2 men get life sentences in shooting death of 11-year-old outside stadium that prompted gun ban 鈥 Associated Press
Two men were sentenced Wednesday to lifelong terms in prison in the shooting death of an 11-year-old boy outside an Albuquerque baseball stadium in 2023 that prompted the New Mexico governor to , the district attorney's office in Albuquerque said.
Investigators say a truck carrying a mother and three young children was mistaken for another vehicle in the shooting as vehicles were leaving the stadium. Gunfire killed 11-year-old Froylan Villegas and paralyzed cousin Tatiana Villegas, while Foylan鈥檚 mother and baby brother were unharmed.
A jury in February convicted Jose Romero and Nathen Garley, both in their early 20s, of first-degree murder, tampering with evidence, shooting at or from a vehicle and other charges in the death of Villegas.
The men were sentenced to life in prison plus 46 years, ensuring they will stay under Corrections Department custody permanently, prosecutors said.
In the aftermath of the shooting and others that killed children, Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham declared a , temporarily suspending the right to carry guns in some parks and playgrounds in the greater Albuquerque area. The decision touched off protests and legal challenges by advocates for gun rights.
District Attorney Sam Bregman, a Democratic candidate for governor in 2026, said in a statement that the shootings 鈥渟hook our entire community" and praised his staff for pursuing accountability.
Heat advisory for Albuquerque and three central counties 鈥
Heat Advisory is in effect Thursday from 12pm to 7pm, with temperatures possibly reaching the triple digits.
Nick Catlin and Eric Green report for KOAT that the city of Albuquerque along with Valencia County and Sandoval County are under the advisories, as temperatures are expected to reach 101 degrees.
Residents are advised to remain hydrated and limit the amount of time spent outside, as prolonged exposure can lead to serious illness.
This comes as a small fire in the Bosque has been reported Thursday afternoon near Tingley Beach in Albuquerque.
U.S. Senators warn 15 New Mexico hospitals likely to close if 鈥楤ig, Beautiful Bill鈥 cuts become law -
U.S. Senators responsible for reviewing the impact of the 鈥淏ig, Beautiful Bill鈥 say Medicaid cuts in the House proposal and further cuts proposed this week by Senate Republican leaders could force over 300 rural hospitals, including 15 in New Mexico, to close.
Senator Jeff Merkley (D-OR), the leading Democrat on the Senate Budget Committee, and other committee members to Republican leaders that 鈥渂y enacting these drastic health care cuts that will kick millions of people off their health insurance coverage, rural hospitals will not get paid for the services they are required by law to provide to patients. In turn, rural hospitals will face deeper financial strain that could lead to negative health outcomes for the communities they serve.鈥
They cited an analysis by Cecil G. Sheps Center for Health Services Research at the University of North Carolina (Sheps Center) which ranked each hospital by the percentage of Medicaid patients it serves.
15 New Mexico hospitals ranked in the top 10% of all hospitals in the country for percentage of patients on Medicaid, the federal healthcare program for low-income and disabled adults and children.
鈥淎lready, rural hospitals are struggling: in 2023, there were 50 fewer rural hospitals than in 2017, and lack of health care access in rural America is contributing to worse health outcomes. Faced with additional cuts to their revenue, many rural hospitals may be forced to stop providing certain services, including obstetric, mental health, and emergency room care, may have to convert to clinics or standalone emergency centers, or close altogether. Rural hospitals are often the largest employers in rural communities, and when a rural hospital closes or scales back its services, communities are not only forced to grapple with losing access to health care, but also with job loss and the resulting financial
insecurity,鈥 the letter explained.
Contacted by nm.news for comment, New Mexico Senator Martin Heinrich鈥檚 office pointed us to this statement he shared on June 6 after the bill passed the House of Representatives : 鈥淒onald Trump鈥檚 鈥淏ig, Beautiful Bill鈥 is nothing but a big, beautiful betrayal of the American people. Whether it鈥檚 closing rural hospitals or leaving 16 million people uninsured: it鈥檚 a big, beautiful NO from me.鈥
The New Mexico hospitals identified at risk by members of the Budget Committee are:
1. Alta Vista Regional Hospital (Las鈥疺egas) 鈥 high Medicaid share
2. Eastern New Mexico Medical Center (Roswell) 鈥 high Medicaid share
3. Espa帽ola Hospital 鈥 high Medicaid share
4. Plains Regional Medical Center (Clovis) 鈥 high Medicaid share
5. Rehoboth McKinley Christian Hospital (Gallup) 鈥 high Medicaid share
6. Carlsbad Medical Center 鈥 high Medicaid share
7. Covenant Health Hobbs Hospital (Hobbs) 鈥 high Medicaid share
8. Roosevelt General Hospital (Portales) 鈥 high Medicaid share
9. Lovelace Regional Hospital鈥 (Roswell) 鈥 high Medicaid share
10. Socorro General Hospital 鈥 high Medicaid share
11. Dr. Dan C. Trigg Memorial Hospital (Tucumcari) 鈥 high Medicaid share
12.Lincoln County Medical Center (Ruidoso) 鈥 high Medicaid share
13.Miners鈥 Colfax Medical Center (Raton) 鈥 high Medicaid share
14.Mimbres Memorial Hospital (Deming) 鈥 high Medicaid share
15. Holy Cross Hospital (Taos) 鈥 high Medicaid share
Each relies heavily on Medicaid reimbursements; a cut would erode revenue and risk shutting down essential health services.
Gallup district attorney files Supreme Court challenge over defunding of office - Dan Boyd,
New Mexico鈥檚 highest court is being asked to intervene in a simmering dispute over the defunding of the McKinley County District Attorney鈥檚 Office.
District Attorney Bernadine Martin filed a Supreme Court petition this week, arguing the Legislature and Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham violated the state Constitution鈥檚 separation of powers provision by out of a $10.8 billion budget bill.
鈥淭he legislative and executive branches have no discretion to withhold essential government services in a manner that violates equal protection or due process rights,鈥 Martin wrote in her petition.
Martin declined further comment on Wednesday due to the litigation, but said in her petition the elimination of funds to her office, if allowed to happen, would effectively nullify her authority as an elected official.
The unusual showdown 鈥 and the filing of the Supreme Court petition 鈥 comes just two weeks before July 1, when the new state budget bill is set to take effect.
Sen. George Mu帽oz, D-Gallup, the chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, said Wednesday he had not yet reviewed the petition but described defunding Martin鈥檚 office as a last resort.
Specifically, he said the action was the only way in his power to ensure criminal cases move forward, citing large numbers of dismissals in recent years.
鈥淚f the district attorney doesn鈥檛 want to do her job and prosecute cases, you have a broken justice system,鈥 Mu帽oz told the Journal.
He previously said he was approached by judges, other prosecutors and Chief Public Defender Ben Baur about an alarmingly low number of prosecutions in McKinley County and Martin鈥檚 management of the District Attorney鈥檚 Office.
The District Attorney鈥檚 Office in Gallup has had by far the state鈥檚 highest average caseload for attorneys in recent years, due to chronic staffing issues. As of last fall, the office had 2,822 assigned cases per attorney, according to Legislative Finance Committee data.
While this year鈥檚 budget bill initially included funding for Martin鈥檚 office, it was amended in the Senate Finance Committee. The final version earmarked $1.9 million for the district attorney in neighboring San Juan County to prosecute cases in McKinley County.
The annual spending bill also provides additional funding for contract attorneys to be hired in the district. While some legislators expressed concern about the changes, the amended bill ultimately passed both the Senate and House before in April.
In her petition, Martin said she approached San Juan County District Attorney Jack Fortner about signing an interagency agreement that would allow her to continue paying staffers and contract attorneys in her office.
But she said that proposal was rebuffed, setting the stage for possible employee furloughs.
In addition to Mu帽oz and the governor, the petition filed by Martin also lists Fortner and several other elected officials and legislators as respondents. That list includes Lt. Gov. Howie Morales, House Speaker Javier Mart铆nez, D-Albuquerque, and House Appropriations and Finance Committee Chairman Nathan Small, D-Las Cruces.
Though rare, it鈥檚 not unprecedented for New Mexico government offices to be defunded. For example, the Commission on the Status of Women was defunded and essentially dismantled in 2011 by targeted line-item vetoes from then-Gov. Susana Martinez, but the commission was later revived.
The Supreme Court had not yet filed any official response to the petition as of Wednesday, but it鈥檚 likely the case would be fast-tracked if the court decides to hear it due to timing issues at play.
Supreme Court clears the way for temporary nuclear waste storage in Texas and New Mexico - By Mark Sherman, Associated Press
The Supreme Court on Wednesday restarted plans to temporarily store nuclear waste at sites in rural Texas and New Mexico, even as the nation is at an impasse over a permanent solution.
The justices, by a 6-3 vote, reversed a federal appeals court ruling that invalidated the license granted by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to a private company for the facility in southwest Texas. The outcome should also reinvigorate plans for a similar facility in New Mexico roughly 40 miles (65 kilometers) away.
The federal appeals court in New Orleans had ruled in favor of the opponents of the facilities.
The licenses would allow the companies to operate the facilities for 40 years, with the possibility of a 40-year renewal.
The court's decision is not a final ruling in favor of the licenses, but it removes a major roadblock. Justice Brett Kavanaugh's majority opinion focused on technical procedural rules in concluding that Texas and a major landowner in southwest Texas forfeited their right to challenge the NRC licensing decision in federal court.
The justices did not rule on a more substantive issue: whether federal law allows the commission to license temporary storage sites. But Kavanaugh wrote that "history and precedent offer significant support for the commission's longstanding interpretation" that it can do so.
Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote in dissent that the NRC's "decision was unlawful" because spent nuclear fuel can be temporarily stored in only two places under federal law, at a nuclear reactor or at a federally owned facility. Justices Samuel Alito and Clarence Thomas signed on to the dissenting opinion.
Roughly 100,000 tons (90,000 metric tons) of spent fuel, some of it dating from the 1980s, is piling up at current and former nuclear plant sites nationwide and growing by more than 2,000 tons (1,800 metric tons) a year. The waste was meant to be kept there temporarily before being deposited deep underground.
The NRC has said that the temporary storage sites are needed because existing nuclear plants are running out of room. The presence of the spent fuel also complicates plans to decommission some plants, the Justice Department said in court papers.
Plans for a permanent underground storage facility at Yucca Mountain, northwest of Las Vegas, are stalled because of staunch opposition from most Nevada residents and officials.
The NRC's appeal was filed by the Biden administration and maintained by the Trump administration. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, a Republican, and New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham, a Democrat, are leading bipartisan opposition to the facilities in their states.
Lujan Grisham said she was deeply disappointed by the court's ruling, reiterating that Holtec International, awarded the license for the New Mexico facility, wasn't welcome in the state. She vowed to do everything possible to prevent the company, based in Jupiter, Florida, from storing what she called "dangerous" waste in New Mexico.
"Congress has repeatedly failed to secure a permanent location for disposing of nuclear waste, and now the federal government is trying to force de-facto permanent storage facilities onto New Mexico and Texas," she said. "It is a dangerous and irresponsible approach."
The NRC granted the Texas license to Interim Storage Partners, based in Andrews, Texas, for a facility that could take up to 5,500 tons (5,000 metric tons) of spent nuclear fuel rods from power plants and 231 million tons (210 million metric tons) of other radioactive waste. The facility would be built next to an existing dump site in Andrews County for low-level waste such as protective clothing and other material that has been exposed to radioactivity. The Andrews County site is about 350 miles (560 kilometers) west of Dallas, near the Texas-New Mexico state line.
The New Mexico facility would be in Lea County, in the southeastern part of the state near Carlsbad.
___
Associated Press writer Susan Montoya Bryan contributed to this report from Albuquerque, N.M.
___
Follow the AP's coverage of the U.S. Supreme Court at https://apnews.com/hub/us-supreme-court.
New Mexico leaders reaffirm immigrant protections, as legal groups notice 鈥榰ptick鈥 in ICE arrests- Patrick Lohmann,
New Mexico elected officials and nonprofit leaders gathered in Albuquerque on Wednesday to acknowledge the fear in many immigrant families amid ongoing federal immigration raids 鈥 but also to reaffirm their commitment to keeping families together.
State House Speaker Javier Martinez and Albuquerque Mayor Tim Keller were among speakers at the office of El Centro de Igualdad y Derechos, each denouncing the federal immigration operations occurring throughout the state but also outlining long-standing protections Albuquerque and New Mexico residents have, regardless of immigration status.
鈥淚 will not allow a wannabe dictator in Washington, DC, to let my parents鈥 sacrifices and the sacrifices of all these good people behind me go to waste,鈥 said Martinez (D-Albuquerque), referring to members of various immigration advocacy groups like El Centro joining him at the lectern. 鈥淚f they want to come after you all, they need to come through me first.鈥
Martinez and Keller pointed to protections against local police coordinating with federal immigration agencies, along with a recent state law that prohibits state agencies from sharing resident data, including motor vehicle data, with the federal government.
Keller noted that the city has coordinated the distribution of 10,000 鈥溾 that lay out immigrant rights, including in city schools, where the school board recently affirmed its policy prohibiting coordination with ICE.
The news conference comes amid an increase of federal immigration operations in the state, according to the New Mexico Immigrant Law Center and other groups that represent immigrants.
鈥淥ver the past several weeks, NMILC and our partners have observed a significant uptick in ICE arrests against community members,鈥 said managing attorney Sophia Genovese. 鈥淐ommon tactics include ICE officers pulling over vehicles and detaining people, going to people鈥檚 homes and workplaces, detaining people at their immigration and appointments, and a number of other tips or tricks and bruising to effectuate the Trump administration鈥檚 mass deportation promise.鈥
ICE is also growing more violent, she said, 鈥渨ith at least one recent account of physical brutality鈥 during an arrest. She was referring to the case of , a husband and father who was recently deported to Venezuela after living in Albuquerque with his family for at least two years. His wife told Source New Mexico last week that ICE agents threw him to the ground and put him in a chokehold, and he was hospitalized before being returned to ICE custody and ultimately deported.
According to Genovese, ICE agents conducted a mass arrest in a Walmart parking lot in Rio Rancho two weeks ago, along with 鈥淚-9 audits鈥 where federal immigration law enforcement goes to restaurants and other businesses and asking owners for paperwork on all their employees.
鈥淭here鈥檚 a lot of ICE activity all throughout Albuquerque,鈥 she said.
But it鈥檚 hard to pin down when and where raids are occurring, speakers said, given the fly-by-night nature of the arrests and because city employees, including the police department, are prohibited by law from coordinating with ICE.
In addition to the ICE activity in New Mexico鈥檚 biggest city, the speakers noted a by federal immigration agents recently in Lovington,, where at least 11 people were arrested. The dairy farm has since shut down, Martinez said.
鈥淣ow if the argument is that we鈥檙e a bunch of freeloaders,鈥 Martinez said, 鈥渁sk yourself, 鈥榳hy are they raiding places of work?鈥 They鈥檙e not catching us at the welfare line while we commit fraud to get welfare.鈥
According to Keller, there are 20,000 mixed-status families in Albuquerque. Across New Mexico, 63,000 immigrants are homeowners, and immigrants across the state contribute $1.4 billion in federal state and local taxes, according to data El Centro presented.
The group also shared several anonymous quotes from families dealing with deportation, including from people whose relatives that have occurred here since Trump鈥檚 second term began.
鈥淭here are terrible things happening in our communities,鈥 one of them reads. 鈥淧oor, defenseless people are being dragged out of their homes. Families are being torn apart. Men, women and children are being separated.鈥