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Sheriff: violent crime and jail population rising; Pathways reentry program shows 70% non‑recidivism

April 23, 2026 | Coconino County, Arizona


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Sheriff: violent crime and jail population rising; Pathways reentry program shows 70% non‑recidivism
Sheriff Brett Axler told the Board of Supervisors that Coconino County is seeing increasing violent crime, rising jail population and growing demand on operations across a very large, rural geography — while also noting successful reentry programming and active community programs.

Axler said the sheriff’s office now operates two jail facilities (a 596‑bed Flagstaff facility and a 48‑bed Page holding facility), with the jail population up roughly 100 inmates since COVID and recent populations in the mid‑300s. He said the population has become more violent, increasing the risk and staffing needs inside detention.

The sheriff described several investment requests and accomplishments: a $20 million, 15,000‑square‑foot intake and medical expansion (on schedule for 2027) to improve medical and mental‑health capacity; a recently funded state gang task‑force position (75% state funded, county to consider 25% share to enable an additional full patrol slot); investments in K‑9 teams (national awards and drug seizures cited); and technology requests such as server cooling and upgrades to records and jail management systems. He also highlighted volunteer and training programs — search and rescue (>12,000 volunteer hours), CERT and a local police academy with 71 graduates since 2022.

Highlighting the Pathways reentry program, Axler said state funding supports the initiative and reported a recidivism measure: roughly 30% of program participants returned to jail on a new charge over a 2.5‑year window (which implies about 70% did not), an outcome the sheriff described as among the best in the state.

Axler recounted a major Feb. 4 active‑shooter incident in Flagstaff in which deputies and multi‑agency SWAT teams engaged a rifle‑armed suspect; during the incident a DPS helicopter crashed while providing overwatch; deputies rendered aid at the crash and continued operations, he said, praising multiple acts of heroism.

Board members asked about coverage gaps in remote areas (Fredonia, Williams, Tusayan) and the sheriff said any single additional deputy could be flexibly assigned to the most critical precinct; he and management emphasized recruitment and retention gains from recent compensation changes but said vacancies remain, especially in detention (22.5 vacancies reported). The manager and board discussed tradeoffs between adding new positions and filling current vacancies and flagged ongoing conversations about long‑term sustainable funding.

What happens next: the Board will review recommended technology and capital items (server cooling, jail management updates, the medical/intake expansion is already under construction) and consider whether to fund additional patrol deputies from general fund resources or to explore alternatives such as intergovernmental agreements and targeted grants.

Provenance: Sheriff presentation and supporting slides to the Board (staffing counts, Pathways figures and capital project status).

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