Albuquerque Journal

Lawyers argue over use of confession

Judge to rule in ‘mobbing’ killing

- BY RYAN BOETEL JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

The 16-year-old murder suspect denied firing the fatal shots 24 times, according to a transcript of his interrogat­ion, and said detectives were confusing him four times.

But homicide detectives Leah Acata and Joshua Brown pressed on, telling Jeremiah King that his friends had already said he was a shooter and that the judge and District Attorney’s Office would be lenient with him if he told the truth.

Eventually, King said: “I fell down and then he came out with his gun and while I was on the ground, I didn’t know what to do so I, I shot,” he said, according to the transcript.

Second Judicial District Court Judge Brett Loveless said at the end of a hearing on Friday that he will decide within the next couple of

KING: Charged as an adult in killing

weeks if King’s confession can be used at trial. King’s attorneys said Albuquerqu­e police detectives deceived the young suspect into talking to them and that King was alone without an attorney or a guardian present when the interview took place July 9, 2015.

King, now 17, is being held at the Bernalillo County Juvenile Detention Center on suspicion of first-degree murder in the shooting death of Steve Gerecke, 60.

Gerecke was shot in his driveway outside his northeast Albuquerqu­e home in June 2015. Several of Gerecke’s family and friends were in court for Friday’s proceeding­s, which only pertained to King’s statements.

Police said King was part of a group of teenagers who were “mobbing” — breaking into houses to steal things — the neighborho­od near Lomas and Tramway and that King shot Gerecke when he confronted the teens outside his home.

In addition to King, Ryan Archibeque, 17, Christophe­r Rodriguez, 16, and Andrew Hubler, 15, were charged as adults in connection with the crimes, and Enrique Palomino and Matthew Baldonado, both 14, have been charged as juve-

SANTA FE — Republican Darren White, the state’s former top cop and ex-sheriff of Bernalillo County, is supporting Libertaria­n Gary Johnson for president — 17 years after he abruptly left Johnson’s administra­tion because of difference­s over drug legalizati­on.

White says he does not support Republican presidenti­al nominee Donald Trump and “his detestable brand of politics.”

He cites the GOP nominee’s divisivene­ss and his attacks on Republican­s who disagree with him.

“Passing on a presidenti­al election wasn’t an option,” said White, a longtime Republican who has been active in the party and was a delegate to the Republican National Convention in 2004.

“We’re talking about the election of the next president of the United States and it’s a hell of a lot bigger than any disagreeme­nt I’ve had with Gary in the past,” White told the Journal this week.

He resigned as secretary of the Department of Public Safety in November 1999, the first year of Johnson’s second term, citing the Republican governor’s recently ramped-up support for legalizing marijuana and other drugs.

White, who had been in Johnson’s Cabinet from the beginning and whose department oversaw the State Police, had said the governor’s position was a “major morale killer” for law enforcemen­t officers and undermined their credibilit­y.

In his resignatio­n letter, he said he was torn between his loyalty and respect for the governor and his own “deeply held beliefs.”

Today, White has come around on the issue: He says he supports the legalizati­on of marijuana if it’s regulated and taxed.

Johnson still supports legalizing marijuana — although not harder drugs — but says he would not use marijuana if he were president.

White is an investor, as well as the CEO and security director of PurLife, a medical marijuana dispensary that recently opened in Albuquerqu­e.

“I believed what I believed at the time. … We all change. The biggest thing for me is also being a patient, somebody who understand­s the benefits of using medical cannabis versus consuming a steady diet of prescripti­on drugs,” White said.

White said he has chronic pain from knee and back injuries from his time in law enforcemen­t and the U.S. Army.

But he said his support of Johnson in the Nov. 8 election has nothing to do with marijuana.

“I watched him for five years. Gary Johnson is honest, he’s discipline­d and he’s incredibly driven,” White said.

White says he considers himself an economic conservati­ve, like Johnson, and, in his view, Trump doesn’t talk enough about curbing the role of the federal government or the danger of the $19 trillion gross national debt.

“I believe the states are better positioned to find solutions to the challenges we face and that’s one of the things that brings me to Gary,” White said.

After leaving the Johnson administra­tion, White was a television reporter in Albuquerqu­e, then won election as Bernalillo County sheriff in 2002 and re-election in 2006. He was the GOP nominee for the District 1 seat in the U.S. House of Representa­tives in 2008, losing to Democrat Martin Heinrich.

He left the Sheriff’s Office in 2009 to take a job with incoming Albuquerqu­e Mayor Richard Berry as the city’s public safety director. He retired in 2011 amid scrutiny of his intervenin­g in the aftermath of a single-vehicle crash involving his wife; a report by the city’s inspector general later concluded he didn’t interfere with police or medical personnel.

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