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Tuesday, Mar 17th

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Heinrich talks education, funding in Gallup visit

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Sen. makes stops at college, community pantry, veterans cemetery

Sen. Martin Heinrich, D-N.M., stopped in Gallup April 2 to announce the Degrees Not Debt Act and to support the construction of the Gallup Veterans Cemetery.

During his visit, he spoke to fellow democrats at the Jim Harlin Community Pantry about his bid for re-election to the U.S. Senate.

Heinrich said voters of the region should cast their ballots for him because he knows this part of the state and because he cares about the area and is willing to fight for it.

“We work on issues here all the time that are near and dear to my heart and the community,” he said.

Heinrich pointed to initiatives like the community-based outpatient clinic for veterans in Gallup, and a new Indian Health Services hospital.

He also mentioned his commitment to outdoor recreation availability in the area.

“I worked with a number of folks from Gallup on the trail project in the Zuni Mountains that brings new economic activities here,” he said.

Heinrich was the former director of the Cottonwood Gulch Foundation in Thoreau and said he spent many evenings and weekends in Gallup shopping.

The senator said it was growing up in a working class family that led him to embrace Democratic Party values.

“My dad never got a college degree and my mom never finished high school,” he said. “They were able to create a very bright future by simply working hard and playing by the rules.”

The current political climate in the country right now precludes some people from playing by the rules while enjoying benefits and incentives that are not available to all American citizens, he added.

“We can hit the reset button in this election,” Heinrich said. “We can invest in our own again.”

Heinrich announced the Degrees Not Debt Act April 2 at Middle College High School, which is located on the UNM-Gallup campus.

The act would focus on the Pell Grant, a need-based federal grant program that began in 1972.

Under the Degrees Not Debt Act, the Pell Grant would be increased to $10,000 per year and index future Pell Grants to the consumer price index, lower expected family contribution, hold states accountable to higher education funding appropriations, and increase transparency in college costs.

Bolstering education will stimulate the economy, Heinrich said of the initiative.

“We were at (Middle College High School) today announcing new legislation to modernize the Pell Grant and bring it up to a level where it should be so that our youth can go to college without graduating with a mountain of debt,” he said.

He said education is the great equalizer, which levels the playing field economically. Investing a portion of the state permanent fund toward early childhood education is one possible solution.

Heinrich cited the $1.7 trillion tax bill that provided tax cuts in the form of corporate buy backs and tax cuts for high income earners as an example of misused resources.

There were many other ways the $1.7 trillion could have been spent, Heinrich said, especially considering student debt could have been eliminated.

“We have $1.4 trillion in student debt today that could have been wiped out. Think about how that could have cascaded down the economy,” he said.

The past year-and-a-half has shown that congress and the president are only interested in taking away the American peoples’ tax care and passing the tax cuts, Heinrich told the crowd.

Heinrich did give credit to the Republicans who were willing to cross the aisle and vote for healthcare and saving the Medicaid expansion in N.M. that keeps rural hospitals open.

“These things are the foundation of not only health care, but also our local economies,” he said.

One constituent asked about the status of the Indian hospital that was approved for funding years ago.

“We’re still on track for FY 2020 for the initial $33 million,” Heinrich said. “We’re basically in line behind the one they’re working on in Arizona.”

As a member of the Senate Intelligence Committee, Heinrich has also been sitting in on the hearings regarding Russian interference in American elections.

“We’re the last game in town,” he said. “The House Intelligence Committee has been completely melted down and has become bifurcated. We are still moving forward.”

The first interim findings dealing with election infrastructure were released and revealed weaknesses the committee is working to address.

Commending the work of New Mexico Secretary of State Maggie Toulouse Oliver, Heinrich said her random auditing of precincts, comparing the electronic and paper voting records should be employed across the country.

“That’s the kind of thing that we ought to be encouraging everywhere,” he said.

COMMUNITY CONCERNS

Lucia Kerele of Gallup High School asked about the economy.

“Earlier, you said you wanted to make sure we had one economy, but you didn’t mention how you wanted to do that,” Kerele said.

Heinrich again pointed to his focus on bolstering access to higher education.

“It starts with education, pure and simple,” he answered. “If you don’t make sure that education is accessible to people, no matter what their income level or zip code, you’re never going to bridge that gap.”

Local attorney Barry Klopfer asked about individual rights with regard to privacy.

“Do you support declassification of the ‘Race Paper?’” Klopfer asked. “There’s this influx right now of Homeland Security and the FBI of surveilling and monitoring black activists. Back in the day, we had groups like the Church Commission to protect us from domestic overreach of spying on U.S. citizens.”

Heinrich said the Senate Intelligence Committee has ongoing government oversight on the kinds of surveillance done domestically and throughout the intelligence community.

Angela Barney-Nez said she was seeking the senator’s support for Indian education.

“The early childhood funding has been completely wiped out in the FY 2019 proposal in the Green Book now. Johnson-O’Malley has been completely wiped out. There’s about $160 million that has been wiped out from Indian education,” Barney-Nez said.

The Johnson-O’Malley Act is a federal subsidy covering education and medical services to benefit Native Americans.

“This is something that Sen. (Tom) Udall and I have been following very closely,” Heinrich said in response. “We’ve seen a pattern of this administration of under-funding and even de-funding these programs. We’re going to continue to make sure that the Appropriations Committee does a better job of funding those priorities than what has come to us from the White House.”

By Rick Abasta 
For the Sun

Crownpoint man pleads guilty to failing to update sex offender registration

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ALBUQUERQUE – Alton Jay Cowboy, 48, an enrolled member of the Navajo Nation who resides in Crownpoint, N.M., pled guilty April 5, in federal court in Albuquerque, to violating the Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act.

SORNA, also known as the Adam Walsh Protection and Safety Act, requires that a convicted sex offender register in each jurisdiction where the offender resides, where the offender is employed, or where the offender is a student, and that the sex offender maintain current registrations.

Cowboy was charged by indictment on Feb. 27, with violating SORNA by failing to update his sex offender registration from April 4, 2017 through Dec. 27, 2017, in Bernalillo County, N.M.

During Thursday's proceedings, Cowboy pled guilty to the indictment without the benefit of a plea agreement.  At sentencing, Cowboy faces a maximum penalty of 10 years in federal prison. He will be required to register as a sex offender when he completes his prison sentence pursuant to his previous conviction.

In 1998, Cowboy was convicted in federal court for aggravated sexual abuse of a minor while in Mariano Lake, N.M. He was released from prison in 2009, and per the conditions of his release, he's required by law to register as a sex offender, every 90 days, for life.

Cowboy remains in custody pending a sentencing hearing which has yet to be scheduled.

Man wanted for Dead Horse Mustang robbery arrested

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Staff reports

A little bit of luck and some very good detective work led to the arrest of a Churchrock man March 26 for the armed robbery of the Dead Horse Mustang convenience store earlier that day.

Kyle Harrison, 34, is now facing nine charges — three counts of armed robbery, two counts of assault with intent to commit a violent robber, three counts of latency and one count of tampering with evidence.

Sgt. Robert Turney, an investigator with the McKinley County Sheriff’s Office, said he learned of the robbery around 2:30 am, shortly after it happened.

The phone call from Deputy Johnson Lee informed him that a man had entered the store with a knife, terrorized the two clerks and he then left with a unspecified amount of money in a blue colored vehicle with the clerk’s vehicle keys along with keys to the store.

The two clerks in the store were not injured, Turney said, but one was grabbed briefly. Both were “very scared.”

The video surveillance tape of the robbery was not immediately available but an alert was put out asking for on duty police personnel to be on the lookout for the vehicle.

At 9 am, after reviewing the investigative report produced by Lee, Turney learned that the suspect had not worn any type of mask during the robbery. He also received a copy of the surveillance tape, which showed a very clear view of what happened earlier that day.

“The video was very scary,” Turney said.

Turney said he then began searching along Challenger Road in Churchrock for the vehicle when he received a phone call that the vehicle had been seen traveling on Nizhoni Boulevard, near the sheriff’s office.

MCSO Inv. Merle Bates, along with Lt. Eric Jim and Dep. Brandon Salazar, had managed to stop the suspect vehicle near Second Street and Nizhoni Boulevard and had taken the driver, Harrison, into custody after it was found he had a bench warrant out for his arrest.

During a search of his person for possible weapons, officers also discovered a small yellow baggie wrapped in a white tissue in one of his pockets. Inside was a white clear glassy substance, which later was identified as methamphetamine.

Harrison at first denied having anything to do with the robbery but when informed of the videotape and other evidence gathered against him, he confessed, said Turney.

Turney credited the swift end of the investigation to a little bit of luck along with some good detective work, pointing out that detectives later learned they had apprehended Harrison just 15 minutes before he would have left town.

Currently, Harrison is being held at the McKinley County Adult Detention Center on no bond stemming from two warrants. He’s making his first court appearance this Wednesday afternoon.

Beloved radio personality walks on

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JOHN MCBREEN DEAD AT 69

Officials for Millennium Media announced the death of John McBreen March 19, its news reporter for more than 25 years. McBreen passed away at his home the weekend prior. He was 69.

“I was heartbroken when I heard the news,” said Mary Ann Armijo, general manager for the iHeartRadio stations here in Gallup.

McBreen spent almost his entire adult life in Gallup, reporting everything from city council meetings to what he heard on the streets, as he ran down the rumors and the events that would become part of the city’s history.

“I loved taking to him about the past because there was no one more knowledgeable about it,” Armijo said.

Over the years, McBreen formed close relationships with the people who have led Gallup and the state since the 1970s. He interviewed every major state politician and local federal officials, as well as young Gallupians who had won the annual spelling bee.

Sammy Chioda, general manager of Mellennium Media, was McBreen’s boss as well as his friend of the past two decades.

“John will be missed by all of us,” Chioda said. “There was no one who worked harder.”

As other metropolitan radio stations moved away from local reporting, McBreen remained a fixture at Millennium Media, reporting the daily news of Gallup and the region on several radio stations – even well past retirement.

“He truly leaves a legacy that will keep him in our memories in the coming years,” Chioda said. “He’s going to be missed.”

HISTORY AND HONORS

McBreen was born in Philadelphia and moved to Gallup in 1973, after seeing an ad put out by the New Mexico Broadcasters Association saying New Mexico was “an exciting place to live.” At the time, Jack Chapman, the owner of KGAK radio, was looking for someone to cover both the news for Gallup and the Navajo Nation. McBreen won the job, and was on the air 50 weeks out of the year for nearly 40 years following.

For the first 22 years he worked under Chapman, until Champman sold the radio station in 1997.

Over the years he was here, said Chioda, McBreen was one of the top stringers for the Associated Press, which gave him numerous awards not only for calling in the most stories of any reporter in the state but for covering some of the biggest stories in the area.

When Larry Casuse and Robert Nakaidine kidnapped the mayor of Gallup, Emmett Garcia, and kept him hostage at a local sporting goods store downtown, McBreen was there to cover every second of it. He won numerous wards from AP and the New Mexico Press Association for that coverage.

A decade later, when members of the Navajo Tribal Council held a meeting late into the night to suspend then chairman Peter MacDonald, McBreen was also there, overcoming attempts by some members of the council to get him to stop broadcasting.

That also earned him a few awards – and for the rest of his life, McBreen kept tapes of both events on hand to remind him of those days.

One of his favorite stories was about an interview with Archbishop Fulton J. Sheen, who was in Gallup for a retreat. The archbishop had turned down a couple of other requests for an interview so McBreen just showed up to where he was eating, flopped down his microphone and asked for an interview.

When dissidents took over a semi-conductor plant in Shiprock, McBreen was the only reporter allowed in and he spent several hours interviewing various members of the American Indian Movement. His interviews were aired nationwide.

In 1986, McBreen traveled to Washington D.C. to accept a coveted Associated Press award for producing the most top weekend stories of the year.

McBreen was on hand every time there was an election, either in Gallup or Window Rock, broadcasting the results and interviewing anyone who showed up at the county courthouse, the city council chambers or the Window Rock Sports Center.

Over the past few years, people had wondered what would happen when he retired because there seemed to be no one equipped to replace him.

Chioda has not decided whether he will continue the news programs.

“I’m reaching out to our listeners and asking them if we should continue,” he said. “I should know in a short while.”

But no matter what the decision is, he added, the station will continue to broadcast its public affairs programs.

McBreen was preceded in death by his parents, Don and Marianne McBreen, whom both are buried in Colorado.

Services will be held at Sacred Heart 415 E. Green Ave., with a rosary at 6 pm Sunday and an 11 am Monday memorial mass.

By Babette Herrmann 
and Staff

MCSO searches for trailer theft suspect

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Staff Reports

The McKinley County Sheriff’s Office is seeking information on John Howard, 32, who officers believe to have been involved in the theft of two flat bed trailers from the Thoreau area Feb. 17 and 19.

Howard is roughly 5’8”, weighing 210 pounds, with brown hair and brown eyes. Officers are also seeking information on the location of Howard’s black Dodge double cab pickup truck, which has a New Mexico license plate numbered 112-TPF.

Anyone with information is asked to contact MCSO Sgt. Robert Turney at (505) 722-8514.

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