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Arpaio's Admission Of Investigation Into Judge's Wife Stuns Courtroom -- KJZZ 91.5

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  • Arpaio's Admission Of Investigation Into Judge's Wife Stuns Courtroom -- KJZZ 91.5

    Arpaio's Admission Of Investigation Into Judge's Wife Stuns Courtroom

    KJZZ 91.5

    Jude Joffe-Block
    4/23/2015

    Excerpt:

    Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio took the stand again Thursday to testify about his role in repeatedly violating a federal judge’s order. While under oath, the sheriff made a surprising admission that the judge’s wife had been the focus of a secret investigation.

    The revelation stunned the courtroom. It came out when U.S. District Court Judge Murray Snow directly questioned Arpaio late Thursday morning.

    Snow began by asking the sheriff about the contempt of court charges he is facing, including violation of a 2011 order to stop detaining immigrants solely for being in the country illegally.

    But then in an unexpected move, the judge brought up a Phoenix New Times article about a possible sheriff’s investigation into Snow himself.

    Snow asked Arpaio directly, “Are you aware that I have ever been investigated?”

    At first Arpaio was vague in his responses.

    After a few more probing questions, Arpaio said his lawyers had hired a private investigator.

    “We weren’t investigating you,” Arpaio told Snow. “We were investigating some comments that came to our attention.”

    Arpaio revealed he had received an email tip from someone named Grisham about an alleged comment Snow’s wife was supposedly overheard making in a restaurant. When asked about the content of that email, Arpaio told Snow, "I think it mentioned that Judge Snow wanted to do everything to make sure I am not elected."

    The judge asked Arpaio on Thursday to save all documentation about the investigation into his wife.

    One of the many questions raised by Arpaio's revelation is which attorney was involved in hiring the private investigator. When Snow asked in court, Arpaio said, “I believe it would have been Casey,” a reference to his former attorney, Tim Casey.

    Casey’s attorney, Karen Clark, said in a statement that Casey’s continuing ethical obligations to Arpaio and MCSO mean he has only a limited ability to respond to the statements made Thursday in court.

    “Mr. Casey is confident that when the evidence the Court’s monitor is gathering is reviewed, it will reveal that Mr. Casey was never involved in an investigation of Judge Snow or his family,” Clark wrote.

    Arpaio also testified that with the help of an MCSO Sheriff's Posse member named Mike Zullo, who was also behind the sheriff’s investigation of President Barack Obama’s birth certificate, he had hired a confidential informant to investigate a second issue that may have involved Snow.

    Arpaio described it as an investigation into “computer tampering.” His testimony suggested he was investigating whether the U.S. Department of Justice was intercepting communication from various judges, a law firm the sheriff uses, and the sheriff himself. Arpaio admitted the investigation hadn't yielded anything and was wrapping up.

    Many in the courtroom were stunned by the admissions.

    “It’s disturbing, to say the least,” said Dan Pochoda of the ACLU of Arizona. He represents the plaintiffs in the racial profiling suit against the sheriff. “It is concerning. It certainly doesn’t reflect well upon this agency.”

    Arpaio has a history of investigating his political enemies and rivals.

    Former U.S. Attorney Paul Charlton told The Associated Press there should be a probe to find out if the investigation of Snow’s wife was lawful. There are federal statutes that criminalize the intimidation of federal officials.

    But Arpaio’s criminal attorney, Mel McDonald, denied that was the scenario with his client.

    “There are statutes all over the place that deal with issues such as intimidation,” McDonald said. “It isn’t here, and that is what you will hear tomorrow.”

    Later, McDonald added, “There’s been no evidence the sheriff ordered the judge’s wife to be investigated.”

    McDonald said more information would come to light Friday, when MCSO Chief Deputy Jerry Sheridan is scheduled to testify.

    Earlier Thursday morning, the plaintiffs used Arpaio’s own media appearances and press releases in an attempt to show the sheriff’s violation of Snow's 2011 order was willful. Arpaio was heard defiantly pledging to continue enforcing immigration laws.

    The court heard a clip of Arpaio six months after the order describing to Fox News his immigration policies. “If there is a state criminal crime, if they are illegal they are going to jail,” he said. As for the others, “We are going to call ICE to take them off. They have been taking these illegal immigrants off our hands when we have no state charges against them.”

    .......................................

    View the complete article at:

    http://kjzz.org/content/130702/arpai...tuns-courtroom
    B. Steadman

  • #2
    Arpaio: PI hired to investigate judge's wife

    The Arizona Republic / azcentral.com

    Megan Cassidy
    4/14/2015

    Excerpt:

    Sheriff Joe Arpaio struck a repentant tone on the stand in his contempt of court trial on Thursday. Phoenix

    In a bombshell diversion from his contempt-of-court proceedings, Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio testified under oath Thursday that his attorneys had hired a private agent to investigate the wife of the federal judge who ruled that the Sheriff's Office had engaged in racial profiling.

    The revelation was the result of direct questioning by U.S. District Judge G. Murray Snow himself, who issued a landmark ruling in 2013 that Arpaio's office had profiled Latinos while conducting illegal-immigration operations.

    Thursday was Arpaio's second day on the stand for the civil-contempt proceedings, where he and top aides are facing three broad allegations of defying Snow's orders stemming from the discrimination suit.

    But the hearing took a dramatic turn after defense and plaintiffs' attorneys finished their examinations, and Snow announced he had some questions of his own.

    After questioning Arpaio on the contempt and immigration matters, Snow shifted his focus to some of the sheriff's more-unorthodox operations, namely involving the sheriff's investigations into public officials. Snow based his questions on allegations cited in a June Phoenix New Times article, and provided a copy for Arpaio to read on the stand.

    Snow launched into his interrogation after noting concerns with Arpaio's decision to transfer a commander from a unit dedicated to clandestine operations into a unit that ensures deputies behave ethically.

    The implications of Snow's questioning were not immediately clear, but testimony offered a murky glimpse into some of the Sheriff's Office's alleged secret pet projects, with Arpaio conceding that the agency employed unreliable informants, private investigators and an unknown amount of public funds to investigate Arpaio's political enemies.

    Arpaio carefully skirted Snow's line of questioning at the beginning, and only under intense scrutiny provided details of the covert mission.

    Arpaio said he had come into the possession of an e-mail from a tipster who claimed to have met Snow's wife at a restaurant, and that Snow's wife said the judge "wanted to do everything to make sure I'm not elected."

    Arpaio said his counsel then hired a private investigator to look into the matter.

    "Results confirmed that your wife was in that restaurant," Arpaio told Snow. "I guess (the investigator) talked to the witness, confirmed that that remark was made."

    Snow additionally questioned Arpaio about a second investigation also related to Snow. Arpaio acknowledged that some time in 2013, county funds were used to conduct investigations into the Department of Justice, which is leading an ongoing racial-profiling lawsuit against the Sheriff's Office.
    Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio as seen in 1993. (Photo: The Republic)

    Arpaio said an informant had indicated that the DOJ had been penetrating Arpaio's e-mails as well as those of local attorneys and judges. Arpaio indicated that Snow was one of the judges but said he later conceded that his informant was unreliable.

    But Mel McDonald, a former U.S. attorney who will represent Arpaio should the current civil-contempt case be referred for criminal proceedings, said the full story has not yet been told.

    "These been no evidence that the sheriff ordered the judge's wife to be investigated," he told reporters after Thursday's hearing. McDonald told reporters to show up today to hear testimony from Chief Deputy Jerry Sheridan.

    ...................................

    View the complete article, including video, at:

    http://www.azcentral.com/story/news/...abrk/26240715/
    B. Steadman

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