From KRQE-TV.com - (AP) - The arrest of Albuquerque's chief criminal judge on charges he raped a prostitute is just the latest example of a seemingly Wild West-no-rules-attitude permeating numerous levels of authority in New Mexico. Just this year, the mayor, police chief and a trustee of the small border town of Columbus were accused of helping smuggle hundreds of guns into the Mexico. A judge in Las Cruces was charged in a bribery scandal with alleged ties to former Gov. Bill Richardson. The Albuquerque police department has been under increased scrutiny for an escalation in questionable police shootings of unarmed civilians. One of its officers is facing charges that he killed his wife to hide his involvement in a car theft ring. And the city's public safety director just quit amidst a probe of his handling of a car accident involving his wife. Additionally, one of the state's most distinguished professors was recently accused of helping run a sophisticated online prostitution ring. The former Santa Fe sheriff last week pleaded guilty to embezzlement. And several pay-to-play investigations continue into dealings of former Richardson administration officials and others close to the Democrat who ran the state for eight years. This just to cite several recent, prominent examples. Read more
New Mexico: Wide-open state of no rules
Posted by
Michael Swickard
on Monday, July 25, 2011
Labels:
New Mexico News
1 comments:
Not to mention that Bill Richardson was never constitutionally our governor.
If one reads the state constitution, one finds that to be governor one must have resided for 5 prior years in the state. The constitution does not say, be a resident of but uses the verb form and states "resided in". Bill Richardson did not reside in NM for the 5 years prior to his first election.
But then this is NM where you get to vote even after you die.
Nothing is proven as to the rape BUT the judge has shown poor judgment by engaging the services of a prostitute, a profession that is illegal to pursue, even though it isn't anyone's business what a woman chooses to do to earn an income.
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