Selected quotes:
Colorado’s law is very clear. Law enforcement does law enforcement. In Colorado, law enforcement doesn’t do federal immigration enforcement. The line is when a sheriff’s deputy, in this case, actually detain somebody in a vehicle for the purpose of enabling federal immigration enforcement to detain that person.
At that point, you’re not operating as a Colorado law enforcement anymore, because there was no Colorado law that was determined to be violated.
…
It’s very important to note here, this wasn’t about community safety. There was no basis for concern that she had committed any crime, posed any threat to public safety.
When there are people who commit violent crimes, crimes that warrant being deported, Colorado law enforcement routinely will share information, as provided under Colorado law, so that ICE can do their job and deport people who are dangerous. But this was a case of someone who hadn’t done anything wrong, didn’t pose any threat to public safety.
In that case, Colorado law enforcement shouldn’t take it upon an individual to go ahead and start acting as if you’re doing federal immigration enforcement solely for purposes of enforcing immigration law, which is totally federal, not for purposes of keeping communities safe. That’s what a state’s job is.
…
We in Colorado cooperate all the time with federal law enforcement partners. And if someone is here without authorization and they have done harmful, dangerous actions, they should be held to account. But what Colorado law says is, we need our law enforcement focused on law enforcement. We don’t have enough law enforcement officers in Colorado.
That’s a public policy decision that we’re making not to do the federal government’s work. It’s their job to do that work.
Phil Weiser, Attorney-General of Colorado
There is no such place in Arizona.
Apache County
Cochise County
Coconino County
Gila County
Graham County
Greenlee County
La Paz County
Maricopa County
Mohave County
Navajo County
Pima County
Pinal County
Santa Cruz County
Yavapai County
Yuma County
Mesa is a city in AZ. And cities don’t have Sheriffs. Mesa County is Colorado.
So where is your “quote” from? Because it’s got problems.
Yeah, I think the article wrote it wrong.
I pulled it from there, as you can see by clicking the link.
Edit:
Indeed it is there…
That makes the whole article suspect for me… Anyone writing news for their locale, will know at the very least what fucking counties belong to their state… For something like that to make it through the author and the copy editor is wild.
Ah… There it is… It’s probably audio fed to an LLM… This whole transcript is likely an AI hallucination.
Edit: and this is from PBS? Come on… Don’t give the right even more reason to cancel you. FFS.
The audio from the body cam is there to hear, and it didn’t indicate who was talking in the moment. But that is indeed what he said.
Agreed that it is disappointing.
The audio in article doesn’t state
Only the “Transcript” does. So no… you can’t say that’s what he said. The transcript itself shows the indication of who’s talking and stating that the officer is from Arizona is in the indicator… not the actual spoken words…
This is literally PBS feeding their shit through an LLM and not checking the results.
You’ve misunderstood.
The audio says who it is (but not in the moment), and the AI transcript got it wrong. Feel free to listen to the audio to confirm.