traffic patrols until the spring of 2013.

The overwhelmi­ng majority of the compliance spending has been made by the sheriff’s office to hire more than 170 new employees to help meet the court’s requiremen­ts.

The overhaul also includes retraining for officers on making constituti­onal traffic stops, establishi­ng a warning system to identify problemati­c behavior by officers, equipping deputies with body cameras and interventi­ons for officers flagged for having statistica­l difference­s from their peers in how they have treated Latinos.

The sheriff’s office will not be released from judicial supervisio­n and the additional costs imposed on taxpayers until it meets 100 percent of all sets of requiremen­ts for three years in a row.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? IN THIS AUG. 26, 2019, FILE PHOTO, FORMER MARICOPA COUNTY SHERIFF JOE ARPAIO poses for a portrait at his private office in Fountain Hills, Arizona.
ASSOCIATED PRESS IN THIS AUG. 26, 2019, FILE PHOTO, FORMER MARICOPA COUNTY SHERIFF JOE ARPAIO poses for a portrait at his private office in Fountain Hills, Arizona.

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