Anger over AZ sheriff's immigration raids: 73 illegals arrested in recent crackdown

Dennis Olson

Chief Curmudgeon
_______________
[YOU GO JOE!!! Dennis]

Anger over sheriff's immigration raids

A total 73 illegal immigrants were arrested in recent crackdown

The Associated Press
updated 2:58 p.m. CT, Fri., April. 25, 2008


GUADALUPE, Ariz. - The self-proclaimed "toughest sheriff in America" has been making forays into Phoenix and nearby Guadalupe and sweeping up illegal immigrants, drawing howls of protest from the cities' mayors and other community leaders.

While Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio has legal authority to enforce the law in cities within his county, politicians and activists are accusing him of grandstanding and, worse, racial profiling.

A total of 150 people — 73 of them illegal immigrants — were arrested by Arpaio's deputies in the raids on heavily Hispanic sections in late March and early April.

"I was upset. We did not request them here," said Guadalupe Mayor Rebecca Jimenez, who charged that the patrols were meant to raise Arpaio's profile for his re-election campaign this year.

Guadalupe, a community of about 6,000 people that relies on the sheriff's office for police protection, is taking steps to find another department to patrol its streets.

Racial profiling alleged
As for Phoenix, Mayor Phil Gordon said Arpaio should be concentrating on more pressing duties such as finding people with warrants against them, and he has asked for a federal civil rights investigation, complaining the sheriff is singling out people who are "driving with a broken taillight or have brown skin." The U.S. Justice Department refused to comment.

And in Mesa, Arizona's third-largest city, the police chief has requested two days' notice of any sweeps Arpaio might conduct there, so that his officers can be prepared for any unrest.

Arpaio has long had a reputation for in-your-face tactics. He is known for making jail inmates wear pink underwear, assigning them to old-style chain gangs, and serving them green bologna sandwiches.

He began pushing the boundaries on immigration three years ago when he set up a special unit to deal with people sneaking across the border. Since then, his office has arrested 900 illegal immigrants under a state human smuggling law and set up a hot line for reporting immigration violations.

Arpaio said the recent sweeps were prompted in part by business owners' complaints about crime among illegal immigrants.

"It isn't racial profiling," the sheriff said. "We don't arrest just anybody on a street corner."

He said the 150 people arrested were approached or pulled over in traffic stops because deputies had probable cause to believe they had committed crimes. It was only afterward that deputies found nearly half were illegal immigrants, the sheriff said.

Crackdown sparking debate
The crackdowns have led to demonstrations by protesters on both sides of the immigration debate.

Opponents lined streets in Guadalupe earlier this month, honking horns and holding up signs with slogans such as "Arpaio Stop Using Guadalupe!" One vehicle had "Proud to Be Brown" written on one of its windows.


Alex Rivera, an American-born landscaper living in Guadalupe, said that during the crackdown there, he saw a Hispanic driver get pulled over twice by deputies.

"It made me angry," Rivera said. "If they let him go once, it gives you the point that he didn't do anything or he didn't have anything. So they let him go once. And then they pulled him over? Of course, the guy looked totally Hispanic."


Civil rights advocates said Arpaio is spreading fear among Hispanics, illegal or not. "You have cooks, landscapers, nannies afraid to drive," said Hector Yturralde, president of the group Somos America.

Some praise efforts
Still, many others in Arizona are frustrated over the flow of illegal immigrants across the border, and the sheriff has received hundreds of letters of support, along with a request from a group of state lawmakers to go into Mesa. (Arpaio said he is planning a sweep in Mesa but is reluctant to warn the police department there for fear the chief will tip off the community and stir up demonstrations.)

Judith Bederka, a retired postal worker from Mesa, said Arpaio is the only local official doing something about illegal immigration. "He is doing what everybody wants him to do," Bederka said.

The U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency said the sheriff has stayed within the bounds of an agreement that gave special immigration training and powers to 160 of his officers. The agency said it knows of no abuses by Arpaio's office.

Weeks after the crackdown, 20 Spanish-speaking day laborers gathered at a dusty intersection to wait for people to offer them work. Ramon Arajon Contreras, a laborer from Mexico who has lived in Guadalupe for eight years, said the sweep frightened him so much that he hid out in his house until it was over. He said he is still afraid.

"If I see immigration officers," he said, "it's like I see the devil."


Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/24314764/
 

Laurane

Canadian Loonie
Sheriff Joe....

doesn't have to do any grandstanding to get elected.....all the people who elected him know what he does and what he gets done. The mayors don't like their powers minimised by the Sheriff of the County, but he is just "doing the job that the city police are not allowed to".

No matter whether you like his approach or not, it works in getting the Illegals off the street......and that is what he was voted in to do, among other things.
 

AZ Heat

Inactive
GUADALUPE, Ariz. - The self-proclaimed "toughest sheriff in America" has been making forays into Phoenix and nearby Guadalupe and sweeping up illegal immigrants, drawing howls of protest from the cities' mayors and other community leaders.
He needs a bigger broom if he's gonna hang out in Guadalupe!

Although I don't agree with a lot of what he does, he is doing a good job with this. And the residents (except for the illegal ones) agree and support this effort.

Keep it up Joe!
 

amarilla

Veteran Member
Quote: "I was upset. We did not request them here," said Guadalupe Mayor Rebecca Jimenez, who charged that the patrols were meant to raise Arpaio's profile for his re-election campaign this year.Guadalupe, a community of about 6,000 people that relies on the sheriff's office for police protection, is taking steps to find another department to patrol its streets.

Well, Rebecca, it appears you DID ask him for help so saying that you didn't request him is a lie. Go hire your own police then. Even the town I grew up in with only 2,000 had police of its own.

A
 

SassyinAZ

Inactive
I believe Arpaio, in response, did pull deputies and protection out of Guadalupe, seems like him gave them 150-180 days to re-establish a police department. They formerlly had their own but, it was disbanded or whatever the proper name is for it, due to corruption and was never re-established opting for the county instead.

I'll go see if I can find something to confirm my recollection on this.
 

Lone Wolf

Lives on TB
Quote: "I was upset. We did not request them here," said Guadalupe Mayor Rebecca Jimenez, who charged that the patrols were meant to raise Arpaio's profile for his re-election campaign this year.Guadalupe, a community of about 6,000 people that relies on the sheriff's office for police protection, is taking steps to find another department to patrol its streets.

Well, Rebecca, it appears you DID ask him for help so saying that you didn't request him is a lie. Go hire your own police then. Even the town I grew up in with only 2,000 had police of its own.

A


In Az., The Sheriff has overall law Enforcement jurisdictional powers in that county, including towns that have their own police departments.

And thats the way it should be in all states, all counties.

THAT is why he is elected and not appointed. ( Except by the Governor to replace a sheriff that has died, resigned, or has been arrested) Otherwise an election or special election must be held.

Anyway....Joe, is doing his job. Quite well it seems.

lw
 

Irish

Veteran Member
And in Mesa, Arizona's third-largest city, the police chief has requested two days' notice of any sweeps Arpaio might conduct there, so that his officers can be prepared for any unrest.

Mesa used to be a nice town, but in the area of Main Street south to the freeway has become a scary area. Most of the businesses on Main street near downtown are Mexican/Hispanic type stores, pawn shops, and Payday loan stores.
 

SassyinAZ

Inactive
http://www.eastvalleytribune.com/story/114204

Arpaio gives Guadalupe 180 days to break ties
Nick R. Martin, Tribune

Calling recent run-ins with Guadalupe leaders a “big problem,” Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio told town officials on Friday he plans to pack up and leave if they don’t want his deputies to patrol there anymore.

Arpaio is giving the town 180 days to decide whether a decades-old contract with the sheriff’s office for police services would continue.

If it does, he says he will insist on complete authority to continue with the types of immigration sweeps that sparked big protests from activists and anger from town leaders two weeks ago.

“The real bottom line is that they’re telling me what to enforce,” Arpaio said during a meeting Friday with the Tribune’s editorial board. “That’s a big problem.”

None of Guadalupe’s council members nor its mayor or town manager returned calls for comment.

In the heat of the last round of so-called “crime suppression” sweeps in the tiny town neighboring Tempe and Phoenix, Mayor Rebecca Jimenez railed against Arpaio, accusing him of coming there as part of a charade, his real intent to target the town’s large Hispanic population.

Jimenez threatened to end the town’s contract with the county sheriff’s office, which provides for patrols, dispatch services and criminal evidence storage.

Unlike most towns and cities, Guadalupe does not have its own police force.

Jimenez went as far as to call Phoenix Mayor Phil Gordon, another outspoken critic of the sweeps, to ask whether his city would take over police operations.

As of Friday, Phoenix spokeswoman Toni Maccarone said, Guadalupe leaders had not sent over a formal request for the city’s help.

No matter who patrols the streets in Guadalupe, though, the sheriff’s office would continue to have jurisdiction in the town because it is still part of Maricopa County.

Arpaio would not say whether more immigration sweeps in Guadalupe would happen even if town leaders canceled the contract. “I’m not going to answer that other than the fact that the sheriff has authority,” he said.

It’s the same authority Arpaio invoked in the past to justify similar sweeps in Phoenix that netted the arrests of dozens of suspected illegal immigrants. He has named Mesa as the next target for the sweeps.

In a letter to Guadalupe Mayor Rebecca Jimenez, Arpaio said he has the duty to treat “all laws fairly and equitably.”

No city or town should tell its police which laws to enforce, he said during the meeting with the newspaper’s board.

Nationally, however, some cities have done just that, asking police departments to make certain crimes lower priorities than others.

In Seattle, for example, the city passed a law about five years ago making marijuana possession the city’s lowest law enforcement priority.

Since then, police and prosecutors there have pursued as few as half the marijuana crimes as before the law was passed, according to news reports.

Other cities, including Denver, have looked at similar measures.

“Statements made by you and the Phoenix mayor reflect a disturbing discrimination and selective enforcement agenda that certain laws passed by the legislature and voted upon by the citizens of Maricopa County should not be enforced,” the sheriff wrote in his letter to Jimenez.

The letter said the sheriff’s office was using the “termination clause” of its contract to allow the town to “explore other law enforcement alternatives.”

Recently, Phoenix’s mayor said his city has a history of being able to handle emergency services for other towns that ask for it.

In particular, he cited an agreement to provide firefighting services for Paradise Valley, which doesn’t have its own fire department.

“To the best of my knowledge, everyone is happy” with the agreement, said Phoenix Fire Battalion Chief Terry Shields. In that situation, Paradise Valley provides the stations and Phoenix provides the trucks and 24 firefighters, Shields said.

Something similar could be done with police patrols in Guadalupe, but for at least the next six months, it looks like the sheriff and town leaders are stuck with each other.

Arpaio said Guadalupe was getting the better end of the deal for now.

“We do it better. We do it cheaper than anybody else,” he said, rubbing his fingers together.

He added later: “If they don’t like how we operate, go buy something else and see how much it costs.”
 

SassyinAZ

Inactive
http://www.azcentral.com/community/tempe/articles/2008/04/18/20080418mcsoguad0418-ON.html
Arpaio pulls Guadalupe police protection
JJ Hensley - Apr. 18, 2008 06:00 PM
The Arizona Republic

Two weeks after Maricopa County Sheriff's deputies descended on the small town of Guadalupe, Sheriff Joe Arpaio announced that the department would no longer offer police protection in that community.

Guadalupe officials have 180 days to secure a new law enforcement provider, Arpaio said Friday afternoon.

After that, the dozen Sheriff's deputies who patrol the one-square mile town tucked between Tempe and Ahwatukee will be re-deployed to other areas, Arpaio said.

Guadalupe Mayor Rebecca Jimenez said city officials had already started exploring other options for police in the community of 2,500 before Arpaio's announcement.

"I am disappointed that Sheriff Arpaio chose to issue this letter of cancellation to the media immediately after delivering the letter to town officials," Jimenez said. "This is yet another attempt by Sheriff Arpaio to garner more media attention for himself and his office."

But the battle between Arpaio and Jimenez has been played out in the media ever since Sheriff's deputies and posse members came to Guadalupe for a "crime suppression operation".

Jimenez claimed the deputies arrived under false pretenses - stating the operation was to curb crime and graffiti activity when it was really to look for illegal immigrants and Jimenez confronted Arpaio about his presence there in front of TV cameras.

The town pays Maricopa County about $1.2 million annually for the police protection, which the Sheriff's Office has provided for most of the last 30 years.

Town residents complain about the lack of consistent law enforcement in Guadalupe, but Arpaio said the small city got the protection it paid for.

Now, town officials will have to find a new force.

Arpaio said the Sheriff's Office would continue to police the community until another law enforcement agency is found, and would stick around if the residents and town officials wanted the agency.

But if the Sheriff's Office remains the only law enforcement agency in town, Arpaio vowed to continue his stepped-up efforts to root out illegal immigrants.

"I'm sure they're not going to hire a guy like me to come in there and lock up illegals," Arpaio said. "This isn't personal. (Jimenez) just made the comment that she doesn't want us. If they don't want us, why should we stay there?"

The throngs of protestors that greeted deputies in the recent immigration round up in Guadalupe, and the signs that dotted street corners imploring Arpaio to leave were ample proof that residents were ready for a new police force.

Jimenez said in a statement that Arpaio's announcement fit in his pattern of reprisals.

"It is also unfortunate that when people speak up against Sheriff Arpaio, that he uses vindictive and retaliatory tactics against them," Jimenez's statement read.
 

denfoote

Inactive
Did you expect the illegal criminals to be quiet??
Now is the time for Joe to arrest ALL the leaders of this on charges of aiding and abetting the FEDERAL crime of entering the country illegally!!
If the illegals want to riot, let 'em!!
I look forward to being deputized by Joe, under Arizona Law, to quell the civil disturbance!!
 
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