Tag Archives: Santa Fe County

Man gets $70K settlement in NM mistaken ID arrest

A New Mexico county is paying a $70,000 settlement to a man who was arrested and then jailed for several days after being mistaken for another man with the same name.

Attorney John Day, who represents Anthony Ortiz of Rio Rancho, says a police officer arrested his client in 2009 because a database record on an arrest warrant included Ortiz’s Social Security number.

The warrant was for another man who allegedly failed to appear in court.

The Albuquerque Journal reports (http://bit.ly/10qhEfU ) the warrant lacked a Social Security number, so a secretary checked other documents to complete the database record. The secretary inserted Ortiz’s Social Security number after finding it on a log of an unrelated 911 call he made years ago when he lived in Santa Fe County.

The newspaper reports the county confirmed the settlement amount but declined to comment on the deal.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Treasure hunt for quirky trader's hidden gold plays on in New Mexico

For more than a decade, he packed and repacked his treasure chest, sprinkling in gold dust and adding hundreds of rare gold coins and gold nuggets. Pre-Columbian animal figures went in, along with prehistoric “mirrors” of hammered gold, ancient Chinese faces carved from jade and antique jewelry with rubies and emeralds.

Forrest Fenn was creating a bounty, and the art and antiquities dealer says his goal was to make sure it was “valuable enough to entice searchers and desirable enough visibly to strike awe.”

Occasionally, he would test that premise, pulling out the chest and asking his friends to open the lid.

“Mostly, when they took the first look,” he says, “they started laughing,” hardly able the grasp his amazing plan.

Was Fenn really going to give this glistening treasure trove away?

Three years ago, he lay two of his most beloved pieces of jewelry in the chest: a turquoise bracelet and a Tairona and Sinu Indian necklace adorned with exotic jewels. At the bottom of the chest, in an olive jar, he placed a detailed autobiography, printed so small a reader will need a magnifying glass. After that, he says, he carted the chest of loot, now weighing more than 40 pounds, into the mountains somewhere north of Santa Fe and left it there.

Next, Fenn self-published a memoir, “The Thrill of the Chase,” distilling the autobiography and, intriguingly, including a poem that he says offers clues to lead some clever — or lucky — treasure hunter to the bounty.

It wasn’t long before word of the hidden trove got out, and the publicity has caused a mini-gold rush in northern New Mexico.

But it has also set off a debate: Has Fenn truly hidden the treasure chest or was this, for the idiosyncratic, publicity-loving 82-year-old who loves to tell tales, just another way to have fun, a great caper to bolster his legacy?

One friend, Michael McGarrity, an author and former Santa Fe County sheriff’s deputy, acknowledges it could be “a private joke,” though he believes “Forrest has certainly buried something.” If it was the treasure he saw, well, “it really is quite an astonishing sight to see.”

There certainly seems to be no shortage of believers, including Doug Preston, whose novel “The Codex” about a notorious treasure hunter and tomb robber who buries himself and his treasure as a final challenge to his three sons, is loosely based on Fenn’s story.

“I’ve seen the treasure. I’ve handled it. He has had it for almost as long as I’ve known him. It’s real. And I can tell you that it is no longer in his vault,” says Preston.

“I am 100 percent sure that he really did go out and hide this thing. I am actually surprised that anyone who knows him would think he was blowing hot air. It is just not his personality. He is not a tricky, conspiratorial, slick or dishonest person at all.”

Fenn says his main goal is to get people, particularly children, away from their texting devices and looking for adventure outdoors.

But probably few are …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

NM art teacher recalled in fatal stabbing case

Friends say 21-year-old Victoriano “Mo” Moises Byrne-Gonzales was an expectant father and aspiring artist who had just been promoted to assistant director at his Santa Fe preschool. But that ended the night of Dec. 2, 2011, when he suffered a fatal stab wound.

Prosecutors say it was the tragic result of his effort “to do the right thing” when he saw a woman he didn’t know getting beaten by her boyfriend. He died at the scene.

The suspect in the stabbing, Adrian Gonzales, 31, of Dixon, is now on trial in District Court in the death of Byrne-Gonzales, for allegedly assaulting his then girlfriend Natasha Romero and for allegedly stabbing and injuring Santiago Cordova, a friend of Byrne-Gonzales.

On Thursday, prosecutors played taped county jail phone conversations between Gonzales and Romero, recorded shortly after the arrest. Jurors heard an angry Gonzales tell Romero that he had just made “the ultimate sacrifice” for her.

According to the conversations recorded from the Santa Fe County Jail, Gonzales tells Romero he was facing life in prison and that Byrne-Gonzales and Santiago Cordova were attacking him after his fight with Romero. “You better love me for 30 (expletive) years of my life,” Gonzales is heard telling a crying Romero who apologizes repeatedly for the altercation.

According to authorities, Byrne-Gonzales was fixing his car when he heard Romero shout, “You’re hurting me,” and saw the two fighting at the Butterfly Springs Mobile Home Park in Pojoaque.

“We saw a male pounding on a female up against a wall,” his brother-in-law, Chris Chavez testified this week. Chavez was with Byrne-Gonzales while the two fixed a car window, he said.

Byrne-Gonzales and Cordova quickly ran to the woman’s aid, Chavez told jurors. But minutes later he saw Byrne-Gonzales return with the fatal wound to the neck. Cordova also was stabbed in the back, Santa Fe County sheriff’s investigators said.

Hours later, Gonzales, a convicted drug trafficker, was arrested on Interstate 25 and charged with first-degree murder, aggravated battery with a deadly weapon and battery on a household member.

Defense attorney Megan Dorsey said, however, her client was acting in self-defense and had confused the men with two others who had burglarized Romero’s mother’s home.

Dorsey told jurors …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News