Wade: County Dems refute Babeu letter to Obama

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On Friday, Jan. 25, Pinal County Sheriff Paul Babeu sent a letter to President Barack Obama as his response to gun control efforts by the president and others around the county. In his letter, he suggested that not only would he not follow the orders of the president of the United States but that he would indeed “push for legislation which would make it a crime for any federal law enforcement officer to infringe upon any Constitutional rights of the citizens I am sworn to protect.”

As one of those citizens in the county he works in, I respectfully submit that I need him to continue to concentrate on response times and arresting bad guys and gals in the county he works in. In other words, leave the legislation to the legislators.

As a 20-year (active) veteran of the U.S. military, I was always under the impression that if I refused an order of an officer above me, I might be subject to a charge of treason. The fact that a majority of Americans have “placed their sacred trust” in our duly elected commander in chief seems to me to trump any local sheriff, no matter how much of a king he might believe he is.

It is noteworthy that Sheriff Babeu always aligns himself with someone else in the course of his activities. For instance, during the first presidential election, he was fond of appearing with then-candidate Sen. John McCain touting the need to “complete the danged fence.”

Next, during this election cycle, it was the “law and order ream” of Babeu and Lando Voyles. And now it is Babeu and State Sen. Rich Crandall, R-Mesa, on the crusade for anti-gun control rhetoric masquerading as proposed legislation. The fact is he once pulled away from the School Resource Officer program, only to now sing its praises is disingenuous as a minimum.