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Details emerge from Thursday Alamogordo police shooting

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ALAMOGORDO, N.M. – A gun fight between New Mexico State Police and two Alamogordo man ended Thursday without injuries to all involved.

Otero County Sheriff’s Office and Alamogordo Department of Public Safety assisted in taking LaBruce Powell, 35, and Travis Powell, 31, both of Alamogordo, were taken into custody after a tense late evening standoff.

Shortly after 11 pm, New Mexico State Police uniformed officers in Alamogordo were alerted to a silver GMC SUV that fled the U.S. Border Patrol check point on U.S. 70 and was being pursued by Border Patrol and Otero County Sheriff's deputies towards Alamogordo.

State Police responded to assist in the pursuit. During the course of the pursuit, which led officers through Alamogordo city limits and was ultimately contained on the Alamogordo bypass, suspects in the GMC fired multiple gunshots on several occasions from the vehicle towards officers and deputies.

A New Mexico State Police officer continued to pursue the vehicle on the Alamogordo bypass around mile post 4 where the suspects again fired at the State Police officer.

At some point during the exchange, the State Police officer discharged his department issued rifle. The State Police officers were able to successfully employ a pursuit intervention technique on the fleeing vehicle and bring the pursuit to a safe end with no injuries to officers or suspects.

LaBruce Powell was charged for two counts of shooting at or from a Motor Vehicle, five counts of Aggravated Assault with a Deadly Weapon, and Criminal Damage to Property over $1,000.

Travis Powell was charged with Aggravated Fleeing a Law Enforcement Officer and Reckless Driving.

The investigation is active with officers still to be interviewed by New Mexico State Police Investigations Bureau. The State Police officer who fired his weapon has been placed on standard administrative leave.

No additional information is currently available to include the officers name and the details of the shooting which will be released via press release as it becomes available.

Through investigation it was also revealed that the suspect vehicle matched the description of a vehicle involved in an earlier aggravated battery with a deadly weapon incident involving the Alamogordo DPS where it was reported the suspects were firing a weapon from the vehicle at officers and civilians in Alamogordo.

Bosque Farm police get in scuffle with car thief; shots fired

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VALENCIA COUNTY – A frantic call to police led to a chase then an officer involved shooting Thursday.

Bosque Farms Police Department received a call from a stolen vehicle victim. The victim advised officers she was in the Peralta area traveling behind her stolen vehicle, which was a silver Kia Optima. As the victim followed her stolen vehicle, a suspect from within the stolen vehicle allegedly fired shots toward her.

Bosque Farms Police Department located the silver Kia Optima in Peralta, NM and a pursuit was initiated. The pursuit ended on El Cerro Loop near Toy Lane in Los Lunas, N.M., where the passenger of the vehicle was taken into custody immediately. The driver lead officers on a foot pursuit. During the foot pursuit a Bosque Farms officer discharged his department issued weapon. A Valencia County Sheriff’s Sergeant located the driver and tased him. The suspect driver was handcuffed and taken into custody.

The suspect, who was identified as Samuel Jose Orona, 28, of Belen, N.M. was charged with:

Unlawful Taking of motor vehicle (4th Degree Felony), Aggravated fleeing from a law enforcement officer (4th Degree Felony), and Resisting or Evading arrest (Misdemeanor).

Taking steps toward better traffic flow

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In 2019, the City of Gallup and the NMDOT developed a Gallup Area Transportation Safety Plan that identified the I-40/US 491 interchange as a high-priority area for safety and traffic mitigation measures.  In the fall of 2020, NMDOT started a Phase IA/B Study to identify options to make the interchange area safer for all users and examine how the interchange can work better with the Maloney Avenue/US 491 intersection.

At the second public information meeting, which was attended by more engineers than area residents, Derek Meier, an NMDOT consultant with Wilson & Company advised that the team had selected the following three options.

  1. Installing two, single-lane roundabouts which eliminates the two traffic lights,
  1. Signal light coordination improvements to smooth the flow of traffic along U.S. Highway 491, and
  1. To widen a small portion of U.S. Highway 491, extending a third southbound driving lane where Westbound I-40 traffic exits to US 491.

The purpose of these improvements is primarily to improve safety in the area where there have been a number of accidents due to the close proximity of the existing traffic signals and increased traffic flow.

Other issues addressed include improve roadway and drainage improvements, enhanced local and regional connectivity and interchange aesthetic improvements.

The design will also incorporate improvements that take into consideration safe passage for bicycle and pedestrian traffic.

The plan was to eliminate at least one of the signals on the north side of the interchange, because the lights are so close together at Maloney and the eastbound onramp. Meier called it the main point of congestion and crashes in that area. He said the plan eliminated both signals there.

Electronic comments will be accepted until Aug. 4.

Meier estimated that the cost of the construction to improve the I-40/U.S. 491 interchange is would come to roughly $16 million in 2023 dollars

For more information on the project background and previous presentations, please visit the NMDOT projects website:  https://dot.state.nm.us/content/nmdot/en/ProjectD6.html#6101390

Mike Daly contributed to this story.

N.M. Representative resigns her seat

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SANTA FE — Representative Sheryl Williams Stapleton, D-Albuquerque, resigned from the New Mexico House of Representatives July 30, including from her position as House Majority Leader.

In response, Speaker of the House Brian Egolf, D-Santa Fe, House Majority Whip Doreen Gallegos, D- Las Cruces, and House Majority Caucus Chair D. Wonda Johnson, D-Rehoboth, issued the following statement:

“Given the weight of the allegations against Rep. Stapleton and the ongoing investigation, her resignation from the House is appropriate and in the best interest of the Legislature and the state. There is important work to be done for the people of New Mexico, and House Democrats and our strong leadership team will continue to remain focused on serving our constituents and moving our great state forward.”

In her resignation letter, Stapleton denied the allegations of racketeering, money laundering, receiving illegal kickbacks and violations of the New Mexico Governmental Conduct Act.

She said she concluded that it is in the best interest of the State that she resign her positions. She added in her resignation letter that it would take a significant amount of time and energy to fully defend against the allegations she faces.

“I remain loyal to my constituents and my colleagues throughout these trying times, and pledge my full support and cooperation in the continued operation of the House of Representatives and the transition of my position,” she stated in her letter.

The House Democratic Caucus will meet July 31 to discuss the future of the position of House Majority Leader.

The Bernalillo County Commission will be responsible for appointing a new member to carry out the remainder of Rep. Stapleton’s current term.

DESTINATION: GALLUP

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City logos get fresh coat of paint

Gallup is getting a brand refresh.

Based on surveys of residents and past visitors, as well as local history, the branding consultancy company Bandwagon LLC has developed a color palette and mood for a new logo to be used in Gallup promotional materials including print, digital advertising, billboards, visitor guide, and tourist merchandise, such as T-shirts.

The new logo and slogan are a move away from “GallupRealTrue,” as the city works to forge a unique brand as a destination city.

“The art, the jewelry, the weavings were things that all the surveys brought up,” Bandwagon partner Cory Cart said. “We realized there was a very distinct color palette and a very distinct shape that is in everything from jewelry to the fashion designer [Navajo Spirit]’s logo.

“You’re seeing it in one of the hotels, the columns holding up the porch to a drive under,” he said.

Bandwagon commissioned Navajo artist Victor Pascual, who grew up in Farmington, to design the logo. The hope is that the chevron-shaped logo suggests both Native American and cowboy cultures that are embedded in Gallup’s history.

“We have a unique opportunity to bridge the past of Gallup and the future and what visitors are looking for now,” Cart told the City Council at its July 13 meeting. “We’re giving you guys a brand that is nodding to that historical past.”

While Arizona, Oklahoma and Texas have benefited from increasing Route 66 tourism in recent years, New Mexico has not been as aggressive about marketing its strip of the Mother Road, Cart pointed out. The new logo design is part of a plan to capitalize on that while building Gallup’s singular identity.

“It’s going to be an invitation from you and the people that make Gallup unique to the visitors,” Cart said. “It’s an invitation to come and visit you in your home.”

It’s not just Gallup leaving the “True” image behind. Cart noted the state tourism department is moving away from the New Mexico True slogan, drifting back to “The Land of Enchantment.”

“Santa Fe has never gone with the True brand. Neither has Albuquerque,” he said. “It takes 15 minutes to explain what the slogan means.

“That takes time away from explaining the destination,” he said.

Also, consumers researching vacation spots tend to search for community information using the terms visit, experience, or enjoy with the city name, hence the pending visitgallup.com website, which should be unveiled in September.

Gallup’s City Council unanimously approved the Gallup-McKinley County Chamber of Commerce tourism services contract and city budget adjustments for tourism grants.

The city’s tourism department won a 2:1 matching grant from the New Mexico Tourism Department, which means the city will spend $42,491 of its own money and $84,983 in grant funds to market Gallup tourism.

The grant funds will help cover 12 months of social media amplification and Google Search management for the new website; six months of digital display advertising on cell phones and embedded in games and social media, including a three-month campaign in Phoenix, Ariz.; and a year of advertisements in “ROUTE” Magazine.

The $115,000 budget allocation for the Chamber includes $15,000 for advertising and promotional services, $75,000 for the operation of the year-round Visitor Information Center and $25,000 to print the 2022 Visitor Guide. In exchange for developing the guide, the Chamber gets the right to keep revenue from guide ad sales.

Complementing the measures approved July 13, will be digital kiosks downtown, where travelers can get updated information about what’s happening in town. The Council approved the kiosks in the spring at a special meeting for Capital Improvement Projects. Kiosk placement won’t be determined until the website widget and app are complete, Gallup Tourism and Marketing Manager Jennifer Lazarz told the Council.

This year’s budget shifts some money from marketing to operations to keep up with increasing wages and make sure the visitor center can stay open. That’s especially important because the next nearest visitor center to the Arizona state line has been closed for repairs for some time, Chamber of Commerce CEO Bill Lee said.

It gives Gallup an opportunity to pull in visitors who, in the past, might have stopped there instead.

“To our west is the Manuelito visitor center run by the state,” Lee said. “It has been closed for a long time and there is no opening date scheduled.

“It’s usually the top-running visitor center in the state – the other one is Del Rio on the other side of the state,” he said.

Lee and Lazarz are both excited about developing the Visit Gallup app, not least because it’s easy to update as things change. The last Visitor Guide was created in 2019, then COVID-19 hit and shut down a lot of tourism.

“Of the traders listed in the [current] Visitor Guide, at least five are no longer in business,” Lazarz said. “Of the restaurants, at least three are no longer in business.

“But we’ve got other exciting businesses that have opened since that are not in the Visitor Guide,” she said.

Using a cell phone app will let tourism staff update information “in a flash,” Lee said, as well as meeting travelers where they are.

“It’s much easier to deal with than carrying a book,” he said. “We’re still finding a happy medium.”

By Holly J. Wagner
Sun Correspondent

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