New Mexico

APD: 14-year-old arrested in pedestrian’s murder; death of different teen led police to suspect

Albuquerque police arrested a 14-year-old boy Wednesday who is accused of running a man over several times in northeast Albuquerque last Friday afternoon.

14-year-old Matthew Jaramillo faces murder, stolen vehicle and tampering with evidence charges in the death of 46-year-old Richard Sisneros, who died at UNMH after he was run over. Continue reading

APD: 14-year-old arrested in pedestrian’s murder; death of different teen led police to suspect

Albuquerque police arrested a 14-year-old boy Wednesday who is accused of running a man over several times in northeast Albuquerque last Friday afternoon.

14-year-old Matthew Jaramillo faces murder, stolen vehicle and tampering with evidence charges in the death of 46-year-old Richard Sisneros, who died at UNMH after he was run over.

APD spokesman Tanner Tixier said officers learned of Jaramillo’s involvement while investigating a suspicious death, when a 15-year-old male arrived at Kaseman Hospital with a gunshot wound Wednesday. He later died at the hospital. Tixier says police are treating his death as suspicious at this point, but have not ruled out homicide.

A criminal complaint for Jaramillo’s arrest says Jaramillo was driving a stolen SUV that day, picked up a prostitute off Central and drove to a parking lot in the 200 block of Virginia SE to ditch the vehicle.

A man, identified by neighbors at Sisneros, started yelling at Jaramillo to leave the parking lot and stood in front of the stolen vehicle. The complaint states Jaramillo told police he tried to get Sisneros to move, but he wouldn’t, so Jaramillo ran him over.

He also admitted to police, according to the criminal complaint, that he dragged Sisneros down the road in an attempt to “detach” him from the vehicle near the intersection of Virginia and Chico NE. Witnesses said Jaramillo drove back over him up to three times.

Jaramillo then allegedly then ditched the vehicle behind a four-plex near General Arnold and Central SE. But when he went back to get the vehicle, it was gone, according to the criminal complaint.

Sisneros died early the next morning.

Police were able to identify Jaramillo as the suspect in Sisneros’ death when on Wednesday, they responded to a home in the 12000 block of Central SE, where they found the vehicle in which the 15-year-old boy was transported to Kaseman Hospital.

When officers interviewed the people at that home, they said Jaramillo had stayed there on the night he allegedly ran Sisneros over and that he admitted to killing the man.

It was after that police were able to pick up Jaramillo, interview him and arrest him.

APD spokesman Tanner Tixier said the cases are not connected save the people involved.

Pounds of pot, $20K in cash found in murdered Durango student’s home; suspected coke found in suspects’ vehicles

Investigators found a little more than 9 pounds of black-market marijuana and around $20,000 in cash in the room of the man shot and killed in Durango early Tuesday and several grams of suspected cocaine in the suspects’ vehicles.

Four people were arrested in connection to 20-year-old Samuel Gordon’s shooting death. Police said Wednesday that one of the suspects knew Gordon had a large amount of marijuana in the house.

Investigators from Durango PD, the Colorado Bureau of Investigations and the La Plata County Sheriff’s Office executed search warrants at Gordon’s home and on two of the vehicles that belonged to the suspects.

They say they found the marijuana and cash in Gordon’s room – packaged up in bags and jars. Durango police said it was “obvious” the marijuana was being sold on the black market.

Police said detectives found 5.5 grams of a white powdery substance that they suspect is cocaine in the suspects’ cars. It is being tested for positive identification it is cocaine.

Officers have already arrested four suspects – all from the Phoenix area: 19-year-old Kodi Kuauhtli, 22-year-old Alvin Flores, 20-year-old Daniel Wright and 21-year-old Kuauhtleko Garcia.

Three of them went into the house through an unlocked patio door armed with guns, according to police.

Police say the incident remains under investigation and have set up a tip line at 970-382-5029 for anyone with more information to call.

Police: Person shot and killed near San Antonio carjacked man in Albuquerque earlier Thursday

A person shot and killed by law enforcement during a traffic stop along I-25 near San Antonio is the same suspect in an armed carjacking that happened Thursday morning in Albuquerque, police say.

Southbound I-25 has been closed since around 1:30 p.m. Thursday after the shooting, which happened just before 12:30.

Socorro County sheriff’s deputies attempted to stop a vehicle near the San Antonio exit. New Mexico State Police spokesman Sgt. Chad Pierce said shots were fired during the traffic stop and officers returned fire, striking a person in the vehicle. A sheet was seen covering a body outside a vehicle at the scene. SCSO deputies and NMSP officers were involved in the shooting, but it’s unclear who fired the fatal shots.

Albuquerque police said Thursday evening the person shot carjacked a person at knifepoint around 11 a.m. near the intersection of 6th and Central. The carjacking victim suffered a cut on his hand in the incident.

Motorists are being redirected onto other roads in the area and have been asked to reduce speed, obey posted signs and watch for emergency personnel.

No further information has been released at this time; stay with KOB Eyewitness News 4 and KOB.com for updates.

Albuquerque Trump protests were mostly peaceful, but unruly people caused late violence

Raw reel from Donald Trump protests, riots in Albuquerque from Blair Miller on Vimeo.

A reel of my raw video from the 05/24/2016 protests and riots at the Donald Trump rally in Albuquerque

The news cycle of the past 24 hours in Albuquerque and worldwide has been dominated by Tuesday’s Donald Trump rally at the Albuquerque Convention Center and the mayhem that followed it.

The 24-hour American news media has continually looped video of people running over police cars, throwing rocks at horseback-mounted officers, fighting and getting inundated with smoke from canisters and pepper spray.

What remains unexplained in many of these reports is that the initial protest and the violence that ensued after the rally generally involved different groups of people. Continue reading

4 arrested or cited at ABQ Trump rally; police seek info for more arrests

Four people were arrested or cited and about a dozen were detained at the Albuquerque Donald Trump rally Tuesday, Albuquerque police said Wednesday.

Three people arrested and cited were all inside the Albuquerque Convention Center, where Trump’s rally was held. Another was arrested outside.

Police say two juveniles inside the rally were cited and released to their parents. Continue reading

Damage to buildings, OT for cops and firefighters will cost taxpayers $50K after Trump rally

The city of Albuquerque says damage from unruly protests that followed Tuesday’s Donald Trump rally, combined with overtime for police officers and dispatch workers, will cost taxpayers at least $50,000.

An estimated 8,000 people attended the Trump rally and 1,000 people are estimated to have protested outside. Continue reading

FBI: Kidnapped child found dead in Shiprock; suspected abductor arrested

SAN JUAN COUNTY, N.M. – The FBI arrested a man Tuesday evening in connection to the abduction and death of an 11-year-old girl who was kidnapped in San Juan County Monday afternoon and whose body was found Tuesday morning.

FBI spokesman Frank Fisher says Ashlynne Mike’s body was located about 6 miles south of the Shiprock monument around 11:30 a.m. Continue reading

Graphic lapel camera video released of APD shooting that left man likely brain-dead, 10 officers on leave

After 11 months, the Albuquerque Police Department on Friday released lapel video and reports from an officer-involved shooting in southwest Albuquerque last May that put 10 APD officers on administrative leave and left the suspect who was shot likely brain-dead.

On May 28, 2015, APD officers tried to pull over Rodrigo Garcia, who was then 20 years old and allegedly driving a stolen car, near 62nd Street and Trujillo SW. Continue reading

DOJ report: UNM’s sexual assault policies not compliant with Title IX, need improvement

The U.S. Department of Justice Friday announced that the University of New Mexico’s handling of sexual harassment and assault reports by students does not comply with federal law and said many students are reluctant to report such matters because they lack confidence in the school’s response.

The Justice Department had investigated the university since December 2014 after a series of on-campus incidents and looked at UNM’s policies and practices for preventing sex crimes and for investigating and responding to students’ complaints.

The university worked in the months afterward to create campaigns aimed at stopping sexual violence, including the LoboRESPECT program. It also in the past had pointed to a task force on sexual violence it created in 2014 as showing the university was working toward solutions.

The report from the DOJ’s Civil Rights Division and Educational Opportunities Section, which was delivered to UNM President Robert Frank Friday, says that despite “strengthened” programs and responses to the issues, the university remains out of compliance with Title IX and Title IV.

The letter says students, faculty and staff “lacked basic understanding about reporting options, duties and obligations, as well as where to turn for help.”

The Justice Department also found “significant” gaps in training and procedures when it came to investigating sexual harassment and assault allegations, which it said led to confusion, delays and distress.

The report also found that students had difficulty finding support at the university after incidents, which sometimes led to negative impacts in the classroom and even altogether withdrawal from the university.

The DOJ’s conclusion to the report notes five pointed measures UNM will have to put in place in order to comply with Title IX:

  • Provide comprehensive and effective training to all students, faculty and staff that gives notice of UNM’s prohibition on sexual harassment, including sexual assault; information about reporting options, duties and obligations; details on where to go for assistance; and information on grievance procedures and potential outcomes;
  • Revise UNM’s policies, procedures and investigative practices to provide a grievance procedure that ensures prompt and equitable resolution of sexual harassment and sexual assault allegations;
  • Adequately investigate or respond to all allegations by students who have alleged sexual assault or sexual harassment, including allegations of retaliation for reporting sexual assault or sexual harassment;
  • Take prompt and effective steps to eliminate a hostile environment, prevent its reoccurrence and address its effects; and
  • Ensure that the individuals designated to coordinate Title IX efforts receive adequate training and coordinate these efforts effectively.

The Justice Department said it will continue to work with the university to implement the necessary changes, and said UNM was fully cooperative with its investigation.

“Our findings reveal how a flawed system for responding to sexual assault fails all those involved – from victims seeking adequate protection, to accused students demanding fair hearings, to faculty looking for clear instruction,” said Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General Vanita Gupta, head of the department’s Civil Rights Division, in a news release.

The Associated Press reported earlier this month that the number of sexual assault and harassment reports at UNM tripled between 2014 and 2015, though the university attributed the rise to better education and reporting awareness. Staff members have been trained over the past year on how to deal with such reports.

“UNM is not alone in trying to deal with one of the most difficult problems on today’s college campuses,” President Robert G. Frank said in a press release from the university after the report was announced. “While we respect the efforts of the DOJ, we believe its report is an inaccurate and incomplete picture of our university. It is a brief snapshot in time that came on the heels of a high profile and widely publicized accusation of a sexual assault involving UNM students. Even so, we receive it in a spirit of cooperation and pledge to continue our campus wide improvements to combat this complex issue.”

“The DOJ’s findings are deeply troubling, and they highlight the complexity of these issues,” said New Mexico Attorney General Balderas. “We have to do a better job of protecting our students’ civil rights and providing them with safe environments conducive to learning. This trend is unacceptable, and I am committed to working with all stakeholders to help address these issues.”