(Reuters) – The Obama administration on
Tuesday said it was preparing to sue Arizona county sheriff Joe Arpaio and his department for violating civil rights laws by
improperly targeting Latinos in a bid to crack down on illegal immigrants.
The sheriff’s high-profile crackdown on illegal immigrants has helped thrust the issue
onto the national political stage with some states passing tough new laws aimed at pushing out those in the country
illegally.
The administration’s Justice Department and the Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office have been in settlement
talks for months over allegations that officers regularly made unlawful stops and arrests of Latinos, used excessive force
against them and failed to adequately protect the Hispanic community.
Those negotiations have broken down because of a
fight over the Justice Department’s demand that an independent monitor be appointed by a federal court to oversee compliance
with the settlement, which has now reached 128 pages in draft form, according to the Obama administration.
“We believe
that you are wasting time and not negotiating in good faith,” Roy Austin, deputy assistant attorney general in the Justice
Department’s civil rights division, said in a letter to the lawyer for Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office
(MCSO).
Austin said in the letter that Arpaio’s team demanded that a meeting slated for Wednesday include for the
first time negotiations over the monitor and previously had demanded that the Justice Department provide more details about
its findings.
“MCSO’s refusal to engage in good faith negotiations requires us to prepare for civil (court) action,”
Austin said. He added that the Justice Department has recently discovered more information about the “failure to reasonably
investigate sex crimes” by Arpaio’s office.
The Justice Department in a December report outlined numerous alleged
civil rights violations, including that Latino drivers were four to nine times more likely to be stopped than non-Latinos by
Arpaio’s force.
The sheriff has steadfastly denied any wrongdoing and lashed out at the Obama administration for
targeting his department and failing to deal with the problem of illegal immigration with some 11.5 million believed to be in
the United States.
In a strongly worded statement on Tuesday, Arpaio said the appointment of a monitor would force him
to abdicate responsibility for his police force, including decisions about policies, operations, jail programs and
enforcement.
“To the Obama administration, who is attempting to strong arm me into submission only for its political
gain, I say: This will not happen, not on my watch!” Arpaio said in the statement.
Arpaio’s force has been under
investigation by federal authorities since 2008 during the Bush administration. Obama’s Justice Department spent months
fighting for access to documents and to some of his deputies. Arpaio was interviewed twice during the
probe.
(Additional reporting by David Schwartz in Phoenix; Editing by Anthony Boadle)