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Latest New Mexico news, sports, business and entertainment at 11:20 a.m. MDT

  • Advocates question investigations used to target wolves

TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) — An ongoing analysis by an environmental group is raising questions about investigations into livestock kills by Mexican gray wolves. The results of the investigations are used to compensate ranchers and target problem wolves in Arizona and New Mexico. The Idaho-based group Western Watersheds Project has documented significant oddities, errors or conflicting details in more than two-thirds of the 117 investigations it reviewed from 2019. The group's deputy director tells the Arizona Daily Star that numerous cases were confirmed wolf kills based just on "logical leaps" and what she described as a stunning lack of evidence.

  • Fire at Albuquerque assisted living facility displaces 13

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — The Albuquerque fire department says 13 residents of an assisted living facility were displaced by a fire in one apartment Saturday morning. The department says firefighters were able to put out the fire without it extending into other areas of La Vida Llena. According to the department, one person was transported for injuries related to possible smoke inhalation and no firefighters were injured. No additional information was released.

  • Visitors packing Southwest's national forests pose problems

FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. (AP) — The Memorial Day weekend saw crowds heading into the woods of northern Arizona's Coconino National Forest. But that was also typical of other May weekends this year, as were the trash and numerous  abandoned campfires that visitors left behind and that officials say presented health and safety hazards. And the same was true in northern New Mexico's Santa Fe National Forest where volunteers cleaning up one picnic area found paper plates, dirty diapers and even buckets of human waste. The trash aside, officials say the potential for human-caused wildfires is particularly worrisome when so many people are in forests and might have to be evacuated.

  • Balloon fiesta organizers hold out hope for October event

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — Organizers say it's "full speed ahead" as they plan for this year's Albuquerque International Balloon Fiesta amid the coronavirus pandemic. Hosted by New Mexico's largest city, the annual event usually draws hundreds of thousands of visitors and ballooning teams from around the world for nine days in early October. The fiesta's director of operations says officials are considering a few options and are hopeful the event can still happen. But he also acknowledged that the plans have to be flexible. State officials have said it's unlikely they'll permit large gatherings any time soon despite easing other restrictions as part of a phased reopening of New Mexico's economy.

  • 2 national monuments in New Mexico plan partial reopenings

GRANTS, N.M. (AP) — Plans are being made to partially reopen two national monuments near Grants in northwestern New Mexico for recreational access after being closed due to the coronavirus pandemic. The National Park Service says El Malpais National Monument on Monday will reopen access to all trailheads, though the monument's visitor center near Interstate 40 will remain closed temporarily due to a construction project. Officials say they tentatively plan to reopen the trails and campground at El Morro National Monument on a schedule of Wednesday through Sunday each w

  • Albuquerque cops use tear gas, helicopter against protesters

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — Police in Albuquerque said officers were forced to use tear gas and a helicopter against demonstrators after a protest against the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis turned violent. Albuquerque Police Deputy Chief Harold Medina said four people were taken into custody following reports of 33 gunshots near a peaceful protest Thursday along the city's historic Route 66. Medina says protesters surrounded a female sergeant's patrol car and broke the vehicle's windows before she escaped. He says some protesters also tried to drag motorists out of their cars and then attacked other police vehicles with baseball bats. No injuries were reported.

  • Primary may shake up state Senate leadership in New Mexico

SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) — New Mexico's primary election is testing the political fortitude of several influential Democratic legislators who have resisted progressive initiatives ranging from recreational marijuana legalization to shoring up abortion rights and greater spending from a state education trust. Candidates backed by a coalition of liberal advocacy groups are challenging Democrats in key Senate leaderships posts, including chamber President Mary Kay Papen of Las Cruces and Senate finance committee leader John Arthur Smith of Deming. Liberal groups say Senate leaders are neglecting social safety-net services. One senator is shifting course about state savings and spending in response to the coronavirus.

  • Wildlife managers use pup fostering to boost wolf genetics

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — A record number of captive-born wolf pups has been placed into the wild as part of an effort by federal and state wildlife managers to boost the genetic diversity among Mexican gray wolves in the Southwestern U.S. The interagency team announced the results of this season's cross-fostering program Thursday. They say the work of integrating the 20 pups into wild wolf packs took place in April and May. A dozen pups were fostered into four packs in eastern Arizona. Eight were spread among three packs in New Mexico. The most recent survey shows there are more than 160 wolves in the wild in the two states.