Rising Phoenix: A City’s Failure To Deal With Nuisance Properties And Code Enforcement; Progressive Pat To The Rescue Saying Squatters Have No Property Rights Ignoring Human Plight

On Wednesday, July 29, the Albuquerque Journal ran a story that the city “may take legal action” against the Rising Phoenix apartment complex. A link to the full Albuquerque Journal article is here:

https://www.abqjournal.com/1480773/city-may-take-landlord-to-court-ex-range-of-violations-at-the-rising-phoenix-apartment-complex-remain-unfixed.html

The Rising Phoenix is a 6 building apartment complex just north of the New Mexico Veterans Memorial located on Louisiana Blvd SE in the Trumbull Village area of Albuquerque. The apartments were built in 1975. According to its on line web page, the Rising Phoenix has 511 apartments offering 3 categories of apartments: 326 sq. ft. renting for $776 a month, 462 sq. ft. renting for $985 a month, and 753 sq. ft. renting for $1,087 a month.

https://www.apartments.com/rising-phoenix-albuquerque-nm/1kn8j16/

ENFORCEMENT ACTION

In October, 2020 the City of Albuquerque Code Enforcement Division of the Planning Department inspected the apartment complex and cited the Rising Phoenix for numerous housing code violations affecting occupancy. Those code violations included exposed electrical wiring, broken windows and doors, inoperable bathroom ventilation fans, bathrooms and kitchens without hot water, missing or non-working fire extinguishers, a hole in a second-story walkway, a missing gas meter and vacant apartments that had been occupied by “trespassers” engaged in “criminal activity.” City inspectors also found an accumulation of discarded items outside some buildings, including trash, old mattresses, weeds and syringes.

After the code violation citations were issued, the City Planning Department gave the property Mihail Koulakis of Texas time to make repairs and bring the property into compliance. On May 25, the City, not satisfied with the progress of improvements made entered into a “nuisance abatement agreement” with the apartment complex owner. The property owner agreed to make repairs, clean up the property and keep it maintained in exchange for the city not taking any further action. The nuisance abatement agreement calls for management to trim shrubbery and trees, install and maintain security cameras, post signs saying the property is monitored by security cameras, install no trespassing signs, and put up fencing to prevent unauthorized entry onto the premises. As long as the repairs set out in the agreement were made as scheduled the city agreed to defer all civil, criminal and administrative action until at least Oct. 6, 2020

On July 9, Albuquerque City Councilor Pat Davis, whose district the complex is in, visited with residents of the apartments. Davis said he saw that the apartment owner “had done absolutely nothing, so I asked city legal to move forward,” because waiting until October would put the residents at risk. Although there is currently an eviction freeze, Davis said, the residents have few options, particularly during the COVID pandemic and said:

“They’re supposed to stay home, and this isn’t a good place for that. … The point of the abatement agreement is to get the owner and the city to work together and, thus far, the owner has not upheld his end.”

On Friday, July 31, Maia Rodriguez, a spokeswoman for the city’s Planning and Environmental Health departments reported that the city is in negotiations with the property owner for non-compliance with an existing nuisance abatement agreement. According to Rodriguez, failure of the negotiations could result in the city filing a civil cause of action for nuisance abatement in court.

PROPERTY OWNER RESPONDS

On Wednesday, July 29, the Albuquerque Journal ran a story that the city “may take legal action” against the apartment complex. According to the story, Albuquerque attorney, Sean Calvert, said his client’s company, MKJS I and II, purchased the complex in 2018 as a “distressed” property and has already “put a whole lot of money into it.” According to Calvert, many of the violations and problems at the complex existed prior to his client’s purchase of the complex. Calvert asserted that the city bears some responsibility for not stopping homeless people who congregate at nearby Phil Chacon Park from entering the complex, and breaking into and vandalizing vacant apartments. According to Calvert:

“Police keep pulling [homeless] people out of Rising Phoenix and ushering them back across the property boundary, but then they come back, and break doors and windows to regain access.

When contacted by the Journal, a representative of the management team declined to provide information, including the number of people living in the complex and the number of units that are Section 8 or otherwise subsidized.

SQUATTERS HAVE NO PROPERTY RIGHTS

On Wednesday, August 12, KOB Channel 4 did an update report on the City’s efforts in demanding the owner of the Rising Phoenix Apartments clean up the property. It was reported that “squatters” who lived at the apartment are now concerned that they will have to find a new place to stay. According to an APD spokesperson, APD officers were dispatched to the property August 12 after reports of trespassing.

APD found a man with meth, two people with felony warrants and two others with misdemeanor warrants.

According to the City, the property managers have until August 17 to move people out of badly damaged buildings, put up fencing and hire security. City officials confirm Fannie Mae has allocated $2 million to the property managers to try and get the complex into compliance quickly.

One person identified as Christopher Krebsbach, admitted to being a meth user and living at the complex for free and said:

“I’m living in an abandoned apartment. … I’ve been here since March.”

Krebsbach said he was worried about police violating his civil liberties after what he saw and claimed:

“They were searched illegally because none of them, none of them all said it was OK to be searched. And many of them were hauled off – I believe we saw seven people. I feel as though [sending police] was a form of intimidation. [Where squatters will live if kicked out] … is something that we always worry about, all of us do. … Some more than others.”

City Councilor Pat Davis was interviewed and said it’s in the property owner’s right to call police to kick people out who are living there illegally.

https://www.kob.com/albuquerque-news/squatters-express-concerns-after-albuquerque-property-is-forced-to-clean-up/5824946/?cat=500

PROPERTY RIGHTS VERSUS HUMAN PLIGHT

Property rights are favored under the law and there is absolutely no question that “squatters” have no property rights of occupancy of another’s real property. It is the responsibility of the real property owner to take steps to have squatters removed. Eviction and removal of people who are squatters on another person’s property is in fact accomplished in any number of ways including personal intervention by the property owner, requesting the Sheriff’s Office or APD for assistance, filing criminal charges for trespassing and seeking removal and arrest. However, for an elected city councilor to intervene to enforce the real property rights of another and seeking news coverage for such matters is nothing more than a publicity stunt.

What is so damn laughable is that Mr. Progressive Pat Davis proclaims “it’s in the property owner’s right to call police to kick people out who are living there illegally” while ignoring the apparent desperate situation of the those that are squatting in empty apartments. Evictions are only part of the solution. The city has available any number of resources and programs and spends millions each year within the Department of Family and Community Services to deal with the homeless, including providing vouchers, temporary housing and drug addiction counseling, but Davis is more interested in just eviction of squatters. Pat Davis says nothing about what efforts are being made by the city to help those that are homeless and so desperate that they become squatters at the “Rising Phoenix.” Pat Davis has his eyes on the news camera and not the problem of squatters and the homeless.

PAT DAVIS CONTINUES WITH HIS PATTERN OF PUBLICITY SEEKING WAYS

It is more likely that not that it was City Councilor Pat Davis that alerted both the Albuquerque Journal as well as Channel 4 about the code enforcement action taken against the Rising Phoenix. Davis has an extensive history for seeking publicity under the pretense that he is doing something for his constituents with enforcement of the city’s code enforcement and nuisance abatement.

One of the first times he did so was back in 2018.

On November 14, 2018 Channel 4 did an “investigative report” about the cities’ efforts to take civil code enforcement action against motels on central that had hundreds of calls for service for a variety of crimes, including auto thefts, assaults, domestic violence and violent crimes such as rape and murder. You can view the report here:

https://www.kob.com/investigative-news/4-investigates-albuquerque-hotels-draw-hundreds-of-police-calls/5145408/?cat=500

It was reported that motels had become “magnets for crime” and nuisance properties under the law and city ordinances. The report featured City Council Pat Davis who talked about city ordinances and laws he has no real knowledge about.

Pat Davis said that for years, the city lacked a willingness to go after so-called nuisance properties. Davis knew that because he was part of the problem. Those years the city lacked a willingness was from 2010 to 2017 under the previous Berry Administration, but Davis did not disclose that fact.

Davis went so far as saying there’s a “new approach” which makes hotel owners more accountable for crimes on their property. No, Councilor Davis, it was not a “new” approach. It was an approach that was abandoned, Davis knew that but made no mention of it.

Davis went so far as to say:

“Neighbors are starting to demand we do more to address these problem properties and quite frankly we should. It’s not just the city fighting back, the court is willing to back us up … If you want a sort of scumbag motel in Albuquerque right now you look at what happened in the Sahara [hotel which is under a court order] and you realize that you could be next.”

Such bravado coming from a City Councilor who did absolutely nothing to help fund the Safe City Strike Force but voted repeatedly to fund the disastrous ART Bus project for millions and refusing to put it on the ballot.

SAFE CITY STRIKE FORCE WAS SOLUTION

From 2002 to 2009, the Safe City Strike Force was formed to combat blighted commercial and residential properties. Thirty (30) to forty-five (40) representatives from the Albuquerque Police Department, the Albuquerque Fire Department, the Fire Marshal’s Office, the Planning Department Code residential and commercial code inspectors, Family Community Services and the Bernalillo County District Attorney’s Office participated and comprised the strike force.

Seventy (70) to one hundred fifty (150) properties a week, both residential and commercial properties would be reviewed by the Safe City Strike Force. The Albuquerque City Council would be given weekly updates on the progress made in their districts on the nuisance properties identified by the Strike Force. The Safe City Strike Force routinely prepared condemnation resolutions for enactment by the Albuquerque City Council to tear down substandard buildings, including commercial buildings. Over 8 years, the Safe City Strike Force took civil enforcement action against some 6,500 properties, both commercial and residential.

From 2010 to 2017, Mayor Richard Berry and Chief Administrative Officer Rob Perry steadily dismantled the Safe City Strike Force to the point that it existed in name only with only a Director and a few code inspectors assigned to it.

In 2018, in his first budget ever submitted, Mayor Tim Keller made a firm commitment to reinstate the Safe City Strike Force when he requested $3.9 million for the city’s Code Enforcement Department and the Safe City Strike Force in the adopted 2018-2019 budget. $1.5 million in additional public safety spending was added by the city council. The Safe City Strike Force and the Planning Department received a funding bump of $425,000 for the 2018-2019 fiscal year. $125,000 was allocated to hire two additional code enforcement specialists. $300,000 was allocated to secure or demolish neglected structures.

SAFE CITY STRIKE FORCE SUCCESS

The success of the Safe City Strike Force is clear and unmistakable and can be summarized in part as follows:

TEAR-DOWNS AND BOARD UPS

The Safe City Strike Force was responsible for the tear down of an entire residential block of homes located at 5th Street and Summer in the Wells Park neighborhood area located north of downtown Albuquerque. There were a total of 21 abandoned and vacant, boarded up properties that could not be repaired, owned by one elderly woman who agreed allowed a tear down of the structures by the City.

A voluntary tear down of an entire strip mall was negotiated by the Strike Force. The strip mall had been boarded up for years, beyond repair, located near the former Octopus Car Wash on Menaul Street and Eubank. The strip mall was constantly being broken into, with fires being set by the homeless, and at one time a dead body was found at the location.

Two long vacant and vandalized restaurants, the Purple Plum and a Furr’s cafeteria, both on far North-East heights Montgomery, were torn down by the Safe City Strike Force.
One year, Albuquerque experienced a large spike in meth labs where almost 90 meth labs were found and identified and where the Safe City Strike Force was asked for assistance with contamination clean up.

CENTRAL MOTELS

The Safe City Strike Force required commercial property and motel owners to make repairs and they were required to reduce calls for service and address security on their properties.

The Safe City Strike Force took code enforcement action against 48 of the 150 motels along central and forced compliance with building codes and mandated repairs to the properties. The Central motels that were demolished were not designated historical and were beyond repair as a result of years of neglect and failure to maintain and make improvements.

Central motels that had historical significance to Route 66 were purchased by the City for renovation and redevelopment.

The Central motels that the Safe City Strike Force took action against included:

The Gaslight Motel (demolished)
The Zia Motel (demolished)
The Royal Inn (demolished)
Route 66 (demolished)
The Aztec Motel (demolished)
The Hacienda
Cibola Court
Super-8 (renovated by owner)
The Travel Inn (renovated by owner),
Nob Hill Motel (renovated by owner)
The Premier Motel (renovated by owner)
The De Anza (purchased by City for historical significance)
The No Name
The Canyon Road (demolished)
The Hilltop Lodge
American Inn (demolished)
The El Vado (purchased by City for historical significance and now renovated and reopened)
The Interstate Inn (demolished).

The Safe City Strike Force was responsible for the demolition of at least seven (7) blighted motels that were beyond repair.

When people were displaced by enforcement actions taken by the Safe City Strike Force, the City’s Family and Community Services Department would provide vouchers to the displaced and assist in locating temporary housing for them and making sure people were not thrown out onto the streets.

VIOLENT BARS

The Safe City Strike Force took action against violent bars on Central that were magnets for crime. Many Central bars have hundreds of calls for service a year placing a drain on law enforcement resources.

A few of the bars located on or near Central that were closed or torn down by the Safe City Strike Force include the Blue Spruce Bar, Rusty’s Cork and Bottle, the Last Chance Bar and Grill and Club 7. The Safe City Strike Force closed Club 7 and the owner was convicted of commercial code violations.

The city attorney’s office in conjunction with the Bernalillo County District Attorney’s office brought criminal charges against and convicted the Club 7 downtown Central Avenue bar owner that hosted a “rave” that allowed under age participants to mingle with adults and where a young girl was killed.

CONVENIENCE STORES

The Safe City Strike Force took enforcement action against a number of convenience stores on Central that had substantial calls for service to APD. In 2005, The Safe City Strike Force identified convenience stores that had an unacceptable number of “calls for service” which resulted in the convenience stores being considered a public nuisance by the Albuquerque Police Department (APD). Outdoor phones at the convenience stores used for illicit drug transactions were identified.

APD felt the convenience stores were relying upon APD to provide security at taxpayer’s expense rather than hiring their own private security company. In 2005, the Strike Force negotiate a stipulated settlement agreement with three major convenience store corporate owners of seventeen (17) convenience stores throughout Albuquerque and they agreed to pay for private security patrols.

FLEA MARKETS

The Safe City Strike Force was responsible for the closure of Louie’s Flea Market and the Star Flea Market, two Westside flea markets both on Old Coors Road South of Central. The flea markets brought down property values. Both flea markets had been around for decades and caused extreme traffic congestion on weekends they operated causing problems for the established or developing residential areas. Both flea markets were found by the Albuquerque Police Department to be locations where stolen property was being sold and both had an excessive number of calls for service.

In 2010, the previous Republican administration began to dismantle and reduce funding for the Safe City Strike Force. At the beginning of 2018, the Safe City Strike Force had one employee, its director, and the Safe City Strike Force existed in name only.

MAYOR KELLER’S “ADAPT” PROGRAM REPLACED SAFE CITY STRIKE FORCE

In July, 2019, Mayor Tim Keller announced the creation of the “Addressing Dilapidated and Abandoned Property Team” (ADAPT). The ADAPT program supposedly relies on new data to target the worst 100 nuisance properties in the city. The goal of the ADAPT program aims to get dilapidated and crime-riddled homes a fresh start. The program is part of the Fire Marshal’s office. Confidential sources within City Hall reported that Mayor Tim Keller and his City Attorney felt the Safe City Strike Force had too much of an “aggressive sounding title”, and they did not believe it fit into Keller’s “ONE ABQ” slogan. The city wanted to soften the approach to nuisance abatement and that is the primary reason for the ADAPT program.

Under the ADAPT program, city officials meet with homeowners and property owners to address crime and code enforcement problems in hopes of turning things around. According to the city, it has 124 properties enrolled in the ADAPT program and the city claims 96% of those property owners are working to fix the problems. According to Albuquerque Fire Rescue spokesperson Lt. Tom Ruiz:
“The whole premise of the ADAPT program is to help the property owners, not punish them.”

In the 2019-2020 approved City budget, a mere $711,000 was allocated for Mayor Keller’s ADAPT Program. Mayor Keller’s “ADAPT” program essentially replaced the funding of the Safe City Strike Force contained in the 2018-2019 fiscal budget. The Safe City Strike Force exists in memory only at city hall.

COMMENTARY AND ANALYSIS

It is pathetic that one lone City Councilor, especially the likes of Pat Davis actually thinks he is taken seriously when he complains about the living conditions of renters at an apartment complex that are out of sight and out of mind to the property owner that does not even live in the state of New Mexico. For the last 6 years, Davis has attempted to take action against many a nuisance property in within his District such as the Rising Phoenix, including trying to enact new ordinances, with little or no success.

Simply put, diplomacy and patience is often a waste of time with property owners who refuse to invest and keep their properties up to code. During his first term in office, Davis was repeatedly asked to take steps and fully fund and staff the Safe City Strike Force, but he refused thinking he had a better plan which resulted in plenty of press for him but no results. City Council President Pat Davis needs to stand down with his publicity seeking ways and allow the professionals within the City’s Attorney’s Office to take over. What Davis should be doing is demanding that the Mayor and City Attorney do their jobs when it comes to enforcing the nuisance abatement laws.

Mayor Tim Keller’s new “Addressing Dilapidated and Abandoned Property Team” (ADAPT) program is nothing more than extensively watered-down version of the Safe City Strike Force. ADAPT is essentially a “passive aggressive” approach by the Planning Department to deal with residential and commercial property owners. Such an approach usually does not work with out of state property owners as is evidenced by the Rising Phoenix. The Safe City Strike Force for a full 8 years showed immense success in dealing with meth labs, crack houses and magnets for crime, especially when legal action was taken by the city attorney’s office against slumlords.

What Mayor Keller and the City Attorneys office fail to understand is that the passage of time and the delay to make repairs to apartment complexes that should be made add nothing more than misery and a slogan of One ABQ is meaningless when their own quality of life is affected.

The City of Albuquerque has one of the strongest Nuisance Abatement Ordinances and New Mexico has some of the strongest state statutes in the country on nuisance abatement with court rulings defining nuisance. The law allows the City Attorney’s Office to take aggressive code enforcement action against slumlord’s blighted properties, both residential and commercial, that have become nuisances and magnets of crime resulting in calls for service to APD. Such calls are a drain on police resources. You can read the city ordinances and state statues in the postscript below.

Under existing ordinances, civil and criminal action can be taken against property owners and the properties that have become a nuisance and a danger to public safety. Under existing city ordinances, property owners can be cited for code violations for not maintaining their properties up to city codes. The city nuisance abatement laws provides that a magnet for crime property is one that has an extensive history of calls for service to the Albuquerque Police Department (APD). They are properties where crime occurs that would allow a District Court to declare the property a nuisance.

CONCLUSION

The City of Albuquerque and the State of New Mexico have some of the strongest nuisance abatement laws in the county. A summary of those laws are provided in the postscript below. Crime rates can be brought down with civil nuisance abatement actions that protect the public health, safety and welfare of the public. It is very disappointing that Mayor Tim Keller reneged on his decision to reinstate the Safe City Strike Force when the decision was made to replace the Safe City Strike Force with his own ADAPT program. The Strike Force was a proven and effective program and was recognized as a best practice nationally. Mayor Keller’s ADAPT program sends the wrong message that he wants city residents and property owners to be content and ADAPT to the fact the city really does not want to do anything about nuisance, substandard and abandoned properties.

As far as phony progressive City Councilor Pat Davis is concerned, he needs to step aside and allow the professionals at city hall to deal with nuisance laws as well as allow the city to step in and continue with its efforts to help and assist the homeless and the drug addicted who become squatters on other people’s properties.

NEWS UPDATE

On Friday, August 14, it was reported that the Rising Phoenix has been placed in receivership after the owner, Mihail Koulakis of Texas and his MKJS Investments I and II, relinquished control. On July 27, 2nd Judicial District Court Judge Erin B. O’Connell file a Court Order appointing Kathleen Danuser of the international company Greystar Real Estate Partners, as the receiver of the property. Fannie Mae, the Federal National Mortgage Association, is listed on the court filing as the Plaintiff and will be providing $2 million to Greystar to secure the property and make all necessary repairs and improvements to bring it into compliance city codes. Danuser will serve as the receiver until the court enters another order terminating or discharging her. She will be paid $1,000 a month, plus reimbursement for reasonable out-of-pocket expenses. The receiver is also authorized to eventually sell the property on behalf of the owner, subject to court approval.

“Among the violations described in the nuisance abatement agreement were exposed wiring and other electrical problems, broken windows and doors, bathrooms and kitchens without hot water, missing or nonworking fire extinguishers, and vacant apartments that had been occupied by trespassers engaged in “criminal activity.” According to the nuisance abatement agreement, between September 2018 and September 2019, Albuquerque police officers responded to complaints at the apartment complex that included aggravated assault, aggravated battery, arson, auto burglary, auto theft, breaking and entering, robbery, robbery with a deadly weapon, criminal damage to property, criminal trespass, larceny and various drug-related offenses.”

https://www.abqjournal.com/1486239/problemplagued-apartments-placed-in-receivership.html

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POSTSCRIPT ON THE LAW OF NUISANCE

NEW MEXICO STATUTES ON NUISANCE ABATEMENT

New Mexico statute defines a “public nuisance” as consisting “of knowingly creating, performing or maintaining anything affecting any number of citizens without lawful authority which is either:
“A. Injurious to public health, safety and welfare; or
B. Interferes with the exercise and enjoyment of public rights, including the right to use public property.
Whoever commits a public nuisance for which the act or penalty is not otherwise prescribed by law is guilty of a petty misdemeanor.”
(30-8-1, NMSA 1978, Public Nuisance defined).
The New Mexico legislature has also empowered municipalities very broad authority to define a nuisance, abate the nuisance and impose penalties and initiate civil causes of action.
State statute provides that “A municipality may by ordinance … define a nuisance, abate a nuisance and impose penalties upon a person who creates or allows a nuisance to exist. …”

(3-18-17 Nuisances and Offenses; Regulation or prohibition)

State statute also grants municipalities with broad powers and provides that:

“A municipality may:
A. sue or be sued; ….
F. protect generally the property of its municipality and it inhabitants;
G. preserve peace and order within the municipality; …”

(3-18-1 General Powers (of Municipality)”

Note that the creating, performing or maintaining a public nuisance is a crime under state law, which would be prosecuted in a magistrate court or metropolitan court. Under New Mexico law, a petty misdemeanor is the very least serious crime for which a person can be sentenced to time in jail. The sentence for a petty misdemeanor in New Mexico can never be more than six months in jail or a fine up to $500, is usually up to 30 days in jail and a $100 fine or both, depending on the offense and the penalties can also be suspended by the court.

Notwithstanding being a criminal charge, actions to abate a nuisance are civil actions that must be filed in state district court. New Mexico statutory law provides that any action for the abatement of a public nuisance shall be governed by the general rules of Civil Procedure.

(30-8-8, NMSA 1978 Abatement of a public nuisance.)

Under New Mexico law, “a civil action to abate a public nuisance may be brought, by verified complaint by any public officer or private citizen, in state district court of the county where the public nuisance exists, against any person, corporation or association of persons who shall create, perform or maintain a public nuisance.”

(30-8-8, B, NMSA 1978, Abatement of a public nuisance, emphasis added)

When a plaintiff prevails and proves that a nuisance exists and a judgment is given against a defendant in an action to abate a public nuisance, the district court can order the defendant responsible for the nuisance to pay all court costs and attorney fees for the plaintiff’s attorney.

(30-8-8, C, NMSA 1978, Abatement of a public nuisance, emphasis added)

The huge significance is that both public officials as well as private citizens can bring an action for nuisance abatement.

Another major distinction is the burden of proof between a criminal charge and a civil cause of action. A criminal charge requires the state to prove a defendant is guilty “beyond a reasonable doubt”. A civil case requires proof by “preponderance of the evidence” by a plaintiff.

In general, with few exceptions, only law enforcement or state prosecutors can bring petty misdemeanor charges for public nuisance. However, any private citizen or public official, such as a District Attorney or City Attorney, or any lay person with money for the court filing fee, can initiate a civil nuisance abatement action for injunctive relief and if they prevail can be awarded attorney’s fees and costs.

ALBUQUERQUE CITY ORDINANCES DEFINING NUISANCE

In 1994, exercising the authority granted to it by the state, the City of Albuquerque enacted its nuisance abatement ordinance and then amended it 2006 to add offenses under the state criminal code and city housing and construction codes.

The City of Albuquerque ordinance defines a nuisance property as “any parcel of real property, commercial or residential, on which …illegal activities occurs, or which is used to commit conduct, promote, facilitate, or aide the commission of … any … [crimes or housing code violations].” (See 11-1-1-3, city ordinance defining Public Nuisance)

The nuisance abatement ordinance lists misdemeanor and felony statutes and housing and commercial codes.

Albuquerque’s Nuisance Abatement Ordinance states:

“It shall be unlawful for any owner, manager, tenant, lessee, occupant, or other person having any legal or equitable interest or right of possession in real property … or other personal property to intentionally, knowingly, recklessly, or negligently commit, conduct , promote, facilitate, permit, fail to prevent, or otherwise let happen, any public nuisance in, on or using any property in which they hold any legal or equitable interest or right of possession.” (See 11-1-1-10, Public Nuisance Prohibited)

The City’s Uniform Housing Code defines a nuisance in part as “Any nuisance known at common law …” or “whatever is dangerous to human life or is detrimental to health, as determined by the health officer” or “any violation of the housing standards” required by the building and housing codes. (See 14-3-1-4, ROA 1994, Housing Code defining Nuisance).

In 2004 the city enacted the Vacant Building Maintenance Act which requires property owners to register their vacant buildings, repair them and keep them maintained. Albuquerque’s housing and commercial codes define substandard structures and there are provisions that allow inspections and civil code enforcement actions.

Under existing city ordinances, property owners can be cited for code violations for not maintaining their properties in compliance with city codes.

Under the nuisance abatement ordinance, aggressive code enforcement action against blighted properties, both residential and commercial, can be taken where it is found that that the properties have become a nuisance and magnets of crime resulting in calls for service to the Albuquerque Police Department.

The city’s nuisance abatement ordinance defines nuisance as:

“Any parcel of real property, commercial or residential, … on which
any of the following illegal activities occurs, or which is used to commit
conduct, promote, facilitate, or aide the commission of … any of
the following activities: …

At this point, the ordinance lists crimes in the state’s criminal code as well as the city’s building and construction codes.

(City of Albuquerque Nuisance Abatement Ordinance, Section 11-1-1-1, Section 11-1-1-3 of ordinance defining “Public Nuisance”)

The city’s nuisance abatement ordinance prohibits “public nuisances” as follows:

“It shall be unlawful for any owner, manager, tenant, lessee, occupant, or other person having any legal or equitable interest or right of possession in real property …or other personal property to intentionally, knowingly, recklessly, or negligently commit, conduct , promote, facilitate, permit, fail to prevent, or otherwise let happen, any public nuisance in, on or using any property in which they hold any legal or equitable interest or right of possession.”

(11-1-1-10 PUBLIC NUISANCES PROHIBITED, City of Albuquerque.)

The City of Albuquerque’s Uniform Housing Code also defines “nuisance” as:

“(1) Any nuisance known at common law …
(2) Any attractive nuisance which may prove detrimental to children whether in a building, on the premises of a building, or upon an unoccupied lot. This includes any abandoned wells, shafts, basements or excavations; abandoned refrigerators; or any structurally unsound fences or structures; or any lumber, trash, fences or debris which may prove a hazard for inquisitive minors.
(3) Whatever is dangerous to human life or is detrimental to health, as determined by the health officer.
(4) Overcrowding a room with occupants.
(5) Insufficient ventilation or illumination.
(6) Inadequate or unsanitary sewage or plumbing facilities
(7) Any violation of the housing standards set forth in this code.”
(14-3-1-4 ROA 1994 of Housing Code, Definitions)

NEW MEXICO CASE LAW ON DEFINING A NUISANCE

The New Mexico Supreme Court and the Court of Appeals has issued opinions and rulings on what constitutes a nuisance.

Under New Mexico court case law nuisances are classified as nuisances per se and nuisances in fact.

“A nuisance per se is generally defined as an act, occupation, or structure which is a nuisance at all times and under any circumstances, regardless of location or surroundings … [A] nuisance in fact is commonly defined as an act, occupation, or structure not a nuisance per se, but one which may become a nuisance by reason of circumstances, location, or surroundings.” (Koeber v. Apex-Albug Phoenix Express, 72 N.M. 4; 380 P.2d 14; 1963, New Mexico Supreme Court).

Further, it is well settled that a court may enjoin a threatened or anticipated nuisance, public or private, where it clearly appears that a nuisance will necessarily result from the contemplated act or thing which it is sought to enjoin. (Koeber v. Apex-Albug Phoenix Express, 72 N.M. 4; 380 P.2d 14; 1963, New Mexico Supreme Court).

A public nuisance must affect a considerable number of people or an entire community or neighborhood. (Environmental Improvement Div. v. Bloomfield Irrigation Dist., 108 N.M. 691, 778 P2d 438, New Mexico Court of Appeals 1989).

A common law “public nuisance” which is similar to the public nuisance statute, is the unreasonable interference with the right common to the general public, belonging to all members of the general public. It is not necessary that the entire community be affected by a public nuisance. If the nuisance will interfere with those coming in contact with the exercise of a public right or if the nuisance otherwise affects interests of the community at large. (State, ex rel, Village of Los Ranchos de Albuquerque v. City of Albuquerque, 889 P.2d 185, 119 NM 150.)

A public nuisance is a wrong that arises by virtue of unreasonable interference with the rights common to the general public. The Public nuisance statute applies to anything affecting “any number of citizens” meaning a considerable number of people or an entire community or neighborhood. (NMSA 1978, 30-8-1 and State, ex rel, Village of Los Ranchos de Albuquerque v. City of Albuquerque, 889 P.2d 185, 119 NM 150.
Public nuisance is one which adversely affects public health, welfare, or safety. A public nuisance affects the rights of citizens as part of the public and must affect a considerable number of people or an entire community or neighborhood. A continuing nuisance is one which occurs so often that it can fairly be said to be continuing although it is not constant and unceasing. (Padilla v. Lawrence, 101 NM 556, cert. denied 683 P.2d 1341, 101 NM 419.

The fact that acts constituting a public nuisance are punishable criminally does not deprive a court of its power to enjoin a public nuisance where there is ample proof of irreparable injury to public health, welfare, or safety. (Town of Clayton v. Mayfield. 82 NM 596, (involved operation of a junk yard that was unfenced and contained old cars). See also, State, ex rel, Marron v. Compere, 103 P.2d 273, 44 NM 414.

For a related blog article see:

“New Approach” To Combat Nuisance Properties Nothing New At All

Biden Picks Harris For Vice Presidential Running Mate

It’s official. Former Vice President Joe Biden has selected first term California Senator Kamela Harris as his running mate for Vice President. She is an excellent choice and her campaign skills and talents are sorely needed. What a striking contrast she will make to Vice President Mike Pence when they debate. “A Programmed Machine” vs a “Metal Shredder”.

Kamala Harris won her first election in 2003 when she became San Francisco’s district attorney. In 2010, she was elected California’s attorney general, the first woman and Black person to hold the job, and focused on issues including the foreclosure crisis. She declined to defend the state’s Proposition 8, which banned same-sex marriage and was later overturned by the U.S. Supreme Court.

In choosing Harris, age 55, Biden has made history by selecting a qualified woman and person of color and embracing a former rival from the Democratic primary who is familiar with the scrutiny and rigors of a national campaign. Born to a Jamaican father and Indian mother, she is without a doubt broken more than a few barriers.

Her law enforcement background has prompted skepticism from some progressives, which always seems to be the case whenever progressives are confronted with having to vote for a prosecutor for any elective office. Senator Harris’ record as California Attorney General and before that as District Attorney in San Francisco was heavily scrutinized by progressives during the Democratic primary. Her record as a strong and effective prosecutor turned many progressives and younger Black voters off who saw her as out of step on issues of racism in the legal system and police brutality. The truth is, all too often law enforcement and aggressive prosecutors are labeled as “conservative” and therefore unacceptable to any progressive litmus test.

During her run for President, Kamala Harris tried to strike a balance with progressives, declaring herself a “progressive prosecutor” who backs law enforcement reforms. Truth is crime must be prosecuted and not ignored because of a person’s background nor color. It also includes prosecuting law enforcement who do not follow the constitution and who violate people’s civil rights. The prosecution of crime must be color blind, whether its skin color or blue uniform. The criminal justice system and law enforcement need reform, as does sentencing reform, but that does not mean total dismantlement of the criminal justice system being advocated by the “defund the police” movement.

Grab yourself some refreshments and get ready to rumble!

Poll: 67% of ABQ Residents Think Crime Is Getting Worse; Released Crime Stats Confirm Crime Has Gotten Worse Under Mayor Tim Keller

The “Citizen Satisfaction Survey” is a research study commissioned by the City of Albuquerque to assess residents’ perceptions of the overall quality of life in Albuquerque, satisfaction with City services, and issues relating to crime, safety, and the economy. On January 21, the City of Albuquerque released the results of the 2019 study. The survey was of 607 adults living in Albuquerque and conducted November 8 to 24, 2019 and has a margin of error of plus or minus 4% points. The poll was conducted by Research & Polling Inc. https://www.rpinc.com/

The survey questionnaire consisted of 48 questions. The final survey report is 105 pages long and contains multiple bars and graphs to illustrate the results. Research & Polling Inc. is New Mexico’s largest full-service market research and public opinion research company. Founded in 1986, the company today serves a wide variety of prominent national and New Mexico clients. The Albuquerque based polling firm is considered the very best polling service as to accuracy in Albuquerque. The company’s President is Brian Sanderoff, a frequent election coverage commentator for local TV stations.

You can review the entire survey at this link.

https://assets.documentcloud.org/documents/6668008/FINAL-COA-Citizen-Survey.pdf

On August 5, 2020, the online news publication ABQ Reports published the following edited article written by its Editor Dennis Domrzalki and reporter Dan Klein regarding citizens concerns for crime:

HEADLINE: Poll: 67 percent of ABQ residents think crime is getting worse; 83 percent want more cops. Is Mayor Timmy listening?

August 5, 2020
By: Dennis Domrzalski and Dan Klein

– The survey shows that by huge margins ABQ residents think that crime is getting worse and that we need more cops—not fewer cops—to make the city safer.

– Of those surveyed, 67% think crime is getting worse in the city.

– The poll showed that 83% of residents believe the city must hire more cops in order to make the city safer.

[On August 4, ABQ Reports] … asked if anyone out there—the news media, the city council or … [Mayor Tim Keller] —would ask the 560,213 Albuquerqueans who aren’t serial protesters how they feel about all the rioting, crime, violence and craziness going on in our city right now.

[The link to the article is here:

https://www.abqreport.com/single-post/2020/08/04/Same-200-protesters-What-about-the-560213-ABQ-residents-who-dont-protest

Well, it turns out that there was a survey done and it isn’t good for…[Mayor Keller] and his leftist cronies at City Hall.

The survey was done in January by Research and Polling, Inc., and it shows that by huge margins ABQ residents think that crime is getting worse and that we need more cops—not fewer cops—to make the city safer.

Of those surveyed, 67% think crime is getting worse in the city. That’s 67% who think that crime is getting worse in the city! Mayor Timmy and city councilors, are you listening?

The survey, which was commissioned by the Albuquerque Police Officers Association, showed that 83% of residents believe that the city must hire more cops in order to make the city safer. Two thirds of those surveyed, 66% said that crime here has had a negative impact on their quality of life. And a whopping 73% said that crime has had a negative impact on businesses in the city.

And the causes of crime? Well, 40% say it’s fueled by drugs and drug abuse.

Only 28% of those surveyed said that cops need additional oversight, rules and reform.

Again, this survey was done in January before all the craziness started. We would guess that the public perception about crime has only gotten worse since the riots, destruction and serial protesters took to the streets.

These survey results are devastating for the defund the police crowd and those who constantly demonize the police. Here’s the survey’s two main messages: People think crime is increasing, and they want more cops, not fewer of them.

If … [Mayor Keller] continues to let 200 to 300 serial protesters—and not the 560,213 people who don’t protest—steer and control the city’s agenda, he and his leftist and progressive cronies will be toast in next year’s mayoral election.

Why is Albuquerque allowing the same 200 very far left people to drive our city policy? Albuquerque has 560,513 people and … [it is] … greatly doubted [by ABQ Reports] that the majority want the craziness that these 200 are spouting. The Albuquerque Journal or another news organization should do a poll and ask the citizens of Albuquerque if they:

1. Want to defund the police (which would make for a much smaller department)?
2. Want to disband the police department?
3. Don’t want to accept federal law enforcement help to arrest career criminals?
4. Feel safe in Albuquerque?
5. Think crime is under control?
6. Think violent crime is going down?
7. Think property crime is going down?
8. Agree with [Mayor] Tim Keller’s far left progressive agenda?

It’s time for the media to stop giving the same 200 people air time. Let’s hear from the other 560,213 citizens.
… .”

The link to the article with graphics is here

https://www.abqreport.com/single-post/2020/08/05/Poll-67-percent-of-ABQ-residents-think-crime-is-getting-worse-83-percent-want-more-cops-In-Mayor-Timmy-listening

ABQ STATE OF POLICING 2020 ANNUAL SURVEY

The results of the Public Perception Survey conducted by Research and Polling released in January, 2020 are as follows:

83% of those surveyed said more police officers are needed to make the city safer.

73% of residents surveyed said they felt that crime has had “a negative or very negative impact” on business in Albuquerque.

67% of those surveyed believe that crime rates in Albuquerque are getting worse.

66%, or two thirds, of residents surveyed say crime has had a negative impact on their quality of life.

28% of those surveyed said police officers needed additional oversight, rules and reforms.

27% of those surveyed believe that crime rated in Albuquerque is about the same.

Those who were surveyed said the following factors are contributing to crime in the city:

40% illicit drugs and drug abuse
16% the homeless
13% the courts
11% felt not enough police officers

ABQ’S CRIME STATISTICS IN A NUTSHELL UNDER MAYOR KELLER

On Thursday, July 2, 2020 APD officials held a press conference to release the Albuquerque crime statistics for 2019. Given Mayor Keller’s words as to whose job it is to address crime, a synopsis of the statics during Mayor Tim Keller’s tenure is in order before the disclosure of the 2019 statistics by APD. The synopsis is required to focus on the statistics because statistics were falsely reported by the Keller administration for his first 18 months in office and the categories were then changed to comply with FBI crime reporting.

HOMICIDES

In 2018, during Mayor Keller’s first full year in office, there were 69 homicides.
In 2019, during Mayor Keller’s second full year in office, there were 82 homicides. Albuquerque had more homicides in 2019 than in any other year in the city’s history. The previous high was 72, in 2017 under Mayor RJ Berry. Another high mark was in 1996, when the city had 70 homicides.

https://www.abqjournal.com/1405615/apd-reports-record-82-homicides-for-2019.html#:~:text=Gilbert%20Gallegos%2C%20a%20police%20spokesman,high%20was%2072%2C%20in%202017.

As of August 7, there have been 41 homicides reported in Albuquerque for 2020.

https://www.koat.com/article/abq-homicide-cases-going-up-during-summer-months/33550332

HOMICIDE CLEARANCE RATES

For the past two years during Mayor Keller’s tenure, the homicide clearance percentage rate has been in the 50%-60% range. According to the proposed 2018-2019 APD City Budget, in 2016 the APD homicide clearance rate was 80%. In 2017, under Mayor Berry the clearance rate was 70%. In 2018, the first year of Keller’s term, the homicide clearance rate was 56%. In 2019, the second year of Keller’s term, the homicide clearance rate was 52.5%, the lowest clearance rate in the last decade.

VIOLENT CRIMES

In 2017, during Mayor RJ Berry’s last full year in office, there were 7,686 VIOLENT CRIMES. There were 4,213 Aggravated Assaults and 470 Non-Fatal Shootings:

In 2018 during Mayor Keller’ first full year in office, there were 6,789 violent crimes There were 3,885 Aggravated Assaults and 491 Non-Fatal Shootings.

https://www.petedinelli.com/2019/11/21/city-matches-homicide-record-high-of-72-murders-mayor-keller-forced-to-defend-policies-makes-more-promises-asks-for-more-money/

In 2019, the category of “Violent Crimes” was replaced with the category of “Crimes Against Persons” and the category includes homicide, human trafficking, kidnapping and assault.
In 2019 during Keller’s second full year in office, Crimes Against Persons increased from 14,845 to 14,971, or a 1% increase. The Crimes Against Person category had the biggest rises in Aggravated Assaults increasing from 5,179 to 5,397.

DRUG OFFENSES

“Crimes Against Society” include drug offenses, prostitution and animal cruelty.

In 2018 During Keller’s first full year in office, total Crimes Against Society were 3,365.

In 2019 during Keller’s second full year in office, total Crimes Against Society increased to 3,711 for a total increase of 346 more crimes or a 9% increase.
FROM #1 TO #2 IN AUTO THEFTS

On June 26, 2019 the National Insurance Crime Bureau (NICB) released its annual list of cities with the most stolen vehicles reported. Despite a 28% reduction in auto thefts over a two-year period, Albuquerque ranked No. 1 in the nation for vehicle thefts per capita for the third year in a row.

https://www.forbes.com/sites/jimgorzelany/2019/06/27/these-are-the-cities-with-the-highest-car-theft-rates/#7c42e7d35146

On July 29, 2020 it was reported that Albuquerque ranks #2 in auto thefts by the National Insurance Crime Bureau which found that auto thefts in the four-county metro area are down in actual numbers and in the rate of thefts per 100,000 residents. According to the new NCIB report auto thefts in the metro area totaled 6,399 in 2019, a 10 percent drop from 2018, and a 36 percent decline from 2016 when auto thefts peaked at 10,001.

https://www.abqjournal.com/1480766/albuquerque-falls-from-top-auto-theft-spot.html

911 EMERGENCY RESPONSE TIMES

In 2009, under Mayor Martin Chavez, the average 911 emergency response time to calls, whether it was a life or death emergency or a minor traffic crash, was 8 minutes 50 seconds.
In 2011, under Mayor RJ Berry the average response times to 911 emergency calls was 25 minutes.
In 2018 and 2019, under Mayor Tim Keller, the average response times to 911 emergency calls spiked to 48 minutes.

RESPONSE TIMES OUT OF CONTROL

The time it takes for APD to respond to priority 1 calls has a major impact on increasing physical injury to victims or callers. On February 20th KOAT TV Target 7 reported on an investigation into the Albuquerque Police Department’s (APD’s) response times. In 2011, the average response time to all calls, whether it was a life or death emergency or a minor traffic crash was 25 minutes. In 2019, that time period spiked to 48 minutes in the average response time. Since 2011, there has been a 93% increase in 911 response times with 48 minutes now being the average time of arrival.

https://www.koat.com/article/apd-response-times-continue-to-climb/31028667

APD PERSONNEL SHORTFALL

Tim Keller campaigned to be elected mayor on the platform of increasing the size of the Albuquerque Police Department (APD), returning to community-based policing and promising to bring down skyrocketing crime rates. To that end, the Keller Administration began implementing an $88 million-dollar APD police expansion program increasing the number of sworn police officers from 898 positions filled to 1,200, or by 302 sworn police officers, over a four-year period. The massive investment was ordered by Mayor Tim Keller to full fill his 2017 campaign promise to increase the size of APD and return to community-based policing to reduce the city’s high crime rates.

POLICE SPENDING UNDER MAYOR TIM KELLER

The results of the city’s “State of Policing” 2020 annual survey confirms that resident opinions are indeed very accurate on many levels.

On December 1, 2017 Tim Keller was sworn into office and since taking office, APD has added 116 sworn police officers to the force. Keller is spending $88 million dollars over a four-year period, with $32 million dollars of recurring expenditures, to hire 322 sworn officers and expand APD from 878 sworn police officers to 1,200 officers. The massive investment is being done to full fill Mayor Keller’s 2017 campaign promise to increase the size of APD and return to community-based policing as a means to reduce the city’s high crime rates.

Last year’s 2018-2019 fiscal year budget provided for increasing APD funding from 1,000 sworn police to 1,040. This year’s 2019-2020 fiscal year budget has funding for 1,040 sworn police, a far cry from the 1,200 sworn officers Keller promised.

BREAKING A PROMISE NOT TO RAISE TAXES

In 2017 when running for Mayor, State Auditor Tim Keller promised he would never raise taxes unless there was a public vote even if it was for public safety. Candidate Keller said he would draw from various agencies, departments and programs where large, misappropriated budgets existed to deal with any city deficit. Within 4 months after assuming Office, Mayor Keller agreed to and signed a city council-initiated $55 million dollar a year tax increase without voter approval, thereby breaking his campaign promise not to raise gross receipts taxes without a public vote. 80% of the new tax revenues were supposedly dedicated to public safety, yet $40 million went towards a projected deficit that never fully materialized.

Candidate for Mayor Keller promised to increase the size of APD sworn police ranks to 1,200. As of July, APD has less than 1,000 sworn police and not the 1,200 promised, despite the $88 million dollar expansion plan. According to January pay stubs, APD has 950 sworn police and graduated another 50 cadets in mid-March. After adding the new graduating class, and subtracting retirements, APD will still short by at least 200 of what was promised by candidate Tim Keller. With anticipated retirements the total number of sworn officers will be less than 1,000 by January 1, 2021 in that the corona virus has resulted in the cancellation of the Spring APD cadet class.

SOARING HEIGHTS FOR PUBLIC RELATIONS

Ever since Mayor Tim Keller assumed office on December 1, 2017, he has taken political showmanship to all new levels. Keller is known for his photo ops and press conferences, attending protest rallies to speak at, attending marches, attending heavy metal concerts to introduce the band, running in track meets and participating in exhibition football games as the quarterback and enjoying reliving his high school glory days, and posting pictures, press conferences and videos on his FACEBOOK page.

Since being elected in November 2017, Mayor Tim Keller has implemented a public relations and marketing campaign to re brand the city image with his “One ABQ” slogan an using the slang nickname “BURQUE” for the city. Keller came up with a strained logo that rearranges the letters in the city’s name to reflect the slang name “BURQUE” in red letters with t-shirts and created a web page with slick videos promoting the city.

Since taking office, Keller has spent more than $312,000 dollars on his “One Albuquerque” positive image campaign and re branding the city as BURQUE. The City spent over $53,000 on the “One Albuquerque” letter sculpture that rearranges the letters in the city’s name to reflect the slang name “BURQUE”. $54,000 was spent on a “One Burque” sculpture.

With the corona virus pandemic taking a strangle hold on the city and state in February, Keller took instantly to conducting daily press briefings on the city’s efforts to deal with the corona virus and attempting to keep up with Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham’s daily briefings on the state level. Keller even went so far as to get the city council to add emergency health provisions to an archaic city ordinance that dealt with riots in the 1970’s so he could issue his own public health emergency orders. The corona virus pandemic has allowed Mayor Keller to take his public relations efforts to even higher levels to deal with the pandemic and to announce city initiatives and inform the public and to conduct “virtual townhall conference call town hall meetings” with the use of the 311 citizens contact center to call upwards of 13,000 people at once to answer questions.

COMMENTARY AND ANALYSIS

In 2017, candidate for Albuquerque Mayor Tim Keller campaigned to get elected Mayor on the platform of implementing the Department of Justice (DOJ) mandated reforms, increasing the size of the Albuquerque Police Department (APD), returning to community-based policing and a promise to bring down skyrocketing crime rates.

In August, 2017 Tim Keller when running for Mayor, had this to say about the city’s high crime rates:

“It’s unfortunate, but crime is absolutely out of control. It’s the mayor’s job to actually address crime in Albuquerque, and that’s what I want to do as the next mayor.”

For the first 18 months of his term Mayor Tim Keller tried repeatedly to take credit for crime rates being on the decline in all categories other than violent crime offenses, but the statistics he released were seriously flawed and mislead the public. In 2019, in response to the continuing increase in violent crime rates, Mayor Keller scrambled to implement 4 major crime fighting programs to reduce violent crime: the Shield Unit, Declaring Violent Crime “Public Health” issue, the “Violence Intervention Plan” (VIP program) and the Metro 15 Operation program. Based upon the statistics released, the Keller programs have had very little effect on reducing violent crime.

Although progress has been made with implementation of the DOJ reforms, APD still falls short in completing the reforms within 4 years as agreed to and reforms are still being implemented after a full 6 years. Increasing and growing APD to 1,200 has been somewhat anemic, with the number of sworn police by the end of the year projected to be 1,000.

Mayor Tim Keller can take some limited comfort that the statistics show Crimes Against Property have dropped by a little more than 10%. Property crime may be down, but it is still higher than when Keller was sworn into office.

The far more serious Crimes Against Persons increased by 1% to 14,971, with both aggravated assault and statutory rape showing significant increases. There were 80 murders in the City last year which was the highest number of murders in the city’s history, up from 69 the year before. There were also 2,796 drug offenses and 709 weapons violations.

Tim Keller no doubt sincerely thought he could do a better job than his predecessor and he could make a difference. The truth is, he has not. Crime in the city has only become worse since Tim Keller has taken office, especially in terms of violent crime.

Voters are very fickle and unforgiving when politicians make promises they do not or cannot keep. When 73% of residents surveyed said they felt that crime has had “a negative or very negative impact” on business in Albuquerque, 67% of ABQ residents think crime is getting worse, 66%, or two thirds, of residents surveyed say crime has had a negative impact on their quality of life, it is an assured bet that no amount of data collection, public relations or nuance programs are going to turn public perception around any time soon.

As has been the case in the last 3 elections for Mayor, in 2021 crime rates will likely be the biggest determining issue in the race. Voters will no doubt decide if Mayor Tim Keller has in fact failed to deliver on his campaign promises to reduce high crime rates. Voters will be deciding if Keller deserves a passing grade for his failed efforts with Mayor Keller no doubt using the Covid 19 epidemic as an excuse for his need for another 4 years to finish what he started. “BURQUE, Please Give Me More Time To Make One Albuquerque Safe” is not much of a slogan.

______________

POSTSCRIPT

Below are the total homicides, aggravated assault and violent crimes reported for the last 12 full years:

The number of HOMICIDES reported each year from 2008 to 2019 are:

2008: 38
2009: 56
2010: 42
2011: 35
2012: 41
2013: 34
2014: 30
2015: 42
2016: 61
2017: 72
2018: 69
2019: 82
2020: 42 as of August 3.

The number of AGGRAVATED ASSAULTS (assaults with deadly weapon) reported each year from 2008 to 2018 are:

2008: 2,960
2009: 2,597
2010: 2,971
2011: 2,910
2012: 2,740
2013: 2,803
2014: 3,121
2015: 3,273
2016: 3,846
2017: 4,213
2018: 3,885

In 2019, the category of “Violent Crimes” was replaced with the category of “Crimes Against Persons” and the category includes homicide, human trafficking, kidnapping and assault. In 2019 during Keller’s second full year in office, Crimes Against Persons increased from 14,845 to 14,971, or a 1% increase. The Crimes Against Person category had the biggest rises in Aggravated Assaults increasing from 5,179 to 5,397.

The total number of VIOLENT CRIMES (murder, rape, robbery and aggravated assault combined) reported each year from 2008 to 2018 are:

2008: 4,718
2009: 4,082
2010: 4,291
2011: 4,207
2012: 4,151
2013: 4,322
2014: 4,934
2015: 5,405
2016: 6,245
2017: 7,686 (Aggravated Assaults: 4,213, Non-Fatal Shootings: 470)
2018: 6,789 (Aggravated Assaults: 3,885, Non-Fatal Shootings: 491)

In 2019, the category of “Violent Crimes” was replaced with the category of “Crimes Against Persons” and the category includes homicide, human trafficking, kidnapping and assault. In 2019 during Keller’s second full year in office, Crimes Against Persons increased from 14,845 to 14,971, or a 1% increase.

https://www.cabq.gov/police/annual-reports/uniform-crime-reports

Another “Hot Town, Summer In The City” For Murder And Mayhem; Increasing Murder Rates Are National Trend

Hot town, summer in the city
Back of my neck getting dirty and gritty
Been down, isn’t it a pity
Doesn’t seem to be a shadow in the city

All around, people looking half dead
Walking on the sidewalk, hotter than a match head

[At night it’s not a different world, as murders continue to swirl.]

“Summer In The City”, Lovin Spoonful, 1966. (Editors note: Apologies to the “Lovin Spoonful” for adding last line to a great summer song.)

On August 7, KOAT, TV investigative reporter Nancy Laflin reported as follows:

“Last year was one of the highest murder rates in Albuquerque’s history.
KOAT asked Albuquerque police if the city is on track for another record no one wants to have.
APD spokesman Gilbert Gallegos says there have been at least 41 homicides in the city, so far this year.
Police are investigating two other deaths to see if those cases are homicides as well.
Gallegos said there was a spike in homicides in July, with at least seven deaths. In August, there have been three murders.
At this time last year he says there were 46.
Gallegos said many of these cases have one thing in common.
“Probably the biggest problem for us has been and continues to be gun crimes. Shootings with injuries, homicides involving guns,” he said. Gallegos said the department is targeting crimes involving guns.
Gallegos said there are arrests in about 56% of the homicides in Albuquerque. He says there are between eight to 10 detectives to investigate these cases. Federal officers are also working with local police to address Albuquerque’s crime crisis.”

https://www.koat.com/article/abq-homicide-cases-going-up-during-summer-months/33550332

HOMICIDES

In 2018, during Mayor Keller’s first full year in office, there were 69 homicides.
In 2019, during Mayor Keller’s second full year in office, there were 82 homicides. Albuquerque had more homicides in 2019 than in any other year in the city’s history. The previous high was 72, in 2017 under Mayor RJ Berry. Another high mark was in 1996, when the city had 70 homicides.

https://www.abqjournal.com/1405615/apd-reports-record-82-homicides-for-2019.html#:~:text=Gilbert%20Gallegos%2C%20a%20police%20spokesman,high%20was%2072%2C%20in%202017.
As of August 7, there have been 41 homicides reported in Albuquerque for 2020.

https://www.koat.com/article/abq-homicide-cases-going-up-during-summer-months/33550332

APD HOMICIDE CLEARANCE RATE AT HISTORICAL LOW, DROPS FROM 80% TO 52%

On Sunday, February 23rd, 2020, it was reported that there has been a dramatic surge in the number of homicides and the percentage of those solved by arrest has dropped dramatically.” In 2019, the city had a historical high of 82 homicides in one year with a 52% solve rate. From January 1, to February 01, the city had 8 homicides, the same number of homicides as in January 2019. On February 22 and 22, three more homicides were reported in the city with arrests yet to be made.
Below are links to the news coverage:

https://www.koat.com/article/deadly-weekend-in-duke-city/31069697

https://www.kob.com/albuquerque-news/eight-homicides-in-albuquerque-last-month/5631030/

APD STAFFING AND CASE LOADS

According to APD spokesman Gilbert Gallegos the homicide unit has 11 detectives and one sergeant. In 2017, APD had 5 detective and one sergeant. APD officials claim that the homicides are being vigorously investigated and detectives are following numerous leads. However, APD does not maintain collective data to show how many murders over the years have gone unsolved and still considered open cases. Some APD homicide detectives have fewer than 10 cases each.

According to APD spokesman Gilbert Gallegos:

“Others with the most years in homicide may have more than 20, which includes cases that may be three, four or five years old and awaiting new leads.”

The city’s APD yearly budget contains performance evaluation statistics mandated by the city’s “performance evaluation” based budget. According to city budget documents, APD’s homicide clearance rate reported in the FBI’s Uniform Crime Report was 80% from fiscal year 2009 to fiscal year 2016. In each of the last two calendar years, the percentage of homicides solved in the city dropped to 52%. That number reflects homicides that weren’t deemed justifiable. The overall clearance rate for 2018 and 2019 was is slightly higher because detectives solved 9 homicides from prior years.

APD maintains a website showing “Active Homicide Investigations.” But the website lists just 25 cases, which occurred from January 2018 to August 2018.

https://www.abqjournal.com/1423578/more-murders-fewer-cases-cleared.html

HOMICIDE CLEARANCE RATES UNDER MAYOR KELLER

For the past two years during Mayor Keller’s tenure, the homicide clearance percentage rate has been in the 50%-60% range. According to the proposed 2018-2019 APD City Budget, in 2016 the APD homicide clearance rate was 80%. In 2017, under Mayor Berry the clearance rate was 70%. In 2018, the first year of Keller’s term, the homicide clearance rate was 56%. In 2019, the second year of Keller’s term, the homicide clearance rate was 52.5%, the lowest clearance rate in the last decade.

During an October, 2019 City Council meeting, APD management said it was working on new strategies to ease the workload on APD sworn officers and homicide detectives.

During an October, 2019 City Council meeting, APD Commander of Criminal Investigations Joe Burke had this to say:

“I would say in the long term if I was looking at a long-term solution—I believe we need two homicide units. I think the best practices around the nation normally have two homicide units. Detectives should be balancing between three to five investigations and we’re nearly double that. … We absolutely need detectives in criminal investigations. … I was happy when I went over at the end of July and was briefed on the status of the unit that there’s a plan in place within the executive staff that when cadets are graduating from the academy that we’re going to get a certain percentage specifically for the criminal investigations bureau.”

https://www.kob.com/albuquerque-news/city-officials-look-for-solutions-to-ease-workload-on-apd-officers-homicide-detectives/5594211/?cat=500

The APD homicide unit has 10 detectives assigned to it. Given the testimony of Commander Joe Burke, total number of detective assigned to the homicide unit should be upwards of 20 with two sperate units.

VIOLENT CRIMES

In 2017, during Mayor RJ Berry’s last full year in office, there were 7,686 VIOLENT CRIMES. There were 4,213 Aggravated Assaults and 470 Non-Fatal Shootings:

In 2018 during Mayor Keller’ first full year in office, there were 6,789 violent crimes There were 3,885 Aggravated Assaults and 491 Non-Fatal Shootings.

https://www.petedinelli.com/2019/11/21/city-matches-homicide-record-high-of-72-murders-mayor-keller-forced-to-defend-policies-makes-more-promises-asks-for-more-money/
In 2019, the category of “Violent Crimes” was replaced with the category of “Crimes Against Persons” and the category includes homicide, human trafficking, kidnapping and assault.

In 2019 during Keller’s second full year in office, Crimes Against Persons increased from 14,845 to 14,971, or a 1% increase. The Crimes Against Person category had the biggest rises in Aggravated Assaults increasing from 5,179 to 5,397.

VIOLENT CRIME STATISTICS FOR LAST 12 YEARS

Below are the total homicides, aggravated assault and violent crimes reported for the last 12 full years:

The number of HOMICIDES reported each year from 2008 to 2019 are:

2008: 38
2009: 56
2010: 42
2011: 35
2012: 41
2013: 34
2014: 30
2015: 42
2016: 61
2017: 72
2018: 69
2019: 82
2020: 42 as of August 3.

The number of AGGRAVATED ASSAULTS (assaults with deadly weapon) reported each year from 2008 to 2018 are:

2008: 2,960
2009: 2,597
2010: 2,971
2011: 2,910
2012: 2,740
2013: 2,803
2014: 3,121
2015: 3,273
2016: 3,846
2017: 4,213
2018: 3,885

In 2019, the category of “Violent Crimes” was replaced with the category of “Crimes Against Persons” and the category includes homicide, human trafficking, kidnapping and assault. In 2019 during Keller’s second full year in office, Crimes Against Persons increased from 14,845 to 14,971, or a 1% increase. The Crimes Against Person category had the biggest rises in Aggravated Assaults increasing from 5,179 to 5,397.
The total number of VIOLENT CRIMES (murder, rape, robbery and aggravated assault combined) reported each year from 2008 to 2018 are:

2008: 4,718
2009: 4,082
2010: 4,291
2011: 4,207
2012: 4,151
2013: 4,322
2014: 4,934
2015: 5,405
2016: 6,245
2017: 7,686 (Aggravated Assaults: 4,213, Non-Fatal Shootings: 470)
2018: 6,789 (Aggravated Assaults: 3,885, Non-Fatal Shootings: 491)

In 2019, the category of “Violent Crimes” was replaced with the category of “Crimes Against Persons” and the category includes homicide, human trafficking, kidnapping and assault. In 2019 during Keller’s second full year in office, Crimes Against Persons increased from 14,845 to 14,971, or a 1% increase.

https://www.cabq.gov/police/annual-reports/uniform-crime-reports

INCREASE IN MURDERS IS A NATIONAL TREND

Diane Dimond, age 68, is a national “Crime and Justice Columnist.” Ms. Dimond is an American investigative journalist, author, syndicated columnist, and TV commentator. She is best known for breaking the story of child molestation allegations against singer Michael Jackson and her coverage of the subsequent criminal trial. On August 8, one of her columns appeared in the Albuquerque Journal. The article as a whole is about crime rates during the pandemic. According to the column the U.S. murder rate had been significantly slowing since the early ’90s but that is no longer the case and she reports:

“Homicides and gun violence are on the rise. Murders have spiked in 36 of the 50 biggest American cities that were studied during a newly released Wall Street Journal analysis of crime stats.

On average, the nation’s homicide rate is up 24% so far this year compared to the same period in 2019. But in certain cities the murder rate is much higher. In Chicago homicides are up 52%. In San Antonio it’s 34%. Phoenix has seen a 32% rise in murders, Philadelphia 31% and Houston 27%. Gang activity is most frequently blamed for the rise as gang members are also feeling the economic pinch of isolation and turf wars have ignited, playing out on near-empty street corners. This year’s recent huge jump in gun sales may have also played a part in the rising inner-city death toll.

As for the idea that the escalation in murders is exclusively happening in American cities run by Democrats, such as the cities mentioned above – baloney! According to the [Wall Street Journal] “Homicides are rising at a double-digit rate in most of the big cities run by Republicans, including Miami; San Diego; Omaha; Tulsa, Oklahoma; and Jacksonville, Florida.” And, by the way, the aforementioned San Antonio is led by a mayor who is a member of the Independent Party. Murder is truly a bipartisan problem.

I’m no social scientist, but I’m thinking that it’s not just the cabin fever caused by COVID-19 isolation that has caused this increase in gun violence and murders. It seems obvious that the current spate of anything-goes-lawlessness and destructive anti-police fervor has added to the idea that illegal, anarchistic behavior won’t be punished. As proof we see disproportionately few arrests given the growing number of destructive acts of property damage – and, yes, even murders – that have occurred in several states.
… .”

https://www.abqjournal.com/1484278/the-good-and-very-bad-of-pandemicera-crime-rates.html

COMMENTARY AND ANALYSIS

In 2017, candidate for Albuquerque Mayor Tim Keller campaigned to get elected Mayor on the platform of implementing the Department of Justice (DOJ) mandated reforms, increasing the size of the Albuquerque Police Department (APD), returning to community-based policing and a promise to bring down skyrocketing crime rates. Tim Keller has already made it known he is running for a second term in 2021.

Mayor Tim Keller can take very little comfort with the fact that the city’s increase in homicides is part of a national trend. The truth is, Albuquerque has been in the forefront of the trend for the last 5 years and homicides have more than doubled. In 2014, the city had 30 homicides and each year thereafter homicides increased and in 2019 the city had 82 homicides, the most in the city’s history. As of August 8, the city has had 43 homicides, yet Mayor Keller says violent crime is a top priority of his administration yet he has done nothing to beef up the homicide unit to a level that is needed to deal with the crisis and the unacceptable clearance rates.

In 2019, in response to the continuing increase in violent crime rates, Mayor Keller scrambled to implement 4 major crime fighting programs to reduce violent crime: the Shield Unit, Declaring Violent Crime “Public Health” issue, the “Violence Intervention Plan” (VIP program) and the Metro 15 Operation program. Based upon the statistics, the Keller programs have had very little effect on reducing violent crime.

Voters are very fickle and unforgiving when politicians make promises they do not or cannot keep. Sooner rather than later people demand and want results. People no longer feel safe in their own homes. No amount of data collection, public relations or nuance programs are going to satisfy those demands or make people feel any safer. Then there is next summer which promises to be as bad as the summers of the last 5 years.

“Forward Together Action” Calls For Pat Davis To Resign; Third Progressive Organization Demanding Davis Resignation; Link To Court Documents; Davis Act Of Brutality Against Bell After Shooting Him

Forward Together Action (FTA) is progressive organization, with offices in California, Oregon and New Mexico. It is a charitable corporation, exempt from income tax, and as such is required to file Form 990 annually with the federal government.

According to its web page, its mission is that it “organizes communities to build power so all families can thrive. FTA evaluates how existing power structures help or harm our families and pushes for the changes needed to create systems that serve all of us. FTA builds political power that uplifts the leadership of women of color, non-binary people and Indigenous communities. FTA holds elected officials accountable to ensure all our families get the support they need to thrive and support leaders and legislators who share our commitment to strong families.”

Forward Together Action in New Mexico leads year-round community-based civic engagement and advocacy with a base of over 10,000 people in four counties (including three rural counties) to change policies and shift culture in New Mexico. FTA New Mexico organizes opportunities in communities where decision makers, organizations and families can come together to share their stories, offer ideas for change, and create solutions in collaboration with one another. Strong Families New Mexico (SFNM) is a state-based advocacy and action program of Forward Together.

Major issues that FTA lists that it works to promote include:

Securing healthcare access, including abortion
Ensuring that our communities are safe from state-based and gender-based bias
Advocating for paid sick leave and paid family leave

The link to the FTA web page is here:

https://forwardtogether.org/programs/state-national-action/

DEMAND FOR PAT DAVIS TO RESIGN FROM CITY COUNCIL

On August 3, 2020, Forward Action Together released the following statement:

HEADLINE: Forward Together Action Statement on Pat Davis
August 3, 2020

It has become clear that Pat Davis, Albuquerque City Councilor, can no longer be a decision-maker in New Mexico. The recent reports about the shooting of a young Black man, Moses Bell, while Davis was a member of the DC Police Department, followed by multiple allegations of civil rights violations while a member of the UNM Police Department in Albuquerque have made it clear that Pat Davis has his own historic pattern of racism and violence against our communities, a past for which he has refused to apologize or even address.

Having learned of his past racist actions from our partners at ProgressNow New Mexico, Forward Together Action is in solidarity with our organizational allies, Albuquerque communities, and the broader communities fighting for Black lives across the country, in calling for the resignation of Pat Davis. Forward Together Action is founded on the values that will help our communities thrive: centering the voices of those most impacted when having policy conversations, providing resources for our communities to live lives with dignity, and deconstructing systems of oppression – which includes dismantling systems that over-criminalize our communities.

Beyond these initial reports, our affiliate partner organization Forward Together/Strong Families New Mexico has its own experiences with Pat Davis. Forward Together was a steering committee member of the 2013 campaign to defeat Albuquerque’s anti-abortion ballot measure: Respect ABQ Women. As a member of this steering committee, Forward Together centered the voices of women of color and other “unlikely voters” so that this battle to protect access to reproductive health care in Albuquerque wasn’t waged without those who would be most impacted by its outcome.

Respect ABQ Women defeated the ballot initiative, and was proud to do so working with great allied organizations. After the campaign was won, Pat Davis in his role at the time as Executive Director of ProgressNow NM, took credit for the work of multiple organizations including those led by and for women of color. This is one act in a pattern of behavior that disrespects and delegitimizes the lives and work of People of Color, especially black and indigenous women.

When Davis ran for US Congress in 2018, he sent campaign emails claiming credit again for the defeat of this ballot initiative. Members of the steering committee, including Forward Together, met with Davis to ask him to apologize publicly and admit that the majority of the work for this campaign was in fact led and done by women of color. He refused.

Forward Together has worked with Davis on multiple occasions, and each time we have seen first-hand the way he treats women of color and communities of color. We have worked with Davis to shape policy, and we will no longer be complicit. Whether it was his role leading the Governor’s task force on cannabis legalization – which allowed him to center the voices of law enforcement over communities of color, being appointed to the nominating commission for potential district and appellate court judges, or continuing to serve the role of President of the City Council – we believe the time has come for Pat Davis to resign.

We are calling on Davis to resign his position on the Albuquerque City Council and finally make room for the voices he has worked so long to silence – those of communities of color who have suffered the consequences of his policing and policy decisions. We also call on Governor Lujan Grisham and others to refuse to appoint Davis to any new commissions, boards, or committees. Instead those in power should make room for the voices who have been silenced and hurt by Davis and others, putting them at the center of policy change.

The link to the statement is here:

http://www.forwardtogetheraction.org/2020/08/03/forward-together-action-statement-on-pat-davis/

Forward Together Action is the third progressive organization to demand that Pat Davis resign from the Albuquerque City Council. The other two with links to their resignation demands are:
Progress Now New Mexico. The link to the ProgressNow statement is here:

https://progressnownm.org/?p=225026

Ole, New Mexico. The link to the OLÉ New Mexico statement is here:

https://medium.com/@olenewmexico/on-power-lessons-learned-speaking-up-db837e2cef9c

LINK TO PAT DAVIS STATEMENT

On June 25, Progress Now New Mexico issued a statement calling for the resignation of City Council President Pat Davis from the Albuquerque City Council. On June 26, Pat Davis went into overdrive and issued a Statement to the media in response to ProgressNow demanding that he resign from the 4 positions of trust and he stated in part:

“It is unfortunate that a blogger’s misrepresentation of the facts is gaining attention and being shared, when court records and subsequent legitimate news stories that can be easily factchecked outline a different pattern of facts and conclusion”.

The link to the full Davis statement is here:

https://www.kob.com/kobtvimages/repository/cs/files/DAVIS%20policing.pdf

LINK TO DOCUMENTS AND COURT FILINGS

The actual pleadings filed are the best evidence to “fact check” the pattern of facts and conclusions peddled by Pat Davis as true to the media which are either false or misleading. In order to “fact check” all of the misrepresentations made by Pat Davis, a link to all the documents and federal court pleadings filed is here:

https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1ZYWiEndlYG3ffELYQO2JMAfzeZzeikUR

DOCUMENT LISTING AND SUMMARIES

A listing of the documents and pleadings in order of importance with summations are as follows:

1. Court Docket page reflecting “Armed Kidnapping ” charge filed against Moses Bell for “kidnapping” of Pat Davis by Moses Bell. (1 page.)

Moses Bell is the African American who was shot twice by Pat Davis when he was a Washington, DC Cop. Moses Bell was originally charged with “kidnapping” of Pat Davis when Moses Bell “drove off” with Davis still hanging half way out of the car after he shot Bell twice and as he struggled with Bell after Davis reached into Bell’s vehicle and tried to seize a gun Bell was trying to hide. (Kidnapping? Kidnapping?? You can’t make this stuff up.)

2. Initial Criminal Complaint against Moses Bell with “Statement of Facts” prepared and signed by charging police officer. (3 pages)

This is a handwritten document written and signed by a police officer (name illegible) charging Moses Bell with “Assaulting, Resisting or Interfering With A Police Officer with a Dangerous Weapon” with a typed “statement of facts” that was also sign by the charging officer and attached to the criminal complaint. A detention hearing was held with Moses Bell held in jail without bond.

3. “Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law And Order Of Detention Pending Trial” of Moses Bell. (6 pages)

These are the “finding of fact” adopted and filed by the Federal Court Judge to jail Moses Bell without bond pending trial. The court’s findings of fact are verbatim from the DC Police charging document that states “two black males” and “a black male subject exit the passenger side of the vehicle.” The charging language makes two references to “black” and not to suspects. Ethnicity has nothing to do with the misdemeanor charges of failing to use a turn signal and a passenger not wearing a seat belt. This distinction was ostensibly important for Officer Davis and his partner to place in the charging document. Otherwise, they he would not have done it.

What is not alleged in the “finding of fact” and can be deduced is that Officer Pat Davis escalated a confrontation by reaching into the vehicle on the driver’s side where Moses Bell was sitting in an idling car. Davis apparently did not say anything as he tried to grab a gun from Moses Bell that Bell was trying to hide resulting in a struggle between Davis and Bell.

Absent are any allegations that Bell was threatening Davis. Davis did not know if Bell had a permit for the gun. Davis lunging into the vehicle was a likely violation of police standard operating procedure. By reaching into the car, Davis placed himself in a completely vulnerable position and endangered his own life and the life of his assisting officer. Davis reaching into the car as he did ostensibly result in Bell reacting. Bell decided to drive off while Davis was partially in the vehicle and Davis either shot him twice in the vehicle or as Bell drove off. Bell was later found with his car abandoned and a gun found on the ground. Bell was arrested and taken to a hospital where he was treated for his two gun shot wounds.

An original allegation Pat Davis has made is that Moses Bell drove off and as he did he drove over the leg of Pat Davis and crashed his vehicle. These allegations are simply false in that the vehicle was found within the hour after the shooting abandoned in a parking lot of an office complex. Bell was found hiding in a stairwell. Pat Davis soon showed up, uninjured, and positively identified Bell as the man he shot. Bell was taken to a hospital where he was treated for his injuries after which he was taken into custody and to jail by Pat Davis.

4. Moses Bell Defense Attorney Sentencing Memorandum (1 page)

All initial criminal charges against Moses Bell including “Assaulting a Police Officer with a Deadly Weapon”, “ Kidnapping” and “Resisting Arrest” were all dismissed or no charges were brought by a grand jury. Bell was ultimately charged by the United States Attorney with one felony of “possession of a firearm” for the reason that the evidence did not support “assault and battery” on a police officer. Bell plead guilty to the one charge and was sentence to the 18 months in jail he agreed to in his plea agreement.

On May 12, 2005, the defense attorney Edward C. Sussman for Moses M. Bell filed the “DEFENDANT’S MEMORANDUM IN AID OF SENTENCING”. The court document provides for the first time Moses M. Bell’s version of his shooting by Pat Davis. It also exposes major discrepancies in what Pat Davis alleged in the criminal complaint as to what happened.

The Defendant’s “Memorandum In Aid of Sentencing” reveals that an Internal Affairs Investigation of Officer Pat Davis and his shooting of Moses Bell was conducted. Pat Davis has never disclosed the results of his Internal Affairs Investigation. Further, Pat Davis has never disclosed if one of his problems was being a “target” of the grand jury and if criminal charges were considered to be brought against him by the United States Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia for excessive use of force or deadly force or for civil rights violations.

5. Court Docket information page reflecting that charging codes had been changed and that Moses Bell was not charged with “assault with a deadly weapon” of Pat Davis. (1 page)

6. Plaintiff Bell’s Civil Lawsuit Against Davis (8 pages)

EDITOR’S NOTE: Pat Davis never revealed the existence of this lawsuit when he ran for Bernalillo County Sheriff, City Council nor United States Congress. All Davis has ever acknowledged publicly is that he was involved with a Police Officer involved shooting. Pat Davis has said he has “made arrests and instigated some encounters I wouldn’t be proud of today” and he has engaged in “brutalization … of those who [he was] supposed to protect and serve.”

This is the handwritten complaint, verified under oath as true, file by Moses Bell without the assistance of an attorney describing his shooting by Police Officer Pat Davis. On August 31, 2004, Moses M. Bell, age 37 at the time, was a Washington, DC resident. Moses M. Bell is African American and on August 31, 2004, was driving his car and giving his male African American friend a ride to his girlfriend’s house.

According to his complaint, while sitting in his idling parked vehicle to allow his passenger to exit his vehicle, Bell was shot twice in the left shoulder by Washington D.C. Police Officer Pat Davis when Davis approached the driver’s side of the car and opened fire without provocation. At the time of the shooting, D.C. Police Officer Patrick Davis was allegedly investigating Moses M. Bell, the driver of the vehicle, for failure to make a left turn signal and his passenger’s failure to wear a seat belt. Police officer David Tucker, Davis’ partner, remained in the vehicle when Davis got out of the patrol car to question the driver Moses M Bell. Moses M. Bell was first charged with “Assaulting, Resisting or Interfering With A Police Officer With A Dangerous Weapon” when a gun was found in the car Bell was driving. Bell’s hand gun was found to have never been discharged and Bell did not threaten or point his gun at Pat Davis.

7. Plaintiff Bell Certification of “Non Service of Process” document (1 page)

This is a handwritten Certification by Moses Bell discloses to the Court that Pat Davis could not be found for “Service of Process” of his Civil Complaint. What Moses Bell ostensibly did not know was that Pat Davis had left the Washington, DC Police Department, moved to New Mexico and was employed by the University of New Mexico as a Lieutenant with the UNM Campus Police. The Bell lawsuit was dismissed against all co-defendants.

8. MOTION TO DISMISS CIVIL COMPLAINT

On December 7, 2005, Co Defendants the District of Columbia and David Tucker, filed a Motion to Dismiss Plaintiff Moses Bell’s Civil Complaint. The grounds for the Motion was “Failure State Claims of Relief”. The reasons given supporting the motion was that Moses Bell’s claims lacked merit, his injuries were not directly related to an established municipal policy nor custom as required by law and that Police Officer David Tucker did not shoot Moses Bell.

9. MEMORANDUM OPINION GRANTING DEFENSE MOTION TO DISMISS

On July 10, 2006 United States District Judge James Robertson filed his Memorandum Opinion and an Order of Dismissal of Claims in Civil Action No. 05-13 72 (JR) captioned Moses Bell, Plaintiff v. City of Washington, D.C.., et al. The Court specifically dismissed Bell’s Civil Complaint against the city and police officer David Tucker.

Judge Robertson noted that “Defendant Davis has been dismissed without prejudice because Mr. Bell has failed to provide an address for purpose of service of process.”

The memorandum opinion reflects an astounding act of brutality by Pat Davis against Moses Bell after he was shot with the Federal Judge adopting the following findings of fact as Background:

“In the afternoon of August 31, 2004, Mr. Bell was at the Greenway Shopping Center, 301 37th Street, S.E., Washington, D.C. when he saw a friend. … He agreed to give his friend a ride to his girlfriend’s residence. … As he was dropping his friend off, Officer Davis approached Mr. Bell’s vehicle on the driver’s side and began shooting at Mr. Bell, striking him twice on the left shoulder. … Fearing for his life, Mr. Bell fled, eventually parking his car, and calling his cousin to pick him up. … Before his cousin could arrive, Mr. Bell was apprehended by the police and transported by ambulance to Howard University Hospital. …

After receiving medical treatment, Mr. Bell was transported by the police, including officer Davis, to the Sixth District station. … En route to the station, the driver, Officer Davis, caused the car to move erratically, which resulted in the reopening of Mr. Bell’s wound. … The police transported Mr. Bell to Greater Southeast Hospital for further treatment and medication. … He was eventually placed into custody at the District of Columbia Central Detention Facility. …”

10. Order [of Dismissal]

This is an Order of Dismissal filed by the Federal Judge in the civil lawsuit filed by Moses Bell. The significance of this dismissal is that it only dismisses as party defendants the District of Colombia Police Department and Police Officer David Tucker who was with Pat Davis when Davis shot Bell.

11. Motion [To Reconsider Dismissal]

Moses M. Bell file a handwritten Motion To Reconsider after the judge dismissed his case.

12. Order [Denying Motion to Reconsider Dismissal]

The Court denied the Plaintiff’s pro se Motion to Reconsider

13 . Bender-Hughes Civil “Complaint For False Arrest and Imprisonment, Negligence and Civil Rights Violations”. (8 pages.)

EDITOR’S NOTE: Pat Davis has never revealed the existence of this lawsuit when he ran for Bernalillo County Sheriff, City Council nor United States Congress. Pat Davis has said he has “made arrests and instigated some encounters I wouldn’t be proud of today” and he has engaged in “brutalization … of those who [he was] supposed to protect and serve.”

The civil complaint alleges that on January 8, 2008, the Defendant Pat Davis, along with other UNM Police went to the home of Brook Bender looking for a person named Richard Hughes and telling Bender they needed to search her home. According to the complaint, the officers did not identify themselves until Bender noticed a UNM Police Badge. The complaint alleges that Davis and the defendants told Plaintiff Bender that they knew she worked for UNM because they had found her UNM employee identification in her car next to some contraband and told her she needed to “work with them” or they would inform UNM officials about the alleged contraband found. According to Bender’s allegations, she responded to the threats by allowing Davis and the other defendants into her home and asked to see a “search warrant”. They told Bender they did not have a search warrant, that they could easily obtain one and if she insisted on a search warrant, they would “rat her out” to her UNM employer.

The Bender-Hughes civil complaint alleges that on the morning of January 9, 2008, at approximately 10:30 am, Davis and the UNM police went to the home of Plaintiff Joan Hughes, made contact with her and announced that they were looking for her son Richard Hughes with Pat Davis providing Plaintiff Hughes with his business card. Hughes told the Defendants that her son was in jail in Grants, New Mexico, which the defendants later confirmed, and that her son had not lived with her for several years. Davis none the less told Hughes that they had to “search her house”. Davis and the other defendants had no search warrant for the home and did not ask Hughes for permission to search her home.

According to the complaint, Davis and the 3 other officers entered the home and ordered Hughes to sit on her couch while two of the defendants watched Hughes and while the others conducted and extensive searched of her home which lasted for about one hour. According to the complaint, one defendant UNM Police Officers found pistol cartridges in Hughes bedroom, asked Hughes where the gun was and she notified them it was in her kitchen. Davis or another defendant retrieved the gun and made a call to see if it was stolen, and it was not. The complaint also alleges that Defendants found marijuana belonging to Hughes’s boyfriend. The defendants confiscated the gun found in the home and the marijuana. On January 11, 2008, Hughes secured the return of the gun from the UNM Police.

14. Flores’ “Civil Complaint for Damages and Civil Rights Violations “ (16 pages)

EDITOR’S NOTE: Pat Davis has never revealed the existence of this lawsuit when he ran for Bernalillo County Sheriff, City Council nor United States Congress. Pat Davis has said he has “made arrests and instigated some encounters I wouldn’t be proud of today” and he has engaged in “brutalization … of those who [he was] supposed to protect and serve.”

On December 17, 2007, at approximately 9:10 pm in the evening when no one was at home at a mid-heights home residence, UNM Cop Pat Davis, along with 21 law enforcement officers stormed the residence to execute a “sealed search warrant”. Three “flash bang” grenades were hurled into the home causing damages to the walls and which started a fire that required the Albuquerque Fire Department to be dispatched. According to the complaint, the defendants, which included Davis, broke in two front doors, wrought iron works, broke windows and interior doors, broke a car window, broke a sliding gate to the home and “trashed” the interior of the home including breaking furniture in a search of marijuana or other evidence of a crime, but no evidence of any crime was found against the plaintiffs nor their renter. Upwards of $20,000 in property damage was caused and three Plaintiffs filed the lawsuit, Aaron Flores and his parents Arturo and Celia Flores against Pat Davis and 20 other law enforcement agents.

15. Plaintiffs Aaron Flores, Cecilia Flores and Arturo Flores “Full and Final Release of Claims and Indemnity Agreement” against Defendant Pat Davis. (5 pages)

This is a release of claims by the 3 plaintiffs against Defendant Pat Davis where $25,000 was paid by UNM relating to the search of private residence and damage done to property. No information is available as to what settlement was reached by the 3 plaintiffs against the other 20 law enforcement who assisted Davis with the raid to execute the sealed search warrant.

16. Pat Davis Booking Statement for Aggravated DWI. (2 pages)

This is the Pat Davis’s arrest sheet for aggravated DWI.

On July 28, 2013, Pat Davis, then age 35, was the chair of the Albuquerque Metro Crime Stoppers and the Executive Director of Progressive Now when he was arrested by BCSO Sheriff’s Deputies around 12:30 a.m. on the 1300 block of Broadway under suspicion of drunk driving. Deputies arrived at the minor accident where Davis had ran into another vehicle to find Davis who appeared drunk, had slurred speech, bloodshot watery eyes and the smell of alcohol on his breath.

On the police audio tape, Davis was told by the BCSO Deputy he could smell alcohol on Davis and asked Davis if he had consumed any alcoholic beverages that evening. Davis is heard to say “no” on the tape, said he had not been drinking and what the officer was smelling was SCOPE mouthwash. Davis referred the officer to a mouthwash bottle in his car. When asked about his slurred speech, Davis can be heard on the audio tape telling the deputy “My speech is not usually slurred. I have a southern accent and been a cop for 10 years.” Davis was born in Georgia, and was claiming he still had an accent. The investigating deputy found a travel-sized bottle of SCOPE mouthwash in Davis’ vehicle but at the license revocation hearing the sheriff officers could not say if and when Davis may have used it the night of his arrest. Davis was administered a field sobriety tests which he failed. Davis submitted to 2 separate alcohol breath tests that showed his blood-alcohol concentration was .19 and .18 respectively.

https://www.abqjournal.com/226603/pat-davis-chair-of-abq-crime-stoppers-charged-with-dwi.html

Davis plead guilty in February 2014 to a first-offense driving under the influence of alcohol and fought the Aggravated DWI charges. Davis was given a deferred sentence with no jail time if he completed 6 months’ probation and 6 months of having an ignition interlock system in his car with random breath alcohol tests and random urinalysis and was given no jail time.

17. Pat Davis Driver’s License Revocation Decision And Order (6 pages)

On November 6, 2013 after an administrative law hearing before a hearing officer with the Department of Taxation and Revenue, which issues drivers’ licenses, the driving privileges of Pat Davis were suspended for 6 months and he was ordered to install an ignition interlock in any vehicle he drove.

COMMENTARY AND ANALYSIS

Given what is known about City Councilor Pat Davis, his actions as a police officer, his litigation history, his credibility is in serious doubt as are his political motives. The real Pat Davis, and his lack of respect for constitutional rights are revealed by his pattern of conduct he engaged if for years and was sued for as a UNM Police Officer and for his conduct as a DC Police Officer.

What is very difficult to reconcile is the past conduct of Pat Davis as a UNM Campus Police Officer and his appointment to chair the Governor’s Task Force on the Legalization of Marijuana. The two civil lawsuits filed against Pat Davis while he was a UNM Campus Police Officer were for violations of people’s civil rights relating to the unlawful searches of private residences for marijuana relating to drug trafficking.

WHITE PRIVILEGE CITY COUNCIL COALITION

Pat Davis is now the leader of what is being referred to as the “White Privilege Coalition” on the City Council consisting of Democrats Pat Davis, Isaac Benton, Diane Gibson and Republicans Don Harris and Trudy Jones. Pat Davis has bragged about in the past of being able to work with Republicans on the city council and has even co-sponsored many ordinances with Republican Don Harris. These are the very same city councilors who voted repeatedly for the ART Bus project and kept all their mouths shut and refused to hold APD accountable when the Federal Monitor issued scathing audit reports on the Court Approved Settlement Agreement (CASA).

Prior to his death, long time City Councilor Ken Sanchez, as a native of Albuquerque, was a strong advocate for all parts of the city and would often work closely with City Councilors Klarisa Pena and Cynthia Borrego to get things done. It was common knowledge Sanchez was always thinking about running for Mayor. Democrat Ken Sanchez was considered a moderate Democrat and would often disagree with Mayor Tim Keller. Sanchez was often criticized by the progressive wing of the party as being a “corporate democrat”.

When long time City Councilor Sanchez passed away, Progressive Democrat Mayor Tim Keller took advantage of it and appointed a progressive activist to the City Council he could rely upon for any and all support, ignoring the two daughters of two former city councilors for the City Council District, Ken Sanchez and Pat Baca, who applied to fill out the term of Ken Sanchez. Now that Pat Davis is City Council President, confidential sources are saying that he repeatedly marginalizes the Hispanic woman on the city council and opposes any of their initiatives. When Pat Davis marginalizes the Hispanic woman on the City Council, he relies on his “White Privilege” coalition on the city council as does Progressive Mayor Tim Keller.

CONNECTING THE POLITICAL DOTS

Confidential sources have said the minority members of the City Council are fearful that City Councilor Pat Davis will retaliate against them should they ever demand his resignation. Mayor Tim Keller’s longtime paid political consultant Alan Packman is now working for the city’s 311 Citizens Contact Call Center and confidential sources have said he responds only to Mayor Tim Keller. Mr. Packman was also a paid political consultant to City Councilor Pat Davis when he ran for city council. Confidential City Hall sources say Packman maintains continuous contacts with Pat Davis assisting and advising him whenever he can along with Mayor Tim Keller’s efforts.

Pat Davis has said “In two elections, voters have sent me to City Hall because I talked authentically and honestly”. The message he is conveying is he has been vetted and forgiven for past mistakes by the voters because he successfully won. Davis is seriously mistaken and is a fool if he thinks that way. Many people of nefarious reputation have been elected to positions of authority, even a President of the United States. Election vetting and even a pardon does not absolve any one from serious misconduct.

CONCLUSION

It is an embarrassment that not a single member of the City Council nor Mayor Tim Keller has asked Pat Davis to step down as President of the City Council. The voting public at least now know why and that progressive organizations have wise upped to Pat Davis. Pat Davis has no business making decisions regarding police reforms, law enforcement policy let alone being City Council President representing the entire City Council and in turn the entire city and people of Albuquerque. Pat Davis needs to resign and seek employment other than elective office. If he left the state after he resigns, that would be a good second step in the left direction.

City Councilor Isaac Benton Finally Gives A Crap

It was over two years ago on March 28, 2018, that the Albuquerque Journal reported on its front page that City Councilor Issac Benton used $20,000 of his City Council $1 million in “set-aside” money to purchase at auction what he hopes could be a solution to a burgeoning public bathroom shortage in Albuquerque.

https://www.abqjournal.com/1151379/providing-a-new-place-to-do-business-downtown.html

Benton had the city purchase a slightly used “Portland Loo” which is a one-stall, stainless steel, stand-alone restroom that sells for around $100,000 new. At the time, Benton claimed the steel toilet is “almost indestructible.”

On February 5, 2016, it was reported that an identical “Portland Loo” was yanked out of the ground in San Diego because it was a magnet for crime and it was one of the more notorious financial boondoggles in San Diego history.

http://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/news/politics/sdut-portland-loo-remove-crime-cost-restroom-2016feb05-story.html

In addition to a 130 percent increase in police calls to the area around the restroom, it was reported maintenance and repair costs were more than double initial estimates. The steel toilet stall, which operated for 13 months at 14th and L streets in San Diego, was moved to the San Diego storage yard and city officials said there were no plans to re-install it anywhere.

YOU CAN FINALLY GO IN THE PORTLAND LOO

On August 4, 2020, the City of Albuquerque’s Department of Municipal Development, Parks and Recreation Department, and District 2 City Councilor Isaac Benton announced the “Old Town Loo” has been installed. The placement of the loo allowed the DMD Parking Division to remove an old parking booth that was no longer being used and to widen the entrance into the parking lot. This has improved access for wider vehicles such as RVs and provides them with additional parking options while visiting Old Town.

The City of Albuquerque says the Parks and Recreation Department will maintain the unit which has been installed in the Old Town City parking lot at San Felipe Street and Central Avenue. The one-stall public restroom is made with heavy-gauge steel wall panels and has graffiti-proof coating.

Councilor Benton had this to say:

“I’m very pleased with the Portland Loo, which we were able to acquire for a very affordable cost using District 2 set-a-side funds, will now be in operation in Old Town. Thanks to DMD and to the Historic Old Town Property Owners Association for their advocacy”.

Dave Simon, director of Parks and Recreation, had this to say:

“Old Town is one of Albuquerque’s crown jewels, and we want visitors to have clean and accessible restrooms. … The Old Town Loo is a great addition to the existing facilities.”

https://www.krqe.com/news/albuquerque-metro/city-of-albuquerque-announces-installation-of-old-town-loo/

COMMENTARY AND ANALYSIS

This is the very first time that I know of that City Councilor Isaac Benton has shown any real concern about anything in his city council district. It is likely what will happen is that the Portland Loo will be a venue for illicit drug use or for that matter prostitution, which is what has happened in Portland.

When you wait long enough on someone, they finally give a crap.