NAMES A B C D E F G H IJK L MN O P QR S T V UW XYZ
See also: Lab Corruption (New Mexico, Aviation related, etc.) New Mexico Corruption
New Mexico Drug Corruption Police Abuses_New_Mexico New Mexico Catholic Abuse Watch for Antics
ON THIS PAGE: Summary of Links Victims Commentary Overview of Issues: Internal, Reforms Victim Incidents/Cases
New Mexico: Things to look for are links between religious groups and officers; cover-ups involving apparent suicides;
mixing evidence between one case or victim and another; repeated signs of group think and conformity among police
officers; gun running, drug operations, making money illegally on the side on top of their regular police salaries. A
general attitude of not making enough money for what they as police officers do so as to rationalize why they work
with or as criminals to make more money.
One thing we need to be considering is gangstalking in New Mexico - working together, we can push back the veil of
invisibility. It probably will take psychic and remote viewing intervention by those with a proven track record along with
traditional investigative experts, family and social networks, health related groups, computer science experts and
more. New Mexico, with all of its other corruption issues, is ripe for gangstalking.
Corruption runs high in New Mexico. Is there a renegade paramilitary group of veterans in the New Mexican desert linked to New
Mexico, Colorado and Arizona waging war on certain New Mexicans including minorities, liberal women and the homeless? Is
there a Hispanic-Native American organized crime network extending from Mexico, Central America and South America into New
Mexico, like La Raza? Complete with white mercenary cops? Are whites being hired as mercenaries in military-police networks for
drug trafficking and security around certain key complexes used secretly? Is there a link between Hispanic Catholics and a mafia-
like network with police-military implications? How extensive is neural electronic warfare? Are police officers beaming the
public with hostile wave devices at low intensity for seatbelt violations, speeding, minor violations and stop-overs? What about
gangstalking? Is there a big oil/military/police -and Islam conspiracy tied between New Mexico and 9/11 in New York? There are
indicators of certain Muslim-Israeli ties to 9/11, American fossil fuel politics(like Bush and Cheney) and international prison
systems. Should we follow ties between certain minorities in New Mexico and certain Jews as well as certain Muslims? The Jewish
link would be “Holocaust” and unfairness to minorities; the Islam link would “taking of lands” as paralleled between Native
Americans, and Israel, Africa with some of this sector fighting each other and some of it working together against “big bad white
Americans.” Another link might be through American international military prison systems and both known and hidden prison
systems in the USA, with cops closely tied to the military in that regard. How many police officers in New Mexico with criminal
records were or stilll are in the American military? If we stay close to the scent of petro, we might be closer to the mark when it
comes to most cover-ups and problems in this country. Don’t forget cartels with black ops snagged into the American policing
networks. If you are too normal you might not be able to catch scent of the skewed trajectories. This might well be the magic of
New Mexico: a lot of corruption, yes…but there are many people here with a heartful spirit fighting corruption and environmental
issues. People thinking outside of the box while demonstrating a strong human will. These people are looking beyond the false
simple answers and pushing back at the lukewarm drivel being fed them by government and others humming along on business
as usual.
OVERVIEW OF ISSUES
Problems, Reforms, Internal Incidents, Police Views, Systems Related Issues
Note: APD is the abbreviation for the Albuquerque, New Mexico Police Department
Topics in this section Overview of Issues: Court System Domestic Violence Lewdness Mexican cartels
Miscellaneous
Prison System Reforms Search and Seizure Speak-Outs Wide-Ranged Corruption etc….
Court System
Justice dot gov: Outcome Assessment for Albuq. police APD (Report filed 08/18/2017)
(CASA Implementation/monitoring police for safety, etc. )
https://www.justice.gov/usao-nm/page/file/991201/download
Discusses how APD still has serious issues regarding force.
Real Crimes: Kaitlyn Arquette - drug activities Judge Brennan, numerous other judges, attorneys and members of state legislature
http://www.realcrimes.com/Arquette/Kaitlyn_Arquette.htm
Excerpt: Update, July 2004: The Arquette family (see Kait Arquette in NM victims and cases on this website) has long believed
that Kait was killed because she had learned too much about influential people involved in the New Mexico drug trade. It
now appears their suspicions might be justified. In May 2004, Chief Judge John Brennan of Albuquerque was arrested on
narcotics charges. That opened a can of worms that may affect a number of cases on this web site.
In June 2004, KRQE TV aired information from a confidential narcotics report about drug activities involving, not only Judge
Brennan, but numerous other prominent NM judges, attorneys and members of the state legislature dating back to
before Kait was murdered. "It draws on a variety of sources and reads like a Who's Who of the New Mexico drug
underworld," the reporter said. "Judges, lawyers, politicians, sports celebrities and prominent businessmen appear in the
report right along side the State's narcotics kingpins." David Iglesias, US Attorney for New Mexico, called the detailed
document about drug smuggling and money laundering in New Mexico "a page-turner I couldn't put down."
http://www.realcrimes.com/Arquette/Kaitlyn_Arquette.htm
Troubled Members of Public, Police Officer Emotional Detachment Can Shift to Cruelty.
Example:
Rare dot US: Lawsuit brewing after police fist bumped over dead body of New Mexico man
https://rare.us/rare-news/lawsuit-brewing-after-police-fist-bumped-over-dead-body-of-new-mexico-man/
Excerpt: Last year, in a Wal-Mart parking lot, Ben Anthony C de Baca drew his last breath. A few minutes later, while EMS and
officers were trying to revive C de Baca, a body cam caught an image of two police fist-bumping over his lifeless body.
Unsurprisingly, the video, surrounding circumstances and aftermath have given rise to controversy, and Anthony’s family is
planning to file a wrongful death suit. The coroner ruled the death as homicide but noted that cocaine was found in his system.
KOB reported that C de Baca had a long history of mental illness. In September of 2015 at a fast food restaurant, he got into an
argument with a family member. According to The Daily Beast, this argument was more of a schizophrenic episode — C de Baca’s
wife said that he began yelling that there were “people in the trunk.” He then drove to the Bernalillo Wal-Mart, and, as one police
officer so eloquently described, started “acting a fool.” Employees and shoppers subdued him until police arrived.
RELATED: A knife wielding teen is in the hospital after a campus security officer took matters into his own hands
Once police were on the scene, C de Baca still did not calm down and even bit one of the officers. In a video of the incident, one
officer asks about the teeth marks, and the other officer responds, “A f****g bite mark, dude. This c**t f**k bit the f**k out of
me, dude. I had to punch his ass off of me.” After he chomped down on the constable, the police placed a spit sock (a thick mesh
bag) over C de Baca’s head and dragged him outside. Police, with a knee in his back, shook his arm, but it was too late.
RELATED: A woman saw the inside of a jail cell after using a hot frying pan to go after cops
A lawyer representing C de Baca’s family told The Daily Beast, “I’m really more concerned about why they hogtied him, dragged
him out, placed him face down with three guys kneeing him in the back.” The fist bump that can be seen at the end of the video is
probably a simple greeting. The spit sock appears to be improperly used and may have contributed to C de Baca’s death, which
was officially ruled a homicide.
https://rare.us/rare-news/lawsuit-brewing-after-police-fist-bumped-over-dead-body-of-new-mexico-man/
Domestic Violence
Cop Block: New Mexico [Farmington] Police Officer [Mike Briseno] Long Embroiled in Brutality Controversy Quits Force (2011)
http://www.copblock.org/1831/new-mexico-police-officer-long-embroiled-in-brutality-controversy-quits-for
Farmington Daily Times: Controversial officer calls it quits [Mike Briseno of Farmington, NM] (2011)
this originally used link is no longer active but is being left as a record; see Behind the Blue Wall below
http://www.daily-times.com/ci_17368306
Behind The Blue Wall: [NM] Farmington Police Officer Briseno quits before disciplined for cop-on-cop domestic violence
(2/14/2011)
http://behindthebluewall.blogspot.com/2011/02/nm-farmington-police-officer-briseno.html
Excerpt from: The Daily Times By Elizabeth Piazza 02/12/2011: A Farmington police officer long embroiled in controversy
over allegations of police brutality and misconduct, resigned over yet another allegation of a domestic violence incident,
this time involving his girlfriend... Mike Briseno, 46, a nearly nine-year veteran of the department, resigned Thursday
following an internal affairs investigation looking into the alleged domestic incident with his girlfriend who also is a
Farmington police officer... "We investigated it internally and sustained complaints against Briseno," Police Chief Kyle
Westall said in a phone interview Friday. "Directly after we sustained (the complaint) he resigned before we made it to the
disciplinary process"...
http://behindthebluewall.blogspot.com/2011/02/nm-farmington-police-officer-briseno.html
Lewdness
The Blaze: Jal, NM Police Chief was Caught on Camera Doing Something Obscene (Off Job), His Officer Fired. By Zach Noble (2014)
http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2014/06/01/this-police-chief-was-caught-on-camera-doing-something-obscene-but-one-
of-his-officers-got-fired-over-it/
Excerpt: This officer’s plan to sabotage his boss wound up backfiring in a major way. Jal, New Mexico police chief Larry
Burns was caught on camera — on two different occasions — having sex in and around a city ambulance. But while his
actions were inappropriate, and got him suspended for two weeks, the chief is keeping his job and the officer who planted
the camera is getting canned. Sgt. Joshua Terrell apparently had bad blood with the chief, KRQE-TV reported, and planted
the hidden camera in an attempt to sabotage Burns. The plan paid off, since Burns was caught in a compromising position,
but Terrell violated several city policies by sneaking into the garage and planting the camera — and once he had the
footage, he released it to the public instead of merely reporting it to the city manager. “To try to destroy a person that he
did not like, I thought we didn’t need (Terrell) with a badge or a gun,” the city manager told KRQE-TV.The city manager said
Terrell couldn’t be protected as a whistleblower because he made the tapes public.
http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2014/06/01/this-police-chief-was-caught-on-camera-doing-something-obscene-but-one-
of-his-officers-got-fired-over-it/
JD Journal: Santa Fe Police Officer Caught Masturbating On Video While On Duty. By Jim Vassallo (2012)
http://www.jdjournal.com/2012/04/12/police-officer-caught-masturbating-on-video-while-on-duty/
A police sergeant in Santa Fe, New Mexico is in a bad situation after a video caught him masturbating while he was on
duty. The video has recently been released and it was filmed by the dashboard camera of the officer’s cruiser. The video
released to the media does not show the inside of the cruiser but has audio that is quite steamy. The officer in question is
Sgt. Mike Eiskant.
One former officer, Shannon Brady, was not surprised at the news of the video as Brady said that Eiskant had a bad
reputation as a stalker of women and a ‘creeper.’ Brady attempted to file a harassment complaint against Eiskant years
ago with the Santa Fe Police Department’s human resource division. The complaint was filed with compliance officer
Raymond Rael, who is not the police chief for the department. You can hear on the video his audio-erotic situation and the
sound of a zipper can be heard clearly. The officer seems to be masturbating while looking at a nude picture of a woman
on his cellphone. The video is a total of 10 minutes and at one time in the video the officer can be heard saying, “Oh, show
me those big beautiful breasts, baby.”
“They had plenty of opportunities over the course of many years to do something about it and they refused to,” Brady said.
When Brady tried to file the claim, Rael asked if she was “doing this only because of all the rumors against Mike Eiskant
stalking women.” Rael instead offered mediation between the two parties but Brady declined. Rael has said that he is
unaware of any other complaints against Eiskant, who has never been placed on administrative leave. Eiskant is scheduled
to retire in November.
http://www.jdjournal.com/2012/04/12/police-officer-caught-masturbating-on-video-while-on-duty/
Law Enforcement Corruption: [Santa Fe] New Mexico 'Lewd Acts' Cop Caught on Tape in Police Car (2012)
http://lawenforcementcorruption.blogspot.com/2012/04/new-mexico-lewd-acts-cop-caught-on-tape.html
Private Investigatons: New Mexico [Santa Fe] police force fires officer caught on camera having sex on the hood of his car in
uniform (2011)
http://privateinvesigations.blogspot.com/2011/09/new-mexico-police-force-fires-officer.html (Jewish publication)
Excerpt: Instead, it recorded uniformed officer Bert Lopez with an unidentified woman. According to The Santa Fe New
Mexican, Lopez has 30 days to appeal his dismissal.The surveillance photos were taken from a motion-triggered security
camera positioned at the front gate of the county-owned La Bajada Ranch south of Santa Fe. The encounter was at the
remote Canyon Ranch.Two photos showing a uniformed officer having sex on the hood were forwarded to Santa Fe Sheriff
Robert Garcia, who identified the officer as being with New Mexico State Police. He forwarded the images to State Police
Chief Robert Shilling.
An internal investigation was immediately launched, and Lopez, an eight-year veteran, was put on paid administrative
leave for about three weeks.
http://privateinvesigations.blogspot.com/2011/09/new-mexico-police-force-fires-officer.html
Mexican cartel infiltration of United States system - see also Cartels, New Mexico Drug Problems on this website
http://www.judithmiller.com/6482/mexicanization-american-law-enforcement
Three Strike Law
Abq Jrnl 2015 Paul Pacheco
https://www.abqjournal.com/605766/push-for-tougher-three-strikes-law-in-new-mexico.html
MISCELLANEOUS
Law vs. Order: (2016) By Steven St. John How an Albuquerrque took on her own police department
https://www.buzzfeed.com/albertsamaha/how-an-albuquerque-da-took-on-her-own-police-department-and
Albuquerque Journal: (2014) APD report probable cause exists to charge Brandenburg
https://www.abqjournal.com/506981/apd-report-probable-cause-exists-to-charge-brandenburg.html
ABQ Journal: Portales
Excerpt from ABQ Journal: New Portales Police Chief Pat Gallegos says attributes the jump in staffing to the pay scale. The
salary increases ranged from 11-to 29 percent, and the department offered incentives to new officers.
Before Gallegos took over, at least eight Portales officer in the span of 18 months were accused of misconduct, convicted
of felony crimes or had left the department under questionable circumstances.
Gallegos said he’s doing strict background checks of his new hires and calling their previous employers to get their history.
https://www.abqjournal.com/390973/portales-police-fully-staffed-following-turmoil.html
Borderland Beat: San Juan County Sheriff Ken Christesen concerned that cartels are targeting his deputies (2011)
http://www.borderlandbeat.com/2011/05/cartel-violence-cash-infiltrating-us.html
“They’re already here,” he said. “There’s three cartels working in San Juan County right now.”
In 2003, Christesen worked for the Region II Drug Task Force when officials caught a former deputy named Mike Marshall
dealing drugs. Then, in 2007, the FBI discovered traitors inside the drug task force. New Mexico State Police Officer Keith
Salazar and former San Juan County Sheriff’s Deputy Levi Countryman were feeding information to a drug cartel.
http://www.borderlandbeat.com/2011/05/cartel-violence-cash-infiltrating-us.html
Eidard: New Mexico town [Columbus] swamped in corruption abolishes police department (07/12/2011)
Excerpt: In another twist for the village, incarcerated former trustee Blas Guitierrez submitted his letter of resignation on
Friday, July 8. He is one of 12, including former Mayor Eddie Espinoza and former police chief Angelo Vega, who were
arrested for their alleged roles in a gun smuggling ring…Espinoza submitted his resignation in late May following the March
10 early morning raid that led to the arrest of the village officials. Vega is still on paid leave pending his resignation or a
guilty verdict
https://eideard.com/2011/07/12/nm-town-swamped-in-corruption-abolishes-police-department/
KRQE: New Mexico State Police Slow to Release Officer Involved Shooting Videos. By Gabrielle Burkhart (10/19/2016)
http://krqe.com/2016/10/19/new-mexico-state-police-slow-to-release-officer-involved-shooting-videos/
KRQE: Red light camera company settles class action lawsuit in Albuquerque for $3.5M. By Gabrielle Burkhart (3/18/2016)
http://krqe.com/2016/03/18/red-light-camera-company-settles-class-action-lawsuit-in-albuquerque-for-3-5m/
Excerpt: ALBUQUERQUE (KRQE) – KRQE News 13 has learned the red light camera company, Redflex, is settling a lawsuit
with thousands of Albuquerque drivers. Those drivers claimed Redflex and the company’s debt collector were hassling
them non-stop to pay up. Now, Redflex will be cutting checks to thousands of people in Albuquerque. For years, red light
cameras in Albuquerque snapped away and thousands of drivers were sent citations. Albuquerque voters pulled the plug
on the program in 2011, and the cameras came down. However, the Arizona company, Redflex Traffic Systems, which
operated the cameras, still wanted to collect on unpaid fines: $21 million, including late fees. Back in 2012, Greg Wheeler,
with the City of Albuquerque, told KRQE News 13, “As a matter of state law we can’t just let those people go, so there will
be a collection effort.”At that point, Redflex hired CreditWatch Services to start collecting fines for red light traffic citations.
According to the settlement, pre-recorded ‘robocalls’ were sent to the cell phones of about 42,000 people to collect red light
ticket fines.Now, as part of a $3.5 million class action lawsuit settlement agreement, the people who received those calls
can now collect themselves.
http://krqe.com/2016/03/18/red-light-camera-company-settles-class-action-lawsuit-in-albuquerque-for-3-5m/
Facebook: Crazy story out of Farmington, NM…basically a deputy, his lying spouse, making up stories about the father of the
arrested deputy's step son…SMDH
https://www.facebook.com/CorruptFriscoTexasPolice/posts/1517708018453648
Prison System
Prison Legal News: illegal Strip Searches Cost MTC and Santa Fe County $8.5 million. By Michael Rigby (2007)
https://www.prisonlegalnews.org/news/2007/jan/15/illegal-strip-searches-cost-mtc-new-mexico-county-85-million/
Excerpt: Illegal Strip Searches Cost MTC, New Mexico County $8.5 Million
Management and Training Corporation (MTC) and Santa Fe County, New Mexico, will pay $8.5 million to settle with an
estimated 13,000 former prisoners who were unconstitutionally strip searched at the Santa. Fe County Detention Facility
between January 2002 and June 2006. The Utah-based MTC, which operated the jail ...
https://www.prisonlegalnews.org/news/2007/jan/15/illegal-strip-searches-cost-mtc-new-mexico-county-85-million/
Prison Legal News: Sharon Jones’s Strep Death Among Shocking Prison Tragedies in Lawsuits by Michael Roberts/Westword
4/01/2016
https://www.prisonlegalnews.org/news/2016/apr/1/new-mexico-sharon-joness-strep-death-among-shocking-prison-
tragedies-lawsuits/
Excerpt: …the Denver-area law firm that represented McGill – Holland, Holland, Edwards & Grossman, P.C. – is collaborating
with Farmington, New Mexico’s Tucker, Burns, Yoder & Hatfield on a series of lawsuits involving the San Juan County
Detention Center in San Juan County, New Mexico, just over the Colorado state line near Durango. The allegations
contained in the complaints come across as real life horror stories with tragic endings that could have been easily
prevented but weren’t as a result of what attorney Anna Holland Edwards calls “a system that incentivizes ignoring serious
medical conditions because it costs too much to treat them.” Not that the expense would have been that great for three
prisoners who lost their lives after being incarcerated at SJCDC. Both Sharon Jones, whose son, plaintiff Corey Jones, lives in
Parker, and Jesus Marquez died of strep infections that could have been treated with simple antibiotics. Indeed, Marquez
was felled by complications from strep throat – the sort of malady that strikes many children multiple times during their
formative years without significant repercussions.
And William “Billy” Carter passed away after the jail stopped providing him with an inhaler that helped him deal with
Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease. The suit in his name maintains that “his breathing issues were treated with such
deliberate indifference and reckless disregard that he prematurely passed away of this treatable condition.” And that’s not
all. Attorney Greg Tucker has approximately thirty additional (and still-living) clients whose cases against the San Juan
County Detention Center have been consolidated under the name of one former prisoner, Jesse Ray Berkey; they include a
handful who live in Colorado. The lawsuit maintains that these individuals “were all told again and again that they were
faking their serious injuries or illnesses” – claims that proved false but saved money in the short term.
https://www.prisonlegalnews.org/news/2016/apr/1/new-mexico-sharon-joness-strep-death-among-shocking-prison-
tragedies-lawsuits/
ACLU: Corrections Reform New Mexico Overview with Links; Little Known Profit Prison immigrants 2014; 19 org’s sign on Cibola
2016
https://www.aclu-nm.org/en/node/6
https://www.aclu-nm.org/en/news/new-mexico-has-little-known-profit-prison-immigrants-aclu-investigation-such-prisons-
reveals
https://www.aclu-nm.org/en/press-releases/nineteen-nm-organizations-sign-letter-urging-dhs-suspend-cibola-prison-
negotiations
Ethics
SKNCLT: Police review anti-corruption and justice systems
http://www.sknclt.com/police-review-anti-corruption-and-justice-systems/
Reforms, Issues With Ineffectiveness of Reforms
La Jicarita: David Correia on the Dept. of Justice Consent Decree
In the Mercury’s most recent Insight New Mexico interview, Price and Correia discuss the just-released consent
decree between the US Department of Justice and the City of Albuquerque regarding the problem of police
violence.
https://lajicarita.wordpress.com/2014/11/22/insight-new-mexico-v-b-price-and-david-correia-on-the-doj-consent-decree/
The Real News: Body Cameras Bring No Accountability for Police Brutality in Albuquerque (12/6/2014)
Video: Max Blumenthal [award winning journalist] says the city's police have killed citizens without provocation faced no
penalty
http://therealnews.com/t2/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=31&Itemid=74&jumival=12769
CBS: Albuquerque Police reforms
http://www.cbsnews.com/news/albuquerque-police-reforms-ordered-amid-excessive-force-reports/
Justice: Investigation into Albuquerque Police Department (2016)
https://www.justice.gov/usao-nm/apd
Independent Monitor Submits Fourth Report Assessing APD's Compliance with Court-Approved Settlement Agreement for
Period from April 2016 to July 2016. Dr. James D. Ginger, the Court-Appointed Independent Monitor of the Albuquerque
Police Department, has formally submitted his fourth monitoring report to U.S. District Judge Robert C. Brack, the judicial
officer overseeing APD's reform process.
https://www.justice.gov/usao-nm/apd
NBC/US News: US Justice Department launching investigation into Albuquerque police (2012)
http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/11/27/15486451-us-justice-department-launching-investigation-into-
albuquerque-police?lite
NPR: Boyd Trial Albuquerque Police Shooting Trial Ends In A Hung Jury By Rebecca Hersher 10/12/2016
In the resulting agreement between the city and the Justice Department, which went into effect in late 2014, the city
agreed to 277 reforms, including to "ensure that officers use non-force techniques to effectively police, use force only when
objectively reasonable under the circumstances, and de-escalate the use of force at the earliest possible moment."
NPR's Nathan Rott reported that, as of April, the independent monitor appointed to enforce the agreement said the police
department had achieved "operational compliance" on just eight of 277 required reforms. Under the current timeline, the
Albuquerque Police Department has until mid-November to be in substantial compliance with the settlement agreement.
Search and Seizure Issues
Case Law: State v. Wagoner. (2001)Warrantless Sweep, etc.
Excerpt of ruling from case: {40} We hold that a search conducted pursuant to a warrant based partially on tainted information
gathered during a prior illegal search is not an independent source of the evidence seized and therefore must be suppressed.
We believe this holding accomplishes two important goals: (1) it provides a bright line rule for law enforcement officers and for
courts reviewing police conduct, and (2) it properly effectuates an individual's right to be free from an unreasonable search and
seizure and the corresponding right not to have evidence gained by exploitation of a constitutional violation used against the
individual in court. To the extent that Wagoner I is inconsistent with our holding, it is hereby overruled.
http://caselaw.findlaw.com/nm-court-of-appeals/1366941.html
NPR: New Mexico Ended Civil Asset Forfeiture. Why Then Is It Still Happening? By Martin Caste (06/07/2016)
Excerpt from NPR: New Mexico passed a sweeping overhaul of civil asset forfeiture. Legislators say some cities' budgets are
so dependent on seized assets that they disregarding the law. Another excerpt: She and another legislator sued the city to
try to force it to obey the new state law. The suit was dismissed on technical grounds. But they may appeal with the help of
an anti-civil forfeiture organization called the Institute for Justice. But Torraco says the city seems dead set on keeping its
vehicle forfeiture program as is.
http://www.npr.org/2016/06/07/481058641/new-mexico-ended-civil-asset-forfeiture-why-then-is-it-still-happening
Wildcat: no excuse for unwarranted search seizure drug dogs
http://www.wildcat.arizona.edu/article/2015/04/no-excuses-for-unwarranted-search-seizure-drug-dogs
Think Progress: New Mexico is the second state to ban police from seizing innocent peoples property
https://thinkprogress.org/new-mexico-is-the-second-state-to-ban-police-from-seizing-innocent-peoples-property-
d9b947c1399#.ku6u8e181
Speak-outs, Issues For Cops On the Job
Available Media, Inc/YouTube: Retired APD Officer Sam Costales speaks on police issues at APD (March 2015)
2nd in a series of 8 college classes entitled "Police Violence and Social Control". UNM tenured professor David Correia is
the instructor. Retired APD Officer Sam Costales is interviewed by UNM Junior Jack Cox and members of the general
public.
Recorded at UNM SUB Lobo A&B on March 5, 2015. Service provided by Available Media Inc., a 501 C3 non-profit formed to
provide the public with information as an alternative to the main stream corporate media.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mz_PFI2zrRM
KUNM: Ex-APD Officer Paul Ielacqua On How Police Cope
http://kunm.org/post/ex-apd-officer-how-police-cope#stream/0
Wide-Ranged Corruption
Alamagordo News: Jay Miller: New Mexico Most Corrupt State?
http://www.alamogordonews.com/ci_18594899
Cutting Edge News: New Mexico Law Enforcement plagued by Corruption and Abuse of Human Rights. By Kent Paterson 10/
6/2011
http://www.thecuttingedgenews.com/index.php?article=52865
Excerpt: Barely a week goes by without a scandal involving a New Mexico law enforcement officer making the headlines.
Angelo Vega, the former police chief of the border town of Columbus, pleads guilty to extortion and trafficking arms
destined for the La Linea criminal organization, one of the protagonists in the so-called Mexican drug wars.
At Albuquerque’s iconic Frontier Restaurant on historic Route 66, where the stern mug and big brim of John Wayne hangs
tall, a Bernalillo County sheriff gets involved in a dispute over a table that ends with the officer’s friend, a former Texas
deputy, pulling a gun on an unarmed man. The deputy is fired but not before a video showing the confrontation gets
ample play on the Internet. In separate trials last month, an Albuquerque cop gets six months in jail for tipping off a friend
who was the subject of a federal drug investigation, while a former Santa Fe County sheriff begins serving a three-month
jail sentence for stealing department equipment and peddling it on E-Bay. .
“I got greedy,” former Sherriff Greg Solano was quoted, as he prepared to hunker down in the hoosegow.
Meanwhile, former Albuquerque Police Department (APD) officer Levi Chavez who is charged with the 2007 murder of his
wife in a case that could involve a crime ring that was sending stolen cars to Mexico, pleads not guilty. Earlier this year, the
city government of Albuquerque paid out $230,000 to Tara Chavez’s family in a settlement of a wrongful death lawsuit.
And in a recent 18-month period, fatal shootings of civilians by members of the APD claim 14 dead.
“I was shocked. I was numb,” said Steve Torres, father of Christopher Torres, who was shot to death during the serving of
an arrest warrant by APD on May 10 of this year. “I couldn’t do anything. I was paralyzed.” Torres spoke at a recent public
forum in Albuquerque sponsored by the ANSWER Coalition, a national anti-war and anti-racism organization with a local
presence.
http://www.thecuttingedgenews.com/index.php?article=52865
State Integrity: Investigation Gives New Mexico a D- On a Corruption Risk Report Card
http://www.stateintegrity.org/new_mexico
Tech Dirt: Worse Than The Disease: Officers Committing Sexual Violence In The Line Of Duty. By Tim Cushing (11/26/2013)
Excerpt: First up, following on the heels of the multiple rectal violations committed by a New Mexico doctor at the behest
of police officers in search of drugs that just weren't there is this story, which features more New Mexico law enforcement
members violating someone's lower regions -- again, in search of drugs.
https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20131125/16525225366/worse-than-disease-law-enforcement-officers-committing-
sexual-violence-line-duty.shtml
True Crime News 7/3/2012
http://truecrimediva.com/new-mexico-police-corruption-series-apd-officer-matt-griffin-aka-the-ninja-bandit-part-1/
Excerpt: Series of Posts on corruption: Albuquerque, New Mexico police officer Matt Griffin, Linda Daniels, more
Real Crimes: New Mexico Citizens Live In Fear Of Their Police
http://www.realcrimes.com/Corruption_Overview.htm
Washington Post: Albuquerque’s Long History of Police Abuse Cover-Up and Scandals. By Radley Balko. 04/14/2014
Excerpt: As of 2012, no shooting by an Albuquerque cop had ever been found unjustified by a grand jury, leading critics to
labeled the process a “sham.” And residents have become fed up with the APD, with hundreds taking to the streets in
protest after the shooting of a homeless man. The thing is, for longtime Albuquerque inhabitants, this probably all sounds
familiar. Back in the mid-to-late 1990s, the city went through a similar scandal. I wrote about it in my book. (see , Rise of
the Warrior Cop: The Militarization of America's Police Forces, by Radlo Balko, 2013)
Excerpt: The city’s police offices also have a record of using “less lethal force” in ways that violate the Constitution,
including a pattern of using Tasers on people who posed little to no threat to the police or the public, and in ways that
made things more dangerous, such as on a man who had doused himself in gasoline.
Excerpt: The city gives its police officers insufficient training on interacting with people suffering from mental illness or
suffering some sort of mental crisis
Excerpt: One particularly poignant example concerns the city’s police union. In 2012, TV reporter Christina Rodda filed a
lawsuit against the city and against Officer Stephanie Lopez. According to Rodda’s lawsuit, she was covering a rave at a club
called Tumbleweeds when she caught Lopez on tape getting rough with a teenager. Lopez then demanded that Rodda
hand over the tape. Rodda initially objected. Lopez then confiscated the entire camera. If she had taken the camera
because the video was evidence of some kind, she should have tagged the camera and taken it to the police station.
Instead, according to Rodda’s lawsuit, Lopez took the camera home. Three days later, the camera was returned to Rodda’s
employer, KOB. The incriminating video had been deleted. Rodda was able to recover the file with the assistance of a
specialist. Lopez then had Rodda arrested. The charge — “criminal trespass” — was summarily dismissed by a judge.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-watch/wp/2014/04/14/albuquerques-long-history-of-police-abuse-cover-up-
and-scandal/?utm_term=.64fe519d7302
Freedom of Information Act - Withholding of Information Corruption - Connected to Police System
http://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/01/10/albuquerque-police-public-records-clerk-sues-chief-for-ordering-him-to-
withhold-public-records/
http://photographyisnotacrime.com/2015/12/20/albuquerque-police-sued-by-aclu-for-refusing-to-release-footage-of-police-
shooting-man-to-death/
Ganging Up On Victims Using Military Approaches
The New Yorker: [Police Murder of Christopher Torres.] Son-Deceased. By Rachel Aviv (02/02/2015)
Excellent New Yorker article on Christopher Torres, his parents, Albuquerque’s police abuse problem, with a commentary
on Albuquerque:
http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2015/02/02/son-deceased
Real Crimes: Corruption - Overview: Manuel Ramirez
http://www.realcrimes.com/Corruption_Overview.htm
Excerpt: Manuel Ramirez family: 10/12/90: Armed with a warrant obtained thru false information, Narcotics Detective Stan
Gloria, Lieutenant Hughes, SGT Bartram (sic- Bertram), Officers R. Vasquez, R. Jeffrey, W. Jones, E. Sauer, B. Snow, A.
Lehocky, Lieutanant Bourgoine, S. Gray, S. Rodriguez, H. Terry, T. McWhorter, C. Lopez and four US NAVY SEALS went to the
home of Manuel Ramirez, at about 4:30 a.m. There they attached a cable to a tow truck and pulled the wrought iron front
door off the Ramirez residence, while other personnel simultaneously broke all of the windows of the Ramirez home. As
Ramirez reached for a handgun, (which wasn’t loaded), the collection of officers entered unannounced and dressed in
black and shot Ramirez twice in the chest. They ransacked the family home, while Ramirez lay dead in his living room and
his grieving family sat in the back of an APD Patrol Car. No drugs were found in the residence until 48 hours after the
break in. The Ramirez's infant was injured in his crib by flying glass. Ramirez’s widow filed a lawsuit against the City in
1992 and received a $275,000 settlement.
http://www.realcrimes.com/Corruption_Overview.htm
Excerpt: Holguin family: 6/5/03: The Holguin family was terrorized by APD officers who stormed the house, guns blazing;
blasted the door off its hinges; pelted the home with flash-gun grenades, and handcuffed all five family members. The
officers, led by Capt. Robbin Burge, knocked the 80-yr-old grandmother, Carmen Holguin, to the floor and injured her so
severely she had to be rushed to the hospital. They, then, swigged drinks from the refrigerator, threw the search warrant
on the floor, and left. The Holguins had no criminal history and were never charged with anything. Police had stormed the
wrong house. In 2002, Capt. Burge was named APD’s Plain Clothes Officer of the Year.
http://www.realcrimes.com/Corruption_Overview.htm
Alse see James Boyd in Victim Incidents/Cases
Drug Rings
Stop the Drug War: Cops charged in Drug Ring Case (12/7/07)
http://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/2007/dec/07/law_enforcement_weeks_corrupt_co
FARMINGTON, N. M. Cops charged in drug case: Keth Salazar, Levi Countryman; Danny Tarango Jr. is a fugitive. Federal
agents today took down two former law officers accused of using insider information to form a large drug ring. Tonight
former San Juan County sheriff's Deputy Levi Countryman and former New Mexico State Police Officer Keith Salazar are
locked up. According to a federal indictment, Salazar is the key person in the case.
http://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/2007/dec/07/law_enforcement_weeks_corrupt_co
Evidence: Lost, Stolen, Destroyed Evidence in Storage; Mishandling of Evidence, Poor/Non-Existent Evidence Gathering During
Investigations
Real Crimes: Corruption - Overview (New Mexico)
Excerpt: 04/7/03: Albuquerque: It’s disclosed that In Feb. 03, an APD freezer containing more than 1,600 samples of blood,
urine, saliva and other evidence from rapes and homicides was shut down because of a freon leak, causing some materials
to thaw. 40 criminal cases may be affected, at least 15 homicides and 10 rapes. The police and the DA’s office withheld that
information from defense attorneys, who continued to construct their cases on contaminated evidence.
Excerpt: 1989: The Albuquerque Police Department was sued by a citizen’s group that wanted access to the APD
intelligence files to see whether they contained evidence of unconstitutional police investigation of political figures who
were not under suspicion of wrong doing. The police had the intelligence files burned one half hour before a federal judge
issued a restraining order to prevent their destruction.
Excerpt: 2/22/92: Albuquerque Journal:Sheriff Gallagher admitted to having destroyed evidence in the case against Deputy
Burt
Excerpt: Crystal Houston homicide: It took until June 2003 and extensive pressure from the media for the state lab to ship
DNA evidence that had been submitted to the state crime lab at the time of her death to a lab in California to be
processed. F
Excerpt: 3/19/05: APD Sgt. Cynthia Orr gave a media interview, starting out, “This is probably going to end my career.” Orr
said Chief Gilbert Gallegos failed to act despite repeated warnings of evidence theft. Orr said that, in Aug. 2003, she
identified two people who were stealing in the evidence room, but Gallegos allowed them to continue to work there, which
enabled them to destroy evidence that would have proven their guilt. She said she discovered thefts when property went
to auction and the list of property taken out of the evidence room was longer than the list of property the auctioneer
received. "Am I implicating the chief is assisting to do this cover-up? Absolutely. Do I know this is a dangerous accusation
to make? Absolutely. But I know this is something that needs to be done." Orr said a deputy chief forbade her to send
reports of missing evidence to the records department, because they didn’t want it to become public record that things
were missing. She said officers under criminal investigations for such things as DUI or domestic violence were allowed to
work in the evidence room where they could oversee the evidence in their own criminal cases.
http://www.realcrimes.com/Corruption_Overview.htm
Albuquerque Police Department (APD)
APD: 1989: From Real Crimes: The Albuquerque Police Department was sued by a citizen’s group that wanted access to the APD
intelligence files to see whether they contained evidence of unconstitutional police investigation of political figures who were not
under suspicion of wrong doing. The police had the intelligence files burned one half hour before a federal judge issued a
restraining order to prevent their destruction. (From Real Crimes)
APD: From Real Crimes: 10/1/87: Former Chief Justice William Riordan, the City’s first independent councilor, found that the APD
Intelligence Unit, under the supervision of APD Sgt. Joseph Polisar, had been secretly stockpiling information on local residents
not suspected of wrong doing. (The Unit was supposed to be gathering intelligence on motorcycle gangs, organized crime,
terrorists and other criminal activity.) From Real Crimeshttp://www.realcrimes.com/Corruption_Overview.htm
APD: From Real Crimes: 05/31/1991: From Real Crimes: “Albuquerque Tribune: Bernalillo County District Attorney’s office
investigated allegations made by a convicted drug dealer that Bernalillo County Sheriff’s deputies provided drugs to transvestite
prostitutes in return for sexual favors. The drug dealer, serving a sentence in federal prison, has a history of cooperating with
law enforcement agencies.” (From Real Crimes)http://www.realcrimes.com/Corruption_Overview.htm
APD: From Real Crimes: 08/24/1994: Albuquerque Journal: City Counselor M. Brasher requested a new investigation into a federal
informant’s claim that four APD narcotics detectives were involved in drug-trafficking, rape, planting evidence and murder of a drug
trafficker and prostitutes. The four were investigated in the fall of 1993 by APD Chief Bob Stover. (From Real
Crimes)http://www.realcrimes.com/Corruption_Overview.htm
APOA: From Real Crimes12/5/1997: Albuquerque Journal: COP UNION GIVES BACA WARNING -- Albuquerque Police Officers
Association President Alex Marentes said of new mayor Jim Baca, “If he screws with us, we will do everything possible to defeat
him in the next . election.” (From Real Crimes)http://www.realcrimes.com/Corruption_Overview.htm
APD: 5/26/02, Albuquerque Journal: APD DOG BITES COST CITY MORE THAN $940,000: The city of Albuquerque, over the past
decade, has paid more than $725,000 to settle APD dog-bite claims. Meanwhile, private lawyers defending K-9 officers in ongoing
lawsuits have billed the city another $217,000 in fees and costs over the past two years. Police dogs have bitten dozens of
citizens who were neither armed nor violent. In some cases, police gave no verbal warning a dog would be unleashed. Officers in
several cases allowed their dogs to continue biting suspects after the initial apprehension. In one case, an unarmed suspect was
ordered to walk toward a police officer with the police dog still clenching her buttock.
http://www.realcrimes.com/Corruption_Overview.htm
See also: Stolen Lives
http://stolenlives.org/
The mission of the Stolen Lives Project is to assemble a national list of people killed by law enforcement agents from
1990 to the present. Through grassroots efforts, over 2000 cases were documented in the second edition of the Stolen
Lives book, which was published in 1999. Although just the tip of the iceberg, these 2000+ are evidence of a horrifying
national epidemic of police brutality. The victims of police violence were part of our society, but rarely are their lives or
names publicized, or the real circumstances surrounding their deaths investigated and made known. The Stolen Lives
Project aims to restore some dignity to the lives lost. Though their lives have been stolen from us, we will not allow
them to be forgotten. Interested in working on and/or contributing to the Stolen Lives Project? See the Call for
Volunteers.
Contact the Stolen Lives Project: stolenlivesprojectonline@gmail.com
Updates: 2019/04/25: Miscellaneous Section added Albq Journal/Brandenburg article and one other article; 2018/12/09 minor format editing; 05/24/2017; 04/01/2017
New Mexico
Commentary, Various