The Troubling Sheriffs Movement That Sheriff Joe Arpaio Supports [View all]
When President Donald Trump pardoned Sheriff Joe Arpaio, calling him a patriot, he didnt just absolve him from the consequences of defying a federal judge. He didnt merely excuse Arpaios racial profiling and illegal immigration sweeps. Trumps pardon did do all of that. But it also did something more: It boosted a radical theory of law and American history that Arpaio supports, and which is gaining steam across the United States.
Its called the constitutional sheriff movement, and as it grows, its increasing the risk of conflict between local law enforcement and federal authorities. Its animating idea is that a sheriff holds ultimate law-enforcement authority in his countyoutranking even the federal government within its borders. Though the movement claims deep history in English law, its real roots lie in the more recent fringes of American right-wing thought. And its popularity helps explain why Arpaios defiance of federal law shouldnt be seen as just one grandstanding sheriff crossing a line, but instead should be seen as part of a broader grassroots resistance to constitutional and cultural upheavals during the 20th century.
The strange idea that unites all members of this movement is that a sheriff is the highest law enforcement officer within a countys borderssuperior not only to local police, but also to officers and agents of the federal government. The actual influence of sheriff supremacy is hard to measure, but it has been growing in recent years, and today the official constitutional sheriffs association boasts 4,500 dues paying members and over 200 sheriffs. Its highest-profile members include Arpaio and David Clarke, who just resigned as sheriff of Milwaukee County, Wisconsin, reportedly to help Trump in some capacity.
http://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2017/09/01/joe-arpaio-pardon-sheriffs-movement-215566?lo=ap_a1
Now I know what they want to take our country back to - the wild west days! And that's scary.