by Ebony Slaughter-Johnson
During a speech to a group of police officers in July, President Trump returned to one of his favorite themes of the campaign season: violence. “Please don’t be too nice” to the “thugs being thrown into the back of a paddy wagon,” Trump advised the officers. Be “rough.”
The president’s endorsement of police brutality was met with applause from the officers and shock from activists and pundits alike.
Sensing the brewing backlash, the White House insisted that the president was simply making a joke. Even Attorney General Jeff Sessions, the country’s top law enforcement official — a man with his own complicated history of encouraging the worst impulses of the police — attempted to distance himself from the controversy.
Yet the president just proved that when it comes to endorsing police brutality, especially against communities of color, he’s dead serious.
For more than 20 years, Sheriff Joe Arpaio of Maricopa County, Arizona terrorized Latino communities, harassed immigrants, and made life a living hell for prisoners in his care in order to build a reputation as “America’s toughest sheriff”.
These systematic violations of human and constitutional rights eventually landed Arpaio in legal trouble of his own. Then President Trump pardoned him.
Arpaio had been awaiting sentencing for a July conviction of criminal contempt.
Back in 2011, a federal judge ordered Arpaio to stop targeting and detaining Latinos just to inquire about their immigration status. Nevertheless, Arpaio persisted for another 18 months, insisting that his racial profiling was lawful. He emasculated inmates, forcing them to wear pink underwear, and attempted to starve them with food that was called inedible.
He tortured them, too: Beginning in the 1990s, Arpaio opened Tent City Jail, which forced inmates to live outside in the extreme Arizona heat. An untold number of inmates died.
To the law, Arpaio is a convicted criminal who built his career on denying the constitutional and human rights of the most vulnerable among us. To Trump, he’s “a patriot” who kept “Arizona safe.”
“Throughout his time as sheriff,” a White House statement bleated, “Arpaio continued his life’s work of protecting the public from the scourges of crime and illegal immigration.” In other words, the innocent immigrants who were harassed, and the prisoners who were tortured, were the real criminals.
Trump promised to be the “law and order candidate” during his campaign. He codified this promise once he became president in the “Standing Up For Our Law Enforcement Community” section of the White House website. “The Trump administration will be a law and order administration,” it echoed.
For the president, it seems, “standing up” for law enforcement includes allowing officers to subvert the rule of law to commit acts of brutality with impunity. Empowering law enforcement to “keep our streets free of crime and violence” means supporting racial profiling. And “law and order” only applies to some, namely those that support the president.
With Trump’s pardon of Arpaio, a message has been sent: When it comes to police brutality of the kind Arpaio perpetuated for decades, the Trump administration won’t simply be complicit in it. It will promote it.
And that’s nothing to joke about.
Ebony Slaughter-Johnson is a freelance writer whose work covers history, race, and the criminalization of poverty.
Lou says
I’m so happy that Sheriff Joe is free. He enforces the law as it should be/written. GOD bless him.
Veteran says
And Obama pardoned a traitor and a bunch of drug dealers. But that’s ok, he is one the liberal buddies.
Sw says
Criminals have no rights imo
a tiny manatee says
Anyone that thinks Joe Arpaio deserved a pardon is a fool and needs to research this scumbag. I mean, he actually had his deputies harass the sitting judge handling his trial.
GT says
Boohoo the poor criminals are uncomfortable too bad! Arpaio said in an interview if you don’t like my jail you don’t have to come back. A few years ago I had a friend who was going to school in AZ. and they got a DUI
(twice the limit) they got sent to the tent jail for 30 days it was such a bad time that they don’t drink at all anymore. Inmates don’t need TV’s or weight rooms or basketball courts they are there to learn a lesson not to be comfortable.
Pogo says
@a tiny manatee
[Humor]The only things that works against the Night Trump’s horde are fire and dragon glass.[/Humor]
Crooked Trump is just whistling to his co defendants, Chill – I got you.
Meanwhile, he’s picking fights by increasingly desperate acts of cruelty and stupidity in order to pander to the racist zombies who carry him on their shoulders. He will win if his violence is returned with violence. You may be certain that his zombies will impersonate humans. It’s up to real humans to not take the bait.
a tiny manatee says
Conservative buddies: people that get political office and then abuse the power of it. Gotcha.
anonymous says
People complain about inmates being treated unfairly…really??/ Unfair that they get a bed … 3 meals a day… cable… health insurance… weight rooms… visitations… hot showers… commissary…etc… Want to know what the homeless and elderly get??? Nothing… Some elderly don’t get any of that…. and the homeless… not the lazy that don’t WANT to work… the ones who bust their asses and have to scrape in order to get a shit hole to live in…. and nothing else… those are the ones we should feel for!! Inmates??? umm… yeah .. sorry!!!! They don’t deserve any of those things
SunSon says
I didn’t know Sheriff Joe had the same idea as I did; Put them in tents and let them erect more tents for the criminals to come. Punishment is meant to correct unacceptable behavior.
Mike B says
Go Trump Go!
Trump 2020!!!
Stan says
Get over it ,you Obama and Clinton snowflakes.
Anonymous says
Ms. Slaughter-Johnson, I’m sorry your commentary was greeted in such a “casting pearls before swine” manner. Trump has made it possible for the deplorable among us to openly voice their disdain. You can bet that if they were the ones emasculated in the many ways incarceration can they’d be the first to cry out for social justice.
Thank you for having the courage to write and speak out.