Albuquerque

Brandenburg: Judges’ ‘broad’ interpretation of court rule led to dismissals

Bernalillo County District Attorney Kari Brandenburg is seeking a letter from the state Supreme Court that explicitly states the case management order’s (CMO) 10-day discovery rule applies only to evidence needed to obtain an indictment – not all evidence that will be needed at trial, as she says the 2nd Judicial District Court has “broadly” interpreted.

Read Brandenburg’s statement in full here.

Brandenburg met with state Supreme Court justices, Chief District Court Judge Nan Nash, District Court Judges Charles Brown and Brett Loveless, the Bernalillo County Sheriff and Albuquerque Police Department chief Tuesday to discuss possible changes to the CMO. Continue reading

Homeland Security: Decision on Real ID for airport travel coming by end of year

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) responded Thursday to multiple requests by KOB for further clarification on theimpending Real ID Act deadline in New Mexico.

DHS did not say much that was still unknown, but did tell KOB the department “is in the process of scheduling plans for REAL ID enforcement at airports” and will make that decision by the end of 2015. Then, DHS says it will give “at least 120 days” notice before changes are made affecting travel.

This means, as was reported Wednesday, that New Mexicans should have no trouble flying with state-issued licenses until at least April 2016.

Read the full DHS response here.

“The REAL ID Act places the responsibility for action on the state to provide state-issued identification that meets the Act’s security standards,” the DHS spokesperson said.

Sen. Martin Heinrich, D-NM, also issued a statement regarding the back-and-forth within the state government over New Mexico’s Real ID compliance and a bipartisan bill that passed the state Senatethat would have brought the state into compliance.

“I have called on the Department of Homeland Security and other federal agencies to improve and expand their public outreach. However, the ultimate solution for this problem must come at the state level,” Sen. Heinrich said. “The state Senate passed a bipartisan bill last year that is both Real ID compliant and ensures all New Mexico drivers can continue to drive legally and safely. This pragmatic, bipartisan solution is the clear path forward.”

New Mexico Senate Democrats also Thursday issued further clarification of Real ID standards at different federal and military buildings in the state and the specific forms people visiting those buildings will have to have. Click here for that information.

Senate Democrats also established a phone line, (505) 986-4727, for anyone with further questions.

Gov. Susana Martinez has said she will not call a special session to resolve the matter. Her spokesman, Michael Lonergan, continued to spar with Democrats over the issue Wednesday, when he told KOB, in part, the governor is following “official guidance from the federal government on this issue,” and said she “has been working to resolve this problem year after year.”

Lonergan also said in that statement, “[i]f the Democrats want to gamble on this issue, so be it. And while they are at it, they will continue ignoring a strong majority of New Mexicans who want to end the dangerous practice of granting driver’s licenses to illegal immigrants.”

Lonergan pointed to a 10-month-old Albuquerque Journal poll in which 56 percent of Democrats, 69 percent of Independents and 62 percent of Hispanics said they were opposed to giving driver’s licenses to undocumented citizens – a total of 70 percent.

402 people were polled on the issue, which had a margin of error of plus or minus 4.9 percentage points.

This story was originally published at KOB.com

Real ID threat from Homeland Security might not be entirely true

The Department of Homeland Security made huge waves in October when it wrote a letter to New Mexico saying it had rejected the state’s waiver for REAL ID compliance and that New Mexicans would need passports or other REAL ID-approved identification to access federal buildings. But it turns out that might not be the case.

Read the DHS letter here.

State Democrats and Republicans have sparred heavily over the issue in the five or so weeks since, blaming one another for failing to pass bills during the last legislative session that would have solved our state’s compliance issues. SB 653 – cosponsored by a Democrat and Republican – did pass the Senate with large bipartisan support, but died in the House. A House-sponsored bill died in the Senate.

Democrats have accused Gov. Susana Martinez of holding the measures hostage in order to keep undocumented citizens from getting driver’s licenses in New Mexico, and she and fellow Republicans have accused Democrats of purposely stalling their efforts to come into compliance in order to allow the continued issuing of licenses to undocumented citizens.

But a group of legislative researchers showed KOB Wednesday what they say is proof that many New Mexicans may not be affected whatsoever by the January deadline Homeland Security says will prevent people from entering federal facilities or flying.

Sen. Daniel Ivey-Soto, D-Albuquerque, offered spreadsheets that show how government owned federal buildings, such as federal courthouses, will continue to accept New Mexico driver’s licenses.

And it’s actually spelled out in the REAL ID Act itself, which says there is “no requirement to produce a REAL ID Act compliant ID to enter a Federal facility for accessing health or life preserving services….law enforcement, participating in constitutionally protected activities…voting or registering to vote, or applying for or receiving Federal benefits…”

Read the federal laws that spell out more of those conditions here.

In addition, Los Alamos National Laboratories says its usual procedures will remain in place, which state that most workers are required to have a Department of Energy-issued badge, and those who don’t have to be escorted by someone who does.

At Sandia National Labs, people with current badges can use their current ID, while other must use alternative IDs.

Cannon, Holloman and Kirtland Air Force bases all say they are awaiting further guidance from the Department of Defense.

Sen. Ivey-Soto and his fellow Democrats say the governor’s administration should have been pointing that out.

“It just seems like the governor is taking advantage of this opportunity to make it political and, unfortunately, to create a lot of fear,” he said.

Senate Majority Leader Michael Sanchez, D-Belen, told the Santa Fe New Mexican Wednesday the governor and her administration are “misleading” New Mexicans by saying they have to get passports by Jan. 10.

“That’s an absolute lie,” he told the New Mexican, saying Martinez was “fear mongering.”

Gov. Martinez has said she will not call a special session to resolve the matter. Her spokesman, Michael Lonergan, told KOB in part Wednesday the governor is following “official guidance from the federal government on this issue,” and said she “has been working to resolve this problem year after year.”

Regardless, in the short term, Sen. Ivey-Soto says New Mexicans shouldn’t panic.

“What’s really important for people to understand, though, is that you do not need to rush out and get a passport,” he said.

KOB has made numerous attempts over the past month to speak with Homeland Security to clear up any confusion, but have not heard back.

We’re still unsure exactly how airports might be affected, but as it is, a New Mexico driver’s license should still be a valid form of identification with the TSA until sometime in April 2016.

This story was originally published at KOB.com

Eden says he would have hired APD training director despite NMLEA investigation

The Albuquerque City Council posed several questions to Albuquerque Police Chief Gorden Eden regarding his hiring of Jessica Tyler as the director of the department’s training academy at Wednesday’s council meeting, and Eden said he would have hired her even if she had been under investigation by the state’s law enforcement academy at the time.

Jessica Tyler was hired as the new head of training at the APD academy three days after she resigned from the Bernalillo County Sheriff’s Office amid an ongoing internal affairs investigation into her actions regarding a deputy reserve training program.

Multiple internal affairs reports obtained by KOB last week show that she violated several BCSO standard operating procedures when she failed to tell her superiors of the lack of funding for the program and when she failed to tell them she knew about the IA investigations into her actions.

Eden told the city council Wednesday that he knew Tyler was under investigation by BCSO internal affairs when he hired her. He also said that he contacted the New Mexico Law Enforcement Academy in June – a month before she resigned from BCSO and took the APD job – which told him there was “no active, pending or prior LEA 90s” for Tyler at that time.

But BCSO filed the LEA 90 – a disciplinary action proposal – after she had already left, so it would not have been filed in June anyway, as the internal affairs investigation was still ongoing. The NMLEA will now have to review the complaint and decide if Tyler should keep her law enforcement certification.

But Eden also told the council at Wednesday’s meeting that even if NMLEA had told him there was an active investigation into Tyler, it wouldn’t have prevented him from hiring her.

“Not at all. In my many meetings with Jessica Tyler, she made me fully aware that there was an active, ongoing internal affairs investigation by the Bernalillo County Sheriff’s Department,” Eden said. “When she told me what the investigation was about, how the investigation – she feels – was originated, I made a decision that that would not influence her ability to serve in this executive role at the academy.”

He conceded that had there been an active investigation by the NMLEA in June, the agency would not have been able to tell him about it – a point brought up by Councilor Dan Lewis.

And though most of the internal affairs investigation into Tyler appears to have been released to KOB last week, though vast portions were redacted, Eden told the council Wednesday they would soon find out more about the investigation that would ease their minds.

“I think…once you hear the facts of the internal affairs investigation that was initiated, it will become clear,” Eden told the council. “I understand that Ms. Tyler, through the attorneys that are representing her, they will be making statements this week.”

It is unclear exactly when Tyler’s attorneys plan to speak, but KOB will bring you their statements.

When KOB’s original story ran, we asked APD to answer multiple questions regarding her hiring, including whether she underwent a formal background check and if she is allowed to direct the training academy while under investigation by the NMLEA, but the police department failed to answer any specific questions.

Instead, it sent a statement from city CAO Rob Perry:

“Major Jessica Tyler is an intelligent, experienced, proven, and capable law enforcement leader and the City of Albuquerque and Police Department are fortunate to to [sic] have her. I have all the confidence that her skills will help with the challenges of training, DOJ agreement, and the recruiting and retention of high quality police officers for APD.”

This story was originally published at KOB.com

APD training director violated BCSO operating procedures, could lose certification

ALBUQUERQUE, NM — The director of Albuquerque Police Department’s training academy was found by the Bernalillo County Sheriff’s Office and an independent review team to have violated multiple portions of the sheriff’s office’s standard operating procedures during her time as BCSO chief deputy, and her law enforcement certification is now at risk.

The violations are outlined in multiple investigations obtained by KOB through public records requests – some of which are heavily redacted, but still offer insight into the alleged violations. KOB first learned of the internal affairs investigation into Tyler on Nov. 20.

Jessica Tyler was named the new director of APD’s training academy July 27, just three days after she resigned from her position as Chief Deputy at BCSO.

But she resigned amid an ongoing internal affairs investigation into her and a BCSO captain’s conduct regarding a reserve deputy training program that current Sheriff Manny Gonzales and former Sheriff Dan Houston never approved the money for.

The BCSO captain, Matt Thomas, also resigned July 1 before the internal affairs investigation was completed.

INTERNAL INVESTIGATION INTO RESERVE ACADEMY ACTIONS

The initial internal affairs investigation started May 1 under the direction of Sheriff Gonzales, and was referred to outside investigator Robert Caswell Investigations.

The cause of the investigation started in Dec. 2014, when Cpt. Thomas wrote a transition report for Sheriff Gonzales and Undersheriff Rudy Mora regarding an upcoming reserve academy scheduled for Feb. 2015.

Cpt. Thomas wrote six BCSO reserve cadets were to take the class, along with two Valencia Co. cadets and 10 Sandoval Co. reserve cadets.

But once February came around, only two BCSO cadets enrolled in the class. One dropped out shortly thereafter. BCSO was the only agency tabbed to pay for the reserve academy, however.

According to an internal affairs document made by Sheriff Gonzales, then-Chief Deputy Tyler told the sheriff, undersheriff and other BCSO superiors during a 10 a.m. March 24 command staff meeting that the sheriff’s office would have to spend about $25,000 in overtime costs to deputies training the reserve class. At the time, more than $7,000 had already been spent.

Cpt. Thomas told the same room of people work was being done to get the state legislature to pass a bill that would have reimbursed the sheriff’s office for the costs.

That bill – HB 589 – would have allotted nine separate academies in New Mexico $50,000 each for training. It passed a House floor vote after making it through committee, but died in a Senate committee on March 24 – the same day as the command staff meeting.

But the message that the funding had been killed never made it to Tyler’s superiors because she never told them.

Amid the internal affairs investigation and on Tyler’s last day with BCSO, investigators obtained text messages that had been deleted from her department-issued cellphone.

Among those text messages was one from Thomas to Tyler saying “academy reimbursement was killed in the legislature, FYI.” The text was sent to Tyler by Thomas at 8:02 p.m. March 24. Tyler responded, saying, “Ok, thanks,” three minutes later.

The investigation by Robert Caswell Investigators says that though the meeting happened at 10 a.m. that day and the text messages weren’t sent until nearly 10 hours later, Sheriff Gonzales had said at the meeting that he was “extremely disappointed in the fact that there was only 1 reserve cadet representing BCSO” and that he didn’t want to provide a “free” academy class filled with mostly Sandoval County cadets.

The report also says that Tyler told Undersheriff Mora that “current administration was aware of the numbers and had them before the academy started” – something Mora and Gonzales both denied.

Thomas told investigators the low-number academy class had been approved “by the last administration,” which former Sheriff Houston later denied to investigators.

As Chief Deputy, Tyler was the immediate supervisor of Thomas and had to report to Sheriff Gonzales and Undersheriff Mora. Investigators determined that she violated standard operating procedures by failing to tell them about the lack of funding.

But Sheriff Gonzales maintained in his internal affairs worksheet he was not informed of the failure of the reimbursement bill and that BCSO would have to foot the costs until Chief Deputy Sid Covington told him April 21 – nearly a month later.

ANOTHER INVESTIGATION REVEALS MORE

On July 17, BCSO contacted Universal Investigation Services to look further into the matter to find out if Tyler was ever made “aware of, or participated in, the dissemination of confidential Internal Affairs information.”

The company interviewed BCSO Internal Affairs Commander Lt. Brian Lindley, who said he found emails and a journal written by Tyler on her department-issued computer that showed she knew of the internal affairs investigation into her actions.

The report says a May 1 entry by Tyler says she “was advised in confidence that the BCSO was going to open an internal affairs investigation on her, and Captain Thomas in reference to the Reserve Academy.” But the entry went on to say that she was told hours later that internal affairs were “no longer going to list her as a target in the case.”

Failing to report knowledge of an internal affairs investigation into one’s self is a violation of BCSO’s standard operating procedures.

TYLER CONFRONTS INVESTIGATOR

Another report from Robert Caswell Investigations says that on Aug. 11 – after Tyler had taken the APD job – she approached an investigator with Robert Caswell and asked him if he knew she had left BCSO and was with APD.

According to the report, Tyler then asked him if he had received “the emails from Sandoval County in reference to the Internal Affairs case.”

He told her he believed the lead investigator had requested the emails, to which she responded, “I know the Sheriff requested the emails, why would he do that?” according to the report. She then asked if there had been another internal affairs case opened against her, to which the investigator told her he felt uncomfortable and changed questions.

SHERIFF’S REPORT FINDS MULTIPLE VIOLATIONS BY TYLER AND THOMAS

Sheriff Gonzales’ reports on the internal affairs investigations into Tyler and Thomas found that Thomas violated at least five portions of the sheriff’s office’s standard operating procedure and that Tyler violated at least seven portions of it.

Because of the violations, BCSO has filed an LEA 90 with the New Mexico Law Enforcement Academy Review Board to try and revoke Tyler’s law enforcement license.

KOB asked the Albuquerque Police Department Friday whether or not the department knew of the investigation into Tyler before she was hired, whether she underwent a background check and if she is allowed to direct the training academy while under investigation by NMLEA.

But APD failed to answer any of those specific questions. The only response given was a statement by Albuquerque Chief Administrative Officer Rob Perry, via an email from APD spokeswoman Celina Espinoza:

“Major Jessica Tyler is an intelligent, experienced, proven, and capable law enforcement leader and the City of Albuquerque and Police Department are fortunate to to [sic] have her. I have all the confidence that her skills will help with the challenges of training, DOJ agreement, and the recruiting and retention of high quality police officers for APD.”

When asked generally about the academy and APD’s confidence in its trainers Thursday, APD Chief Gorden Eden said, “Our academy is going to be one of the most critical parts when it comes to the implementation of any policy because you have to train to that policy.  So having a strong staff out at the academy, having some of the best instructors that we can find when it comes to training…that becomes really important.”

NMLEA said it could not comment on the matter at this time.

Albuquerque sued over ‘policing for profit’ program

Two New Mexico state senators announced a lawsuit against the City of Albuquerque Wednesday in an effort to stop the civil forfeiture program.

The program allows law enforcement officials to seize and keep private property without a criminal conviction. The practice put New Mexico into the national spotlight last year when Las Cruces City Attorney Pete Connelly called civil forfeiture “a gold mine.” Continue reading

Suspect in APD officer’s shooting death indicted on federal weapons charges

The man accused of shooting and killing an Albuquerque police officer Oct. 21 was indicted by a federal grand jury Tuesday on four counts of violating federal firearms laws.

The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives filed a criminal complaint for the federal charges for Davon Lymon the day after the shooting. APD Officer Daniel Webster died from his injuries Oct. 29, nearly a week after the shooting.

Lymon is prohibited from possessing firearms or ammunition due to his previous felony convictions of voluntary manslaughter, aggravated battery with a deadly weapon, fraud and forgery.

Counts 1, 2 and 3 of the indictment charge Lymon with possessing a firearm in late May. The fourth count charges him with possessing the firearm and ammunition the night he allegedly shot Officer Webster.

Police reportedly recovered six cartridges in the area where the officer was shot. The complaint filed Oct. 22 states they also recovered a semiautomatic pistol from a vacant lot in the area where Lymon allegedly fled as he left the scene of the shooting.

Lymon faces a maximum of 10 years in federal prison on each count. He remains in federal custody pending his trial date, which has yet to be set.

This story originally appeared at KOB.com

APD Officer Daniel Webster honored at memorial service

There was not a single empty seat inside the Kiva Auditorium on the day the community said goodbye to Albuquerque Police Officer Daniel Webster.

Tuesday, all 2,300 seats were filled with Officer Webster’s family, friends and fellow law enforcement officers. Even people who didn’t know Officer Webster attended his funeral service inside the Albuquerque Convention Center.

Webster, 47, was an officer with APD for almost nine years. He died last Thursday, eight days after he was shot during a traffic stop at Central Avenue and Eubank Boulevard.

As the service started, family pictures of Webster and his loved ones flashed on two video screens above the crowd. Fellow law enforcement officers saluted as the officer’s casket, draped by an American flag, was carried into the auditorium.

The best friend of Officer Webster’s widow delivered the eulogy, talking about the 20 years he spent in the U.S. Army as a paratrooper before joining the Albuquerque Police Department.

“Dan loved to be on his Harley, work in his garden, cook, play chess on his phone and play with his new puppy, Sage, a very high-energy German shepherd. Dan was a very private man and enjoyed his time home alone with his wife and their dogs. Lastly, Dan loved his job and always went to work with a smile,” Christy Miller said.

Officer Webster is survived by his three adult children, Rebecca, Danielle and Ashleigh, and his wife, Michelle Carlino-Webster, who is a Bernalillo County sheriff’s deputy.

Watch: Daughters read scriptures at Officer Webster’s funeral

“Dan thought he was Batman, and in a way, he really was,” Carlino-Webster said during the memorial service at the Kiva Auditorium in the Albuquerque Convention Center. “He really loved his job and protecting people.”

Carlino-Webster shared several stories about Webster, calling him a “goober,” a true man of servitude and a cop with the highest integrity.

Watch: Officer Webster’s wife delivers informal eulogy

“All of us have a job to do, we have to continue his legacy,” she said. “We can make a difference. I will be that voice for you, Dan. I will be your advocate.”

Carlino-Webster also thanked the Albuquerque community for its support, saying Officer Webster would have been overwhelmed.

Gov. Susana Martinez also spoke during the service and discussed the day Webster saved a baby’s life by performing CPR.

“Albuquerque’s superhero officer, Dan Webster, looking down on us today and every day that you put on that uniform—everyone in this building—when you put on that uniform, he is with you because he understands that just a simple citation, a simple incident can become deadly. And that is why we must pull together as a city and community in the name of Dan.”

Watch: Gov. Susana Martinez speaks at Officer Webster’s funeral

Albuquerque Police Chief Gorden Eden spoke of Webster’s service in the U.S. Army and with the department, saying he had a servant’s heart.

“We, the Albuquerque Police Department, were blessed the day he came to work for us. He demonstrated his leadership in the academy, he demonstrated an attitude of caring and courage and a word that I heard in the hospital from many, many people was he rescued them,” Eden said.

Watch: Chief Eden speaks at Officer Webster’s funeral

Watch: APD Officer Reads “Sheepdog” and “Warrior’s Creede”

So many people showed up for the funeral service that organizers had to set up an overflow roomwhere people could watch the service through a video feed.

Following the service, community members wearing blue lined the streets for the officer’s procession. The route was decorated with blue ribbons and banners on Monday and gifts were left at the Strong Thorne Chapel of Daniels Funeral Home.

The funeral procession for Officer Daniel Webster made a stop at the Albuquerque Police Department’s main substation for his final dispatch Tuesday.

Listen: Final dispatch call for Officer Webster

Military funeral honors were performed at Vista Verde Memorial Park in Rio Rancho. A handful of military planes and helicoptersperformed a flyover at the honors service.

View: Funeral Procession Route

Watch: KOB’s earlier coverage from 5 p.m. and 6 p.m.

See photos from the service and procession below. On a mobile device? Click here.

With Elizabeth Reed. This story was originally published at KOB.com

Man accused of killing 4-year-old girl charged with federal crimes

Tony Torrez, the man accused of shooting and killing 4-year-old Lilly Garcia in a road rage incident last week, has been charged with federal firearm and drug trafficking crimes by the Drug Enforcement Administration.

A federal criminal complaint charges Torrez with marijuana possession with intent to distribute and carrying a firearm while committing drug trafficking crimes.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office in Albuquerque say Albuquerque Police Department detectives watched Torrez load “items” into a car at his house, which a woman then drove away in. Police arrested Torrez shortly thereafter in a separate Lexus sedan. Police obtained warrants to search both vehicles and Torrez’s home.

When the warrant was executed, APD found shoe boxes filled with money, marijuana and THC oil wax at Torrez house, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office. The DEA then obtained a federal warrant to seize the items and cash.

When warrants were executed on the two vehicles, agents allegedly found money and a small amount of marijuana in the Lexus. In the Toyota, agents found large bags of marijuana, two revolvers, two rifles, a bulletproof vest, suspected cocaine and paraphernalia.

The money taken from Torrez’s home and the two vehicles totaled $64,000.

If convicted of the two federal charges, he faces at least five years in federal prison. The firearm charge carries a mandatory five-year minimum sentence and the marijuana trafficking charge carries a maximum of five years.

Torrez is currently being held at the Metropolitan Detention Center on a $650,000 cash bond for his state charges: first-degree murder, aggravated battery with a deadly weapon, assault with intent to commit a violent felony, shooting from a motor vehicle, child abuse resulting in death and tampering with evidence.

His federal charges carry a no-bond hold.

This story originally appeared at KOB.com

APD Officer Daniel Webster dies from injuries

Albuquerque Police Department Officer Daniel Webster died from his injuries at the University of New Mexico Hospital early Thursday, the department has confirmed.

Officer Webster was shot multiple times during a traffic stop in southeast Albuquerque on Oct. 21. He died around 2:30 a.m. Thursday.

Watch: Press Conference on Officer Webster’s Death

Albuquerque Police Chief Gorden Eden released a statement Thursday morning:

“It is with deep sorrow that I inform you our colleague and brother, Officer Dan Webster, has succumbed to the injuries that he sustained during a traffic stop on October 21, 2015. Officer Webster fought valiantly for his life, however, his injuries were too severe.

Officer Webster was the very best example of a life committed to public service, through his service to our country and to our community. He leaves a legacy of excellence and commitment, and we honor his life through our ongoing service to our community. Though our own hearts are heavy, please continue to pray for his wife and their family as they endure this unimaginable loss.”

Webster, 47, served with APD for nearly nine years and was named APD Officer of the Year in 2013. He was the Southeast Area Command representative for the Albuquerque Police Officers Association and recently returned to the field because of an officer shortage within the department.

Before becoming an officer, he served as a paratrooper in the U.S. Army for 20 years before retiring.

He was honored in September 2013 for giving CPR to a baby who was not breathing, saving the child’s life.

He underwent multiple surgeries at UNM Hospital in the hours after the shooting and remained in the hospital’s intensive care unit for the next seven days.

Webster’s wife is a Bernalillo County sheriff’s deputy.

“Today our hearts are heavy as we grieve the loss of APD officer Daniel Webster,” Albuquerque Mayor Richard Berry said. “Officer Webster served our city and our nation with distinction, honor and courage. I extend my deepest sympathy and prayers to Officer Webster’s wife and family and I ask our community to come together as we mourn his passing and remember the sacrifice that he and his family made to keep us safe. Keep the men and women of APD close to your hearts today and always.”

The Albuquerque Police Officers Association today released a statement Thursday afternoon:

“Today our community lost one of its true heroes, a man who gave everything to serve and protect the people of Albuquerque. To call Daniel Webster an exceptional officer would be an understatement. He represented the very best of our profession. He worked tirelessly to keep our streets safe and always went above and beyond to help the community and his fellow officers. He was a role model, a protector, a friend, and we were proud to have him serve on the APOA board working on behalf of the rank and file officers of the Albuquerque Police Department.”

The police union encourages the public to display white and blue ribbons as part of the “We are Albuquerque, Let’s Take Our City Back” campaign, which represents support of the Albuquerque community and the officers who protect it.

Gov. Susana Martinez also issued a statement about Webster’s death Thursday:

“My husband and father were both law enforcement officers and this cold-blooded murder hits close to home and breaks my heart thinking about the pain the family is enduring. We must all remember that Officer Webster lost his life working to keep us safe from harm. Because of a senseless act of violence, his wife and children are left without a husband and a father. We have lost a hero and I ask all New Mexicans to join me and Chuck in praying for Officer Webster’s family and friends.”

HOW TO HELP WEBSTER’S FAMILY

In the days after the shooting, community members and local businesses stepped up to help Officer Webster and his family.

Metro Papa John’s locations donated $6,000 and Pizza 9 donated $7,000 of profits from pizza sales on Monday and Wednesday, respectively.

Other restaurants like Bubba’s 33 and Crab N’ Draft also contributed profits toward the fund set up for Webster.

The APOA has set up an account for his family at Wells Fargo. Donations can be made to the Officer Dan Webster Fund #8138663789. Gift card donations for the family and well wishes can be dropped off or mailed to the main APD station at 400 Roma NW, Albuquerque, NM 87102 – Attn: Chief’s Office, Officer Webster.

An official GoFundMe page has also been set up for Officer Webster.

New Mexico State Police, Albuquerque Police Department Cadet Class 114 and BCSO Cadet Class 36 are holding a fundraiser for Webster’s family Sunday, Nov. 1 from 10 a.m. – 2 p.m. at the Royal Car Wash, located at 11517 Central Ave. NE in Albuquerque.

Albuquerque Religious and Clergy United is planning an interfaith vigil Friday at 3 p.m. at the Walgreen’s at Eubank and Central, the site of Webster’s shooting.

Friday, Nov. 6, the staff at Officer Webster’s old barber shop, Deuces, will give free haircuts to anyone in law enforcement or the military.  For paying customers, Deuces owner James Ortega says they will donate 50 percent of the proceeds to Webster’s family.

SUSPECT TO REMAIN JAILED PENDING TRIAL

Albuquerque police said Officer Webster stopped 34-year-old Davon Lymon on Oct. 21 for driving a motorcycle with a stolen license plate. While attempting to arrest him, the criminal complaint states Lymon fired six rounds at Webster, striking him several times, including in the face near his chin.

Lymon was not supposed to have a gun due to previous violent felony convictions, including voluntary manslaughter in the death of 20-year-old Ronald Chanslor Jr., who was the grandson of the founder of Blake’s Lotaburger.

Lymon is currently facing federal weapons charges. State charges against Lymon are also expected to be filed.

Bernalillo County District Attorney Kari Brandenburg said she and her office would move on those charges “in the near future,” but since he is being held in federal custody after his first federal appearance Tuesday, Brandenburg said the DA’s Office would wait to file charges so as to not start the 10-day discovery limit of the Case Management Order.

Brandenburg’s office was adorned with darkened badges and blue ribbons Thursday in Webster’s honor.

“As District Attorney, I am deeply concerned about the violent events which have recently taken place in our community,” Brandenburg wrote in a statement. “We are all working diligently to hold the accused accountable, and we stand by those who pledge to stop the violence in our community.”

-With Elizabeth Reed. This story was originally published at KOB.com