Former ‘Sheriff of the Year’arrested and jailed
Every civil servant wants to experience his or her legacy firsthand-
but not the way that one time Arapahoe Sheriff Patrick J. Sullivan Jr.
has. Sullivan, a nationally renowned law enforcement leader, was
arrested on drug charges and is now being detained in the Denver, USA
area jail that bears his name.
Sullivan, who in 2001 was named the National Sheriff Association’s
“Sheriff of the Year,” was arrested on suspicion of trafficking
methamphetamines.
Local news station CBS4 began an investigation of Sullivan last month
on a tip that he had agreed to meet a male informant, providing drugs in
exchange for sex.
He was subsequently arrested by the South Metro Drug Task Force and
is currently being held on a $250,000 bond.
And in an incredible twist of fate, Sullivan is now cooling his heels
at The Patrick J. Sullivan Jr. Detention Facility, named in his honour.
“The allegations of criminal behaviour involving Pat Sullivan are
extraordinarily disturbing,” said Grayson Robinson, Arapahoe County’s
current sheriff. “While the arrest of the former sheriff is very
troubling, no one, and particularly a former peace officer, is above the
law. This is the most shocking thing I’ve ever been involved with.”
Sullivan, 68, has been retired for nine years, but had been serving
as director of safety and security for Cherry Creek Schools.
“This is a very sad time for the Arapahoe County Sheriff’s Office and
our community,” Robinson said. The CBS4 report also found that for
several years Sullivan has posted bond for multiple suspects held in
drug cases at jail facilities across the state.
As recently as 2008, Sullivan was an active participant in state and
local methamphetamine task forces, helping Colorado draft a plan to deal
with the surge in meth-related crime.
In 1995 President Bill Clinton named Sullivan to the National
Commission on Crime Prevention and Control. According to a 1995 White
House news release, Sullivan was a consultant to US House Subcommittee
on Crime and served on two advisory councils affiliated with the
Department of Justice.
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