PHOENIX — Against a staged backdrop of seized guns, drugs and DPS officers with dogs, Gov. Doug Ducey brought together federal, state and local law enforcement officials Wednesday to praise his leadership on border security.

Ducey, facing re-election this year, invited the media to the event at the Department of Public Safety. In a prepared speech, the Republican governor said the state and its partners stepped in because calling on the federal government to secure the border “too often ... has been met with empty words and little action.”

But Ducey’s remarks in the closed hangar had another audience: a videographer and photographer who also were invited — and who were recording all this for a future campaign commercial.

The governor, questioned about having campaign photographers videotaping what was billed as a press conference put on with taxpayer resources, insisted there was nothing improper about the event or their taping it for his campaign.

“This is a public event,” Ducey said. “Anyone who wants to come can come.”

It is not unusual for an incumbent seeking re-election to have their events at public venues, such as on the Capitol lawn, videotaped by campaign staff.

But this time, only the media — and Ducey’s campaign — were notified, and less than 24 hours earlier, that he was going to provide “the latest updates on the Arizona Border Strike Force.”

In fact, that invite was conditional: Only after those who received it said they wanted to cover the event were they given the location.

The governor’s office did not respond to repeated requests for a list of those to whom the invitation was sent.

Ducey contended the update about the strike force at the DPS hangar was just part of doing his official duties.

“I’m not going to stay home because it’s an election year,” he said. “We have real issues at the border. This is an event around the Border Strike Force and highlighting the success we’ve had in relationship with our federal government and local law enforcement.”

While Ducey billed the event as public, the videographer hired by the campaign, who did not provide his name, repeatedly shielded his face any time someone from the media sought to take his picture.

The half-hour event featured a parade of speakers who praised Ducey. They included Rodolfo Karisch, chief agent for the Tucson Sector of the Border Patrol.

“I want to start off by thanking Governor Ducey for his leadership on this issue as we all tackle the border security problem together,” he said for the assembled cameras. Karisch said that includes the governor’s decision to deploy National Guard troops to the border to help with “logistical and administrative support so that we can get more agents back to the line.”

Karisch, questioned afterward, said he was not participating for political purposes or to benefit the governor’s re-election campaign.

Ducey created the strike force within the DPS shortly after taking office in 2015, setting up a partnership with local law enforcement along the border as well as the Border Patrol.

“We’re taking the fight directly to the drug cartels and the human smugglers and we’re getting results,” the governor said at Wednesday’s event. He credited strike force operations with the seizure of more than 60,000 pounds of marijuana, 295 firearms, 15.6 million “hits” of heroin “and enough fentanyl to kill more than 11 million Americans.”

Ducey said he added $2.9 million to the agency’s budget in the fiscal year that just started, money he said will hire 12 additional DPS officers.

Pima County Sheriff Mark Napier said the complex nature of dealing with crime along the border means no one government agency can solve it.

“It absolutely requires a coordinated, collaborative and comprehensive approach to solve these problems,” said Napier, a Republican. He said his praise extends beyond the DPS and Border Patrol.

“We have a governor that keenly understands the issues around border security,” the sheriff said. “He’s an active partner with our border sheriffs, with our state, local and federal partners. And he understands the scope and nature of the problem.”

Republican Cochise County Sheriff Mark Dannels, after thanking the governor “for all your support,” took the opportunity to boast of the “zero tolerance” program his agency has instituted, which means that anyone caught smuggling drugs will be prosecuted. The result, he said, is “100 percent of those individuals are now sitting in the Arizona Department of Corrections.”

“As a result, Cochise County is now a safer and better place for our citizens,” Dannels said.

“We have a governor that keenly understands the issues around border security. He’s an active partner with our border sheriffs, with our state, local and federal partners. And he understands the scope and nature of the problem.” Mark Napier, Pima County sheriff

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