Watch any media appearance by Sheriff Mark Lamb of Pinal County, Arizona, and it becomes immediately clear that he has something to sell you.
“I’ve always been in sales and marketing,” Lamb said on the Sheepdog Nation podcast in 2019. “I considered myself a sales and marketing guy.”
“I understand the importance of branding who you are,” he told entrepreneur and YouTube streamer Brad Lea last May. “Whether you’re a salesman, whether you’re a politician, whether you’re a police officer, you can brand yourself.”
Lamb has taken his own advice. He has made himself the American sheriff.
Now, as Lamb considers a run for the Senate in 2024, his sizable presence on right-wing media and broader forays into self-help and childrens’ books, reality TV, and various philanthropic endeavors could become all the more important in building a statewide constituency. Lamb also has powerful allies at conservative institutions: He’s a fellow at Trump-aligned think tank the Claremont Institute and spoke at a rally organized by the Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR), an anti-immigrant organization which the Southern Poverty Law Center has designated as a hate group. He has also worked with election denialist group True the Vote and expressed an affinity for QAnon conspiracy theories.
Despite his history as a salesman, Lamb isn’t a Harold Hill figure, sweeping into town to swindle the locals and hit the road before anyone catches on. He’s more like former President Donald Trump, a hard-right politician with a sense for branding and zero compunction about using his elected office to further his own personal and commercial ends.
Lamb gained notoriety early in his tenure as Pinal County sheriff by appearing on reality TV, another point of overlap with Trump. Early in the COVID-19 pandemic, he ingratiated himself to right-wing media by refusing to enforce Arizona’s stay-at-home order, earning him praise on Fox News. (He later contracted COVID-19.)
Lamb was already tied to far-right movements such as the Constitutional Sheriffs and Police Officers Association (CSPOA), an organization founded by former Oath Keepers board member Richard Mack that claims sheriffs are the highest law of the land, superseding any federal or state authority. The movement arose from the far-right “Posse Comitatus” movement in the 1970s and ‘80s, and its legal claims have been thoroughly debunked by legal experts.
Lamb told journalist Jessica Pishko in a profile for Politico that he was not a “constitutional sheriff,” but there are reasons not to take him at face value; as Pishko notes, he spoke at the CSPOA conference in 2020. He also appears on a list of signatories in a 2017 letter from CSPOA’s “Freedom Coalition” demanding the release of people they claim were incarcerated as a result of federal overreach.
“Sheriff Lamb is a Constitutional Sheriff and is one of the best sheriffs in America,” said Mack, the movement’s godfather, as reported by the SPLC.