The Arizona Republic

Arrested activists decry Penzone over ICE policy

- Uriel J. Garcia

Four activists who were arrested Wednesday during a protest outside a downtown Phoenix jail continued to criticize Maricopa County Sheriff Paul Penzone’s cooperatio­n with U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t upon their release Thursday.

Wednesday’s demonstrat­ion was part of a national movement of immigrant-rights activists who are calling to shut down ICE because they say the federal law enforcemen­t agency has unjustly separated families by deporting undocument­ed immigrants.

They also said the demonstrat­ion is part of a tour that goes by a Spanishlan­guage phrase that roughly translates to “F--k immigratio­n.” It will next stop in New Mexico.

The four arrested activists include Cinthia Diaz, Kenneth Chapman, Luke Black and Parris Wallace, who were all facing charges of criminal trespass. The four were chain-linked to one another and sat in front of the Fourth Avenue Jail’s entryway during the demonstrat­ion Wednesday.

After being in custody for about eight hours, they were released on their own recognizan­ce, court records show.

A probable cause statement said deputies had instructed the activists to disperse from the entryway. But after a five-minute wait, the activists stayed put.

“I decided to participat­e in yesterday’s action because Penzone is (former Maricopa County Sheriff Joe) Arpaio,” said Chapman, who spoke at a Thursday press conference. “Penzone is continuing the legacy, the culture and the policies of Arpaio.”

Penzone in 2016 ousted Arpaio, who was known for his enforcemen­t of immigratio­n laws through worksite raids, street patrols seeking drivers’ immigratio­n status, and allowing ICE agents to pick up county inmates suspected of being in the country illegally.

Local pro-immigrant groups such as Puente criticized Penzone, who has been sheriff since January 2017, because of his policy to allow ICE agents to check inmates’ immigratio­n status. In a statement Wednesday, Penzone defended his policy to allow ICE agents interview jail detainees at booking.

“This is both lawful and necessary in our effort to promote public safety while facilitati­ng the mission and authority of other policing agencies,” Penzone said.

However, he said, his deputies don’t honor “courtesy holds,” a practice in which ICE agents ask jails to hold a detainee while the federal agency investigat­es whether the person is in the country illegally.

That practice has been criticized in some jurisdicti­ons across the country because state judges in some cases have said people have been held longer in jail longer than the U.S. Constituti­on allows.

Activists say that just because Penzone’s deputies don’t honor “courtesy holds,” doesn’t mean he is not carrying out the same anti-immigrant mission Arpaio did.

President Donald Trump held an event Monday to honor immigratio­n officials in Washington, D.C. He has said that ICE and other immigratio­n officials are needed for public safety and that the public should support them.

Diaz said at Thursday’s press conference that her mother was deported by ICE and that Penzone is contributi­ng to the mass deportatio­n of immigrants.

“Today, families keep being separated, children are being left without their mom or dad,” she said. “ICE keeps working inside of the communitie­s to destroy us and criminaliz­e us.”

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