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Latest New Mexico news, sports, business and entertainment at 3:20 a.m. MST

  • Fight over river access simmers before New Mexico commission

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — A panel charged with overseeing hunting and fishing regulations and managing wildlife across New Mexico will have its first meeting Friday. The panel will meet following a shakeup over an ongoing dispute that involves public access to rivers and streams that flow through private property. Former Game Commission chairwoman Joanna Prukop ran afoul of Democratic Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham last fall when she and other commissioners voted to reconsider the contested rule that limits access. Questions have been raised about its constitutionality. The commission under Prukop's leadership had the support of sportsmen groups, conservationists and members of New Mexico's congressional delegation, but the governor's office has opted to replace her with a new board member.

  • Watchdog group traces influence of New Mexico's lobbyists

SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) — A watchdog group on ethics in government is highlighting the influence of paid lobbyists on the legislative process in New Mexico. A report published Friday advocates for greater public disclosures on lobbying and a change in the culture of local Statehouse politics. New Mexico Ethics Watch issued the report that names that state's top registered lobbyists in terms of expenditures and how many clients they represent. It also traces the influence of lobbyists on recent initiatives for gun control, recreational marijuana legalization, film industry incentives and taxes on tobacco products.

  • National preserve in New Mexico expands land holdings

JEMEZ SPRINGS, N.M. (AP) — A national preserve in northern New Mexico that is sometimes referred to as the "Yellowstone of the Southwest" has added another piece of property to its land holdings that contains sulfuric acid hot springs, volcanic fumaroles and steaming mud pots. The National Park Service recently completed the purchase of a 40-acre parcel known as Sulphur Springs within the Valles Caldera National Preserve. Officials say many of the geothermal features on the property are found nowhere else in New Mexico, and similar sites are very rare in the Western U.S. The acidic pools and streams in the area also are home to a range of "extremophile" algae and bacteria.

  • Ruling: Casino employee can't claim workers' comp benefits

SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) — The state Supreme Court says at least some tribal casino workers injured on the job can't receive New Mexico workers' compensation benefits. A ruling Thursday precludes an Isleta Pueblo casino employee who hurt her knee while working from bringing a claim against the pueblo or its insurer under the program. Program administrators dismissed Gloria Mendoza's claim, saying the pueblo can't be sued in state court or administrative proceedings without its consent under the tribal sovereign immunity doctrine. Thursday's ruling says Mendoza's claims can't proceed because the pueblo isn't part of the case and there's no indication it ever agreed to participate in the program. The decision cautions that its conclusions may not apply to all workers' compensation cases involving tribes.

  • Slain Tejano singer from New Mexico to be honored

SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) — A slain Tejano singer from New Mexico will posthumously receive the New Mexico Hispano Music Association's Lifetime Achievement Award. The Santa Fe New Mexican reports the group recently announced it will give Ernestine Saucedo, known to music fans by her maiden name, Ernestine Romero, the award at their annual Hispano Music Awards. The event will be held Saturday at the Ohkay Hotel Casino Conference Center. Organizers and Romero's loved ones said the award is one way to help ensure her legacy is not forgotten. Police said the 32-year-old singer and songwriter was fatally shot in July by her husband, 34-year-old Jessie Saucedo. Authorities say he then killed himself.

  • Police say tear gas smoked out suspects in pot burglary

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — Authorities say a SWAT team was forced to smoke out suspects in an Albuquerque marijuana dispensary burglary that sparked a standoff. Police said 35-year-old Kyle Minard was arrested Tuesday after the SWAT team dispatched tear gas into the R. Greenleaf business. Around four hours later, 32-year-old Bronson Jeremy Vigil came running out of the dispensary and was also arrested. Sgt. Tanner Tixier says officers had responded to a break-in alarm around 2:30 a.m. Tixier says officers searched the dispensary with a police dog when they spotted a man inside and he began "scaling the interior walls" before hiding in the roof. Police used police dogs and then tear gas to get the men out.

  • New Mexico senator waiting to decide on impeachment charges

SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) — New Mexico's senior U.S. senator says he intends to hear all the evidence at the impeachment trial of President Donald Trump before making a decision. Democratic Sen. Tom Udall was sworn in Thursday for the upcoming trial. Udall spokesman Ned Adriance said in an email that Udall is pushing for a full and fair trial to ensure that the facts are fully uncovered. Two articles of impeachment charge Trump with abuse of power by pressuring Ukraine to help him politically and obstructing Congress's probe into what happened. Udall has been a critic of Trump on a wide range of issues. 

  • Taos Pueblo woman death may have stemmed from dog attack

TAOS, N.M. (AP) — Authorities in Taos Pueblo are investigating whether a woman died as a result of an attack by a pack of dogs. Pueblo Gov. Edwin Concha told the Taos News that the New Mexico Office of the Medical Investigator was looking into last week's death. According to a dispatch log from Taos County officials, someone reported seeing several dogs around a woman's body Jan. 8. The caller said she got the dogs away from the body and saw bite marks on the victim's arms and legs. The log did not specify how many dogs were involved and whether they were wild.