Ex-Reporter Sues Alb. Police Department

A former reporter is suing the city of Albuquerque, N. M., and a police officer for allegedly deleting evidence of police brutality and tampering with evidence during a story she was covering. Cristina Rodda, a former anchor and reporter for the Albuquerque NBC affiliate station KOB, is suing Officer Stephanie Lopez of the Albuquerque Police Department. In her federal court filing this week she cited violation of the first, fourth and fourteenth amendments, intentionally spoiling evidence, violation of the New Mexico Tort Claims Act against Lopez. She also cited negligent hiring, training, supervision and retention against the city. "We just filed this week so the city will have 20 days to answer the lawsuit," B.J. Crow, Cristina's attorney told ABC News.com.  the station the clip of the patron being thrown to the ground was gone.  More here
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Supreme Court Ruled Dianne Hamilton to Stay on Ballot

From ballot-access.org -On April 13, the New Mexico Supreme Court ruled 3-1 that State Representative Dianne Hamilton (R-Silver City) should remain on the June 5 Republican primary ballot, as a candidate for re-election. The Court did not explain its reasoning. The case is Fortenberry v Hamilton, no. 33,563.  More here
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Equal Justice Under the Law?

Judges always follow the letter of the law, right? Well, not really. New Mexico has seen a virtual epidemic of petition and candidacy filing form snafus over the last few weeks. It didn’t take long for the State Supreme Court to wade into the mess involving somewhat deficient filing petitions and candidate forms of both Republicans and Democrats. In the end, the high court looked at the nuances of various filing deficiencies and refused to give the death penalty to otherwise legitimate candidates and take choices away from the voters.
There was one curious exception to this “let the voters decide” attitude. It occurred not in the Supreme Court, but in an Albuquerque District court.
Johnny Luevano
Johnny Luevano, a 20 year Marine Corps veteran who has been stationed in multiple locations during his active duty career while calling New Mexico home, was summarily tossed off the ballot by District Judge Alan Malott. The death penalty ruling for Luevano's candidacy illustrates just how little regard some of those drawing their paychecks from our legal system in New Mexico have for people serving in the military.
Luevano came off active duty less than four months ago. Knowing his active duty stint would end last December 31st he began construction of his permanent residence in June of 2011. The permanent Luevano residence was actually ready to move into earlier this year. But alas, the bureaucrats at the City of Albuquerque did not get around to issuing him a final “occupancy permit” until a few days after the candidate filing deadline. Little did incumbent Moe Maestas know how much thanks he would owe to the snail’s pace of those slaving away in the permit issuing department. Thanks to the bureaucracy, one way or the other, Luevano was going to be out of district. He would either out of district for a few days, or he would be permanently out of district before the November election was even held.
Native active duty military personnel have the right to vote in New Mexico elections while stationed anywhere. Apparently when their active duty careers end and they try to put down permanent roots in their home state (and run for office), Judge Malott has decided a very strict application of the letters of the election laws apply.
Amazingly, at the Supreme Court just a couple of days later all the other New Mexico candidates who had legal deficiencies in their filing paperwork this year were cut some slack so voters would have choices. However, in the Luevano case, the key to the Judge Malott's ruling was determined to be the speed with which bureaucrats in the City of Albuquerque were willing to get their permit issuing work done.
Luevano has yet to decide if he will appeal this atrocious decision to the Supreme Court. Let's hope he does. It would be very interesting indeed to see if the Supremes can reconcile giving slack to every candidate who made mistakes on their own, but not to a returning veteran who was at the mercy of a slow motion occupancy permitting process.

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New Mexico Pension Program Hires New Administrator

Wayne Propst
Albuquerque JournalThe Public Employees Retirement Association has selected Wayne Propst as its top administrator for the pension system serving New Mexico government employees. The pension board announced Friday that Propst will become executive director of the $12 billion retirement fund effective May 14. Propst has been executive director of the New Mexico Retiree Health Care Authority since August 2008. He succeeds Terry Slattery, who left last year for a job with a retirement program in Iowa. Kurt Weber has been serving as PERA’s interim executive director. Propst takes over as the board and the Legislature consider possible changes in benefits and retirement eligibility to shore up the fund’s long-term finances. The pension system covers about 64,000 active public employees, including state and municipal workers, judges and legislators, and about 31,000 retirees. Read More News New Mexico 

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PBS NewHour host to host NM town hall

Ray Suarez
KRQE A teacher town hall in Albuquerque that focuses on New Mexico's high dropout rates, especially among Latino students, is drawing PBS NewsHour senior correspondent Ray Suarez as part of a campaign to bring national attention to the increasing number of students who don't graduate. Suarez is scheduled to moderate next week's town hall, which is expected to draw close to 200 teachers from around the state. The forum at the University of New Mexico will give teachers a chance to offer solutions amid planned reforms in the state, he said. "There are interesting things happening in New Mexico," Suarez told The Associated Press in a phone interview. "So, it'll be great to talk to teachers there ... and also some schools that are representative of the problem." The Albuquerque event comes after Gov. Susana Martinez announced her administration is developing a new teacher evaluation system this summer. A teacher evaluation proposal passed the House earlier this year but died in the Senate. Martinez said this week she will use administrative rules to make the changes the Legislature did not. Read More News New Mexico

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NM governor asks feds to stop horse slaughterhouse

Susana Martinez
BusinessweekNew Mexico Gov. Susana Martinez said Friday she is asking federal officials not to allow a southeastern New Mexico company to open the nation's first slaughterhouse for horses since 2007. Martinez plans to send a letter to the U.S. Department of Agriculture asking it deny a Roswell meat company's request for inspections that would allow it to operate. "Despite the federal government's decision to legalize horse slaughter for human consumption, I believe creating a horse slaughtering industry in New Mexico is wrong and I am strongly opposed," Martinez said in a statement. Valley Meat Co. has filed an application with the U.S. Department of Agriculture for its 7,300-square-foot plant outside of town. Documents obtained by the Humane Society of the United States and Front Range Equine Rescue show that horses would be "custom slaughtered" and processed for human consumption at the plant, the Albuquerque Journal reported ( http://bit.ly/IlnrcB). Valley Meat didn't immediately returns calls from the Associated Press on Friday. USDA officials said they were preparing a statement. Horse slaughter has effectively been blocked since Congress withheld funds for USDA inspections of horse meat plants in 2006. But a recently passed agriculture bill provides the money. The last horse slaughterhouse closed in Illinois in 2007. Since Congress renewed inspection funding, several plants are under consideration, including one in Missouri that would process up to 200 animals a day. More than 100,000 American horses are shipped out of the country to plants in Canada and Mexico for slaughter each year, and their meat is bound for markets in Europe and Asia, according to the Humane Society. Although there are reports of Americans dining on horse meat a recently as the 1940s, the practice is virtually non-existent in this country. Read More News New Mexico 

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A New Williams Stapleton Controversy

Sheryl Williams Stapleton
Capitol Report New Mexico - Rep. Sheryl Williams Stapleton (D-Albuquerque) is in the middle of another controversy — actually two new controversies. Last night on KRQE-TV, reporter Tim Maestas disclosed that Rep. Stapleton allegedly tried to back-date some Albuquerque Public School documents — possibly in reaction to the station’s story last fall about Stapleton taking paid leave of absences — and also may have sent a letter to the station’s general manager complaining about KRQE story puporting to be APS Superindendent Winston Brooks. Read full story here: News New Mexico

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Las Cruces Firm Nationally Recognized

LAS CRUCES, NM — Spence Asset Management of Las Cruces has been nationally recognized as the nation's "Mid-Cap Manager of the Year" by Emerging Manager Monthly, a publication of Financial Investment News, in their April 2012 issue. Spence Asset Management was critically evaluated among other firms nationwide based on the review of a committee made up of financial industry experts.
"While most investment firms are located in and around major cities, Spence Asset Management shows there is something to be said for escaping the noise of the big cities," said the editors of Emerging Management Monthly. "The Las Cruces, NM-based firm enjoyed a successful 2011 that saw its mid-cap growth equity returns rank in the top five percent of its peers." Spence Asset Management's strategy returned 5.77% last year, compared to -1.55% by the Russell MidCap Index.
Portfolio Manager James Spence welcomed the national recognition. "Our firm strives to exceed our clients' expectations in an ever-changing market. We are dedicated to independently researching and evaluating investments while maintaining the strictest discipline and financial strategy. We believe this independence and steadfast approach have allowed us to deliver strong absolute and risk-adjusted returns," Spence said.
“Being named the top Midcap manager in 2011 is especially meaningful. For the last ten years we have beat our comparison benchmark, the Russell Midcap Index, which has nearly doubled the rate of return of the more widely followed S & P 500 Index,” Spence continued.

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National union gives $190,000 to Independent Source PAC

CWA Triangle 
ALBUQUERQUE - Independent Source PAC, a liberal Super-PAC run by Bill Richardson's former private investigator, today filed their quarterly report with the Federal Elections Commission showing that they received another $90,000 from the Communication Workers of America, a national labor union. The PAC has now received a whopping $190,000 from the national union to fund their smear efforts against Governor Martinez. While ISPAC claims to be a watchdog group, we now learn ISPAC itself is under federal investigation by the Federal Elections Commission (FEC) and their latest report raises serious questions about potential fraud. In March, the FEC notified ISPAC that they were in violation of federal law. Among other issues, the FEC alleged that the PAC illegally failed to report campaign expenditures and their balances didn't add up. Read the letter:  http://query.nictusa.com/pdf/914/12330003914/12330003914.pdf#navpanes=0 In the finance report released today, ISPAC states that expenditures for television ads were to support the Presidential campaign of Barack Obama. But the only ads that have been produced by the PAC and placed on TV are about state issues — attacking Governor Martinez on education and the state fair. See video here. "Bill Richardson's former private investigator appears to be picking up where his former client left off — skirting the law. Independent Source PAC is providing fraudulent information to the federal government about their activities and the Republican Party of New Mexico will be notifying the Federal Election Commission of the new violations disclosed in today's report," said Republican Party of New Mexico spokesman Annaliese Wiederspahn. 

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