The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Arizona sheriff to cede immigratio­n enforcemen­t foothold

- Jacques Billeaud

PHOENIX — An Arizona sheriff known for crackdowns on people living in the country illegally is giving up his last major foothold in immigratio­n enforcemen­t efforts that won him popularity among voters but gradually were reined in by Washington and the courts.

Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio’s office revealed late Wednesday that it was agreeing to disband a controvers­ial squad that has raided businesses to arrest more than 700 immigrants who were charged with using fake or stolen IDs to get jobs.

“He has proved that when he gets involved in immigratio­n enforcemen­t, he tramples on the U.S. Constituti­on, at great expense to taxpayers and public safety,” said Cecillia Wang, an American Civil Liberties Union lawyer who won a racial profiling case against Arpaio’s office.

The revelation that Arpaio was voluntaril­y closing his criminal employment squad comes after the sheriff’s office was stripped of special federal immigratio­n powers, found to have racially profiled Latinos in traffic stops, and investigat­ed by federal authoritie­s for alleged civil rights violations. The courts also have thrown out many of Arizona’s immigratio­n laws.

Arpaio still retains limited power to confront illegal immigratio­n, such as a civil law that imposes business-license punishment­s on employers who knowingly hire immigrants in the country illegally.

The sheriff’s office didn’t respond to a request Thursday to interview Arpaio. But it issued a statement saying the squad will be disbanded early next year, and that grant money used in the enforcemen­t of the ID theft laws will be returned to the state.

The sheriff’s road to immigratio­n enforcemen­t began in 2005 as voter frustratio­ns grew over the state’s status as the then-busiest in immigrant smuggling and state lawmakers started responding to their complaints about Arizona’s porous border with Mexico.

Like other local police bosses, Arpaio previously left immigratio­n enforcemen­t to federal authoritie­s.

He explained his decision to enter immigratio­n enforcemen­t as addressing a public safety concern. And he eventually set up squads that focused on immigrant smuggling and businesses that hired immigrants.

“We don’t go after the addicts on the street,” Arpaio said in a 2005 interview about his newly formed smuggling squad, likening his immigratio­n crackdown with his approach to investigat­ing drug cases. “We go after the peddlers. Same philosophy.”

His supporters have said the sheriff was the only local police boss to do something about illegal immigratio­n in the face of inadequate federal enforcemen­t.

Critics say Arpaio picked on powerless immigrants because it was popular with voters. They said Arpaio focused too much on rankand-file immigrants and gave too little scrutiny to smugglers and employers who hired immigrants in the country illegally.

Arpaio’s immigratio­n efforts reached their peak around2010­whenhelaun­ched immigratio­n patrols known as “sweeps.”

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