Neighbors react to home invasion shooting

From KOB-TV.com - By: Maria Guerrero, KOB Eyewitness News 4 - A South Valley Homeowner apparently decided to take matters into his own hands and shot a suspected intruder early Wednesday morning.

     "No I didn't hear it," said Juanita Balulis as she walked down her driveway. Balulis said she had no idea there was a crime scene right down the street from her home. "That's really scary," she said looking at the police tape.
     Bernalillo County Sheriff’s deputies were called to the 5300 block of Southfort Drive early Wednesday morning. They found a man in a home with a gunshot wound to the chest.
     Investigators say the homeowner told them the man broke into his home so he shot the intruder. Deputies say the intruder, who they are not naming, even drove up to the home in his black car. The sheriff’s office had the suspect’s car, which has a license plate, towed from the home.
     Neighbors described the homeowner as a good man with a wife and a little girl. "They are really good neighbors. Very calm," said Chaviera. “I love this area out here,” said Balulis. “I moved here from Virginia. I've liked it so far but now I don't know if i'm going to like it too much anymore after this or not.”
     The suspected intruder wasn’t killed. He’s still in the hospital after being shot and is the only person facing charges right now. The sheriff’s office says the suspect could be charged with burglary. The homeowner isn’t facing any charges at this point. Read more
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Farmers resume "water bank" use


Farmers using the Middle Rio Grande Conservancy District’s “water bank” had their irrigation supplies turned back on Monday, but the district’s water manager said it is not clear how long they’ll be able to water. 
Water bank farmers are the lowest priority water users on the farm water system. Two weeks ago, with Rio Grande levels falling because of the drought, the district cut off water bank users, the first time that had happened in the history of the district. With warmer weather, snow melt has increased flows in the river enough to supply the low-priority water bank customers for now. 
But they could be cut off again any time over the next two months, said conservancy district water manager David Gensler.

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Orangutan born at ABQ zoo


Officials at the Albuquerque BioPark say a baby orangutan that was born at the zoo this week is alert, has been nursing and has a strong grip.
 The zoo says Sarah the Sumatran orangutan gave birth to the healthy baby sometime late Thursday or early Friday. Zookeepers have yet to determine the baby's gender. They say Sarah and her baby are behind the scenes but will soon rejoin the rest of the orangutans. 
The zoo's primate supervisor, Debbie Wiese, says the first few days after birth are the most critical and the mother and baby will be closely monitored to make sure development progresses normally. Sarah's pregnancy surprised zookeepers last November, making it difficult to determine a due date. 

This is the first orangutan birth at the zoo since 2008.

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Carlsbad Caverns pipeline needs repairs

Park officials say a pipeline that stretches more than a mile to provide Carlsbad Caverns National Park with drinking water needs to be replaced. 
Officials say some sections of the pipeline were damaged by freezing temperatures. A wildfire also destroyed much of the line's insulation along with many of the wooden blocks used to support it. 
The pipeline provides water to the visitor center, employee housing and park offices. Officials say repairing or replacing the line is necessary to ensure a permanent, reliable source of water. 
The park will consider a range of alternatives to accomplish the work as part of an environmental assessment. It will also evaluate potential issues and effects on park resources as part of the process.


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NM Supreme Court allows water manager to decide rights


New Mexico's highest court is allowing the state's top water manager to decide proposed water rights transfers to increase flows in the drought-stricken Pecos River
The state Supreme Court ruled Monday the state engineer's office can move ahead with an administrative hearing on a proposal to transfer water rights to allow more pumping of groundwater near Carlsbad in southeastern New Mexico. The water will go by pipeline into a reservoir to boost river flows.
The justices rejected arguments by a ranching family that State Engineer Scott Verhines has a conflict of interest in deciding the water proposal by the Interstate Stream Commission. 
The Supreme Court tossed out an Eddy County district court judge ruling that stopped the state engineer from holding a hearing, which now will start in June.


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Economic decline hurts El Paso airport

NewsNM Swickard - Nope, not just economic decline. The TSA has caused some people, myself included, to prefer to drive rather than fly, an odd change for someone like me who loves to fly. I have not been up in a commercial aircraft for six years. From the El Paso Times - by Evan Mohl - The El Paso International Airport is facing a decline in passenger traffic and additional cancellations of flights -- something that is causing growing concern among city leaders. Tight economic times and ongoing challenges of airline companies have caused city officials and leaders to search for ways to maintain and increase the airport's flights and passenger traffic.
     The airline industry's struggles with profitability, increasing fuel costs and mergers have drastically affected small and midsize airports that depend on airlines for business, said Brent Bowen, professor and head of aviation technology at Purdue University.
     The El Paso airport, with a taxpayer-funded budget of about $48 million, is not immune. The airport's traffic is down 15 percent since 2010, said Monica Lombrana, the city's director of aviation. Lombrana also said Southwest Airlines, which operates more than half of El Paso's daily flights, plans to stop its direct flight to San Diego in the near future. The announcement comes a few months after the airline stopped its two nonstop flights to Albuquerque.
     "It's a pretty stark situation for medium-sized airports," Bowen said. "And it has pretty much everything to do with the airline industry, which those airports have little or no control over." Read more
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Swickard: Trading Liberty for Safety

© 2013 Michael Swickard, Ph.D. “They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” Benjamin Franklin 
The problems in Boston this last week have brought up other problems that arose from dealing with the attack upon the Boston Marathon and the subsequent capture of an alleged terrorist. Constitutional Rights were not in effect for citizens of the area because there was an emergency.
It has been said there was not enough time for the proper judicial authority so it was skipped. We are a nation of laws so when the government does not abide by laws I become concerned. Perhaps this was an unfortunate instance when the problems of law-breakers required our nation of laws to not be a nation of laws. What concerns me is not this time, which is gone, it is the next time.It is ever so easy the first time to find a reason to not abide by our Constitution and to not give American Citizens their rights since this was an emergency.
What about the next time and the time after that? Have we forfeited all of our Constitutional Rights because of an attack upon our nation? I would hope not. More so, if we have to lean one way or the other, which way should we lean: toward a tyranny of the government where citizens are forced at gunpoint to obey the authorities or liberty that requires the authorities to abide by the laws of private property search?
Me, I am for the government never having a time when we trade our Constitutional Rights for safety. So what I would like is two-fold: first, an understanding why proper channels were not used in Boston to detain an entire town and to search house by house. But that is something that happened so perhaps it is water under the bridge. More important, can our government just shut down towns without judicial review? Likewise, can the authorities shut down a state or even the entire nation without judicial review? 
Could there be a day when every American is confined to home without paperwork? Could we find a day when every home in American is searched without judicial review? Could the newspapers be shuttered and the Internet cut off? Could the cable networks be stopped and there be no one to write about it? 
Perhaps we should be talking about this in Congress and our state Legislatures. If we do not talk now, we may not ever. Will you trade safety for your liberty? Read Column

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Roswell Horse slaughter house passes inspection

The attorney for a proposed horse slaughterhouse in southeastern New Mexico says a federal inspection Tuesday went well and the plant hopes to be in business soon.  
Attorney Blair Dunn says agriculture officials found no issues at Valley Meat Co. and told the owners they are recommending a grant of inspection be issued immediately. Dunn says he expects final approval for the plant to come in a matter of days. 
Valley Meat Co. has become ground zero for an emotional, national debate over a return to domestic horse slaughter. 
The company hopes the inspection ends a yearlong political drama that has left it idle and made owner Rick De Los Santos and his wife, Sarah, targets of vandalism and death threats.


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NM Supreme Court to hear arguments in water case


The New Mexico Supreme Court will hear arguments next week in a case challenging the state's ability to pump groundwater in southeastern New Mexico.
 The state has been pumping water from wells between Artesia and Carlsbad to augment flows in the Pecos River. The pumping is part of a drought management strategy aimed at delivering water to downstream users in New Mexico and Texas
Other users are complaining that the state's pumping has lowered the area's water table. 
The Supreme Court has temporarily blocked a lower court ruling challenging the state's process for transferring water rights to the well field.


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LULAC faults NMSU in presidential search


A civil rights group is faulting New Mexico State University for not including them in the advisory and selection process of naming a new president. 
The New Mexico League of United Latin American Citizens said in a letter Monday that it was being excluded and faulted NMSU for the low number of Latinos on the school's board of regents.
 Paul "Pablo" Martinez told the board of regents in a letter that LULAC was included with the recent selection of University of New Mexico President Bob Frank
NMSU spokeswoman Julie Hughes says the board has received LULAC's letter and is in the process of responding. 
Community forums of the five presidential finalists began this week. 


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