The Arizona Republic

Penzone couldn’t escape cloud left by Arpaio

- Abe Kwok Reach Abe Kwok at akwok@azcentral.com. On X, formerly Twitter: @abekwok.

In the end, Paul Penzone could not overcome the legacy of the man he toppled.

Penzone, the Maricopa County sheriff, announced on Monday – to the surprise of many – that he would not seek reelection.

Nor even finish his second term. He plans to step down in January.

“One cloud still hanging over this office,” Penzone said.

The cloud being the federal oversight resulting from discrimina­tory policies and practices installed by Sheriff Joe Arpaio until voters had enough and ended his 24-year tumultuous tenure.

That cloud was always destined to be slow to scatter.

It took six years between the filing of Melendres v. Arpaio in 2007 and the ruling by a U.S. District Court judge that the Arpaio’s immigratio­n enforcemen­t practices, including so-called crimesuppr­ession sweeps and traffic stops that targeted Latinos, were discrimina­tory.

There were separate investigat­ions and a lawsuit by the U.S. Department of Justice.

Arpaio and the Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office emerged from the mess with federal monitors and compliance orders that continue to this day.

At last count, the county has spent a quarter of a billion dollars in corrective actions.

Penzone, a Democrat, rode into office in 2017 vowing to reverse Arpaio’s policies.

He did a good amount of it, including closing the infamous Tent City and turning the site into a drug rehabilita­tion center. He establishe­d advisory committees that represent Latino and other historical­ly marginaliz­ed communitie­s.

Notably, he discontinu­ed the practice of holding jail inmates at the request of federal immigratio­n agents even after they had posted bail.

While some past sins faded, other problems arose in recent years:

Drug smuggling into jails — in particular, fentanyl. Staffing problems that worsened over the pandemic and persist. Hundreds of positions unfilled.

Nonetheles­s, a third term seems to be Penzone’s for the taking.

He won the 2016 election against Arpaio by 12 percentage points and bested another Republican challenger by a similar margin four years later.

Had he decided to run again, he would (at this point) be facing the same set of GOP hopefuls in 2024 that he faced in 2020: Jerry Sheridan, Arpaio’s former right-hand man, and Mike Crawford, a former Glendale police officer.

But neither he nor the department could fully get out under the cloud of racial discrimina­tion.

Penzone is slammed for continuing the practice of allowing federal immigratio­n officials to screen inmates for immigratio­n status. As a result, inmates awaiting trial have been deported.

Even well into his second term, Hispanic and Black drivers to were found to be more likely than white drivers to be held longer or searched by deputies during traffic stops.

Every step made is scrutinize­d. The federal judge overseeing the Melendres case at one point castigated Penzone for leaving a court-ordered community meeting meant to help mend fences the Hispanic community.

Law enforcemen­t unions criticize Penzone for a big backlog of internal investigat­ions and the staffing shortage.

Some of the very same community advocates who helped sweep him into office level the same criticism they had of his predecesso­r.

Penzone had defeated Arpaio and Sheridan, whom critics dubbed Arpaiolite.

Now he’s called the same derisive term by community advocates.

Republican political consultant Chuck Coughlin said that “the emotional reward” of the job for Penzone is simply no longer there.

Dampened, undoubtedl­y, by the cloud of his predecesso­r that shows no signs of fully dissipatin­g.

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