Man With AK-47 Killed by Sniper

Posted by | Posted in New Mexico Court Records | Posted on 19-01-2012

The man Albuquerque police shot and killed Tuesday � the 14th in 20 months � was a robbery suspect with a long criminal record who officials say refused to drop what turned out to be an AK-47. After a short standoff with police, a SWAT sniper fired more than once, killing Michael Marquez, 31, in an open field near an apartment building, according to police. Marquez, a convicted rapist, was a member of the notorious MS-13 gang, known for its violence, Police Chief Ray Schultz said. About 10 to 15 family members gathered at the scene of the shooting near Central and 60th SW, crying and hugging each other. Bill Marquez, the suspect�s brother, told a Journal photographer that just because someone is criminal does not mean they �should be treated like an animal.� The incident began around 10:40 am Tuesday, when detectives working a Crime Stoppers tip regarding a man suspected in three armed robberies began watching Marquez, Schultz said. Schultz said robbery detectives had gathered intelligence on Marquez and that confidential informants had confirmed his identity and whereabouts. Detectives were watching Marquez at the apartment, just north of Central, when they spotted a woman who Schultz said was a known acquaintance of Marquez and pulled her over. When the woman was being pulled over, other detectives spotted Marquez walking out of the apartment on 60th Street. Marquez had spotted police, seemed �agitated� and began making comments to them about not going back to
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Shot Fired at UNMH

Posted by | Posted in New Mexico Court Records | Posted on 21-12-2011

By Jeff Proctor Journal Staff Writer Lomas Boulevard looked like a staging ground for a military offensive Tuesday afternoon as police searched for a man who fled UNM Hospital after he allegedly beat his girlfriend and fired at least one shot inside the pediatrics unit. The hospital and much of the UNM campus were on lockdown as SWAT officers, detectives and officers in camouflage and carrying assault rifles spread throughout the area looking for Cesar Dominguez-Garcia. More than 100 officers from at least three agencies responded to the scene within minutes of the callout. None of the bullets from Dominguez-Garcia’s semiautomatic handgun struck anyone, Police Chief Ray Schultz said about an hour after the 3:10 pm incident. Police on Tuesday night were still searching for Dominguez-Garcia, who they say is a member of the Southside gang. UNMH security photos and video showed he had left the hospital and fled west across Yale on foot after firing the gun. Schultz did not know how badly the girlfriend was injured. Dominguez-Garcia and his girlfriend had gone to the hospital with their child, who was admitted as a patient in the pediatrics unit on the sixth floor of the Barbara and Bill Richardson Pavilion, according to police. The child’s age was not released. Shortly after 3 pm, Dominguez-Garcia inexplicably “went off,” Schultz said, and began beating his girlfriend around the face, chest and arms. Members of the woman’s family intervened and separated the two, the chief

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Citizen Complaints Against Police Subject To Public…

Posted by | Posted in New Mexico Court Records | Posted on 07-12-2011

NM Appeals Court Orders Disclosure of Records in Police Case By Barry Massey/The Associated Press Tuesday, 17 August 2010 13:30 Court rules citizen complaints against police are public records and subject to public disclosure SANTA FE — Citizen complaints brought against police are subject to public disclosure, according to a state Court of Appeals ruling that reinforces a New Mexico sunshine law granting access to government records. The court ruled against the state Department of Public Safety, which refused to release complaints against one of its law enforcement officers on grounds that they were confidential personnel records. In a unanimous ruling on Monday, the court disagreed and said the complaints were not covered by exceptions in the Inspection of Public Record Act that provide for the confidentiality of “matters of opinion in personnel files” and “letters of reference concerning employment.” At issue was a public records request filed by a former captain with the state Motor Transportation Police Division, Charles Cox, who was fired in 2005 for making a racist comment about a patrolman who was black and for discrimination against a female employee. In 2006, Cox requested complaints that citizens had brought against the patrolman. Cox sued the department for not releasing the records and he contended that his firing was retaliation for exercising his right to free speech. A federal court ruled against Cox’s civil rights lawsuit but sent the public records
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Morning Meltdown 8-23-11

Posted by | Posted in New Mexico Court Records | Posted on 20-10-2011

Morning Meltdown August 23, 2011 Sharon West (age 14) Vanishes From Fannett, Texas on July 30, 2011 Video: www.youtube.com Facebook Page: www.facebook.com —- Donations pour in to help woman with bone cancer SALEM, Ore. — Donations are pouring in from across the country after the story of a local woman fighting bone cancer went viral on the Internet. Jan Cline was holding yard sales each weekend in her backyard to raise money to pay her medical bills, but the city of Salem shut her down after a neighbor complained. A city ordinance prohibits people from holding more than three yard sales a year. The city has the ordinance because it says in the past people had set up flea-market-type sales on their property. The story galvanized people who were outraged the city wouldn’t make an exception for Cline. salem.katu.com —- 5.3 magnitude earthquake hits Colorado The largest earthquake to hit Colorado in more than 40 years has shaken thousands of people in the southern part of the state and northern New Mexico. The magnitude 5.3 earthquake was recorded at 11:46 pm MDT Monday at Cokedale, which is about nine miles southwest of Trinidad and 180 miles south of Denver, according to the National Earthquake Information Center in Golden. Four aftershocks of magnitude 3.0 or greater have been recorded Tuesday. www.kwch.com —- Kansas warns against eating stolen meat Kansas agriculture officials are cautioning consumers to be careful after hundreds of pounds of beef and pork were
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What do you think of this Man charged in teen’s death faces forgery counts deported once but returned anyway?

Posted by | Posted in New Mexico Court Records | Posted on 01-05-2011

Question by I’m gonna start another riot: What do you think of this Man charged in teen’s death faces forgery counts deported once but returned anyway?
A man in jail facing a manslaughter charge in the death of a Mesa teen was indicted earlier this month on three counts of felony forgery.Manuel Contreras-Galdean is awaiting trial in the November 2008 death of Kelly Tracy, who was a student at Gilbert’s Highland High School.After his arrest, a deputy went to Contreras-Galdean’s Apache Junction workplace, SAK-Electric and Plumbing, 56 S. Meridian Road, to investigate Contreras-Galdean’s background. That visit led to Contreras-Galdean’s brother, Leonel Contreras-Galdean, 30, being arrested on suspicion of forgery and identity theft. Two others were also arrested.

On June 4, a Maricopa County grand jury charged Manuel Contreras-Galdean with three separate forgery counts: October 2003, November 2004 and September 2007. Two of the charges are related to verification of employment forms. The third charge is related to Arizona’s employee withholding form.

If found guilty, Manuel Contreras-Galdean could face probation or between one and two-and-a-half years in jail for each felony forgery count.

Manuel Contreras-Galdean has admitted to being an illegal immigrant who once voluntarily returned to Mexico after being picked up by authorities following a traffic stop in New Mexico.

According to court records, he pleaded not guilty to the forgery charges on June 15.

He has also pleaded not guilty to the aggravated assault and manslaughter charges he faces from the Nov. 15 crash in Mesa that killed Highland band member Kelly Tracy and injured her brother, Matt.

Mesa police say Manuel Contreras-Galdean was impaired by alcohol when he failed to yield as he was making a left turn at the intersection of Sossaman and Guadalupe roads.

According to court records, the 12-day manslaughter and aggravated assault trial is expected to start in October. Court records state he was offered a plea bargain for 10.5 years in jail. The plea bargain is set to expire in July. He could face up to 20 years in jail for the manslaughter charge alone.

http://www.eastvalleytribune.com/story/140844

Best answer:

Answer by Wounded Duck
I think your moniker says it all. Propaganda was a weapon of Josef Goebbels. Anyone who uses it in the same manner, to promote hatred, should achieve the same end he did.

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How To Search New Mexico Court Records Online

Posted by | Posted in New Mexico Court Records | Posted on 29-01-2011

New Mexico Court Records are now available online. If you are looking to search New Mexico Court Records, you need to read this article. How To Search New Mexico Court Records Online

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If you need to find court information about a man or woman from New Mexico, you should definitely perform a free online search right now. Most court records cost less than to purchase, which is a great deal in today’s poor economy. Don’t waste your time expecting the government to help you find the New Mexico Court Records you need – search online and purchase accurate, reliable court records about any person from New Mexico. Every year, thousands of people use an online records search to find important court information. For less than , you can find court records about anyone living anywhere in the United States, including New Mexico. Don’t wait any longer – click on the link to start searching New Mexico Court Records today and find the important information you have been looking for now!

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Whose responsibility is the health care of illegal immigrants?

Posted by | Posted in New Mexico Court Records | Posted on 09-06-2010

Fifty-one people — nearly all illegal immigrants — are facing a “life-or-death limbo” after a cash-strapped Atlanta charity hospital decided it must stop providing them free kidney dialysis treatments that were costing the hospital (or rather taxpayers) $50,000 per year.

That’s according to a heart-rending article in Saturday’s New York Times about the “excruciating choices” faced by Atlanta’s Grady hospital upon closing its outpatient dialysis unit. Over the years, the unit has been overrun by illegal immigrants, and it has thus become a major financial drain on the “taxpayer-supported safety-net hospital,” the Times explained in its lengthy article: “The Breaking Point: Hospital Falters as Refuge for Illegal Immigrants.”

Who is to blame for this heart breaking situation?

Not surprisingly, the Times blames America’s heartless polices on health care and immigration. Or as the paper explains, the moral dilemma Grady has faced is “a stark reflection of what happens when the country’s inadequate health care system confronts its defective immigration policy.”

Interestingly, though, the Times’ mentions nothing about the responsibility of Mexico’s government toward its own citizens, whom it all but encourages to immigrate illegally to this country. (Most of the illegal immigrants at Grady appear to have been from Mexico.)

Nor is there any suggestion that Mexico’s richest taxpayers, men like Carlos Slim – the world’s richest man and a major Times shareholder) — ought to part with a tiny fraction of their fortunes (Slim’s worth $59 billion) to help with the dialysis treatments of their fellow Mexicans. Couldn’t some of Mexico’s vast oil revenues also help pay for the dialysis treatments?

Grady, for its part, has been in quite a moral quandary over its responsibility to the illegal immigrants. Upon closing its dialysis unit, it has gone onto spend tens of thousands of dollars per patient to pay for their dialysis elsewhere — and to even cover travel expenses to Mexico. However, hospital spokesmen all but acknowledge that at some point in the near future the funds will not be available to pay for dialysis. What’s more, it seems unlikely that these patients will be getting free dialysis back in Mexico.

That Mexico’s own government (and its richest citizens) are apparently unwilling to chip in to provide such care is interesting in one respect. In the past, Mexican officials have been full of outrage when one of their citizens in America has been sentenced to death — following a murder trial in which local authorities failed to notify Mexico’s consular officials that a Mexican citizen was arrested for murder.

In fact, Mexico appears to have used all its resources available — even going to international courts — to obtain justice for these criminals. Yet when it comes to poor Mexicans needing health care, neither Mexico’s government – nor its richest citizens – are anywhere to be found. The Times makes no effort to find them for comment, either.

Could it all be a reflection of Carlo Slim’s influence at the self-described “paper of record”? While an intriguing possibility, these omissions probably have more to do with the particular worldview embraced by the Times — one that blames America for the world’s problems, including a lack of free dialysis clinics for illegal immigrants.http://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2009/11/whose_responsibility_is_the_he.html

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