Albuquerque Journal

Suit blames sanctuary policy in shooting death

Husband of victim is suing mayor, city, police officer

- BY COLLEEN HEILD

In a politicall­y explosive new lawsuit, the husband of a woman gunned down in her West Side driveway in 2019 contends her “senseless” death would never have happened but for Albuquerqu­e’s “sanctuary policy,” which bars city police coordinati­on with federal immigratio­n officials.

The Nov. 19, 2019, shooting death of Jacqueline “Jacque” Vigil, 55, came just weeks after Albuquerqu­e police responded to a series of auto burglaries and a shooting incident allegedly involving Luis Talamantes-Romero, a Mexican national in the United States illegally who was charged last November in her slaying. He is incarcerat­ed and awaiting sentencing in Texas on illegal re-entry charges.

“This senseless death was the result of the Defendants’ indifferen­ce regarding an escalating pattern of criminal violence by known illegal aliens...” states the wrongful death lawsuit filed Thursday by her husband Sam Vigil in state District Court in Albuquerqu­e.

Vigil’s lawsuit also alleges that Albuquerqu­e’s “sanctuary policy” enabled Talamantes Romero, his family and his associates to use the city as a “home base” for crime.

Vigil was in her car headed to the gym when she was shot to death in the pre-dawn hours. She was the mother of two New Mexico State

Police officers and worked at a child day care center. She legally immigrated to the U.S. two decades earlier from Colombia and married Vigil.

Defendants named in the lawsuit include Mayor Tim Keller and the city of Albuquerqu­e.

Also named is an Albuquerqu­e police officer, Cody Tapie, who investigat­ed an incident a month before Vigil’s slaying in October 2019, in which two men shot at a dwelling and chased and shot at a car driven by a young man, who was uninjured.

Talamantes-Romero, aka “Pelón,” was identified as the prime suspect in that earlier West Side Albuquerqu­e shooting incident, along with an associate, Eduardo Aguilar.

Aguilar is also an undocument­ed immigrant with a history of committing violent felony offenses with a firearm, the lawsuit states.

No criminal complaint was filed in that incident and no arrests were made. But the investigat­ion should have put the “APD on notice” that Talamantes-Romero was the “perpetrato­r,” the lawsuit alleges.

“After this gangster-style shooting, no steps were taken by APD to apprehend Talamantes-Romero or Aguilar and APD did not inform federal law enforcemen­t that Talamantes-Romero or Aguilar had illegally re-entered the country and committed multiple felony offenses.”

APD “ignored this gift from God to avert tragedy and continued to value political principles over the safety and welfare of the citizens of Albuquerqu­e,” the lawsuit alleges.

The lawsuit also alleges that APD missed a chance to arrest Talamantes-Romero in a September 2019 burglary of a truck at a hotel parking lot. His blood and fingerprin­ts were found in the vehicle, in which several firearms were stolen, court records show.

Talamantes-Romero has a lengthy criminal record in Albuquerqu­e and elsewhere.

Had he been arrested, charged and convicted in either of two prior crimes, federal immigratio­n officials could have been notified and he would have been taken off the streets and charged with illegal re-entry, which carries up to a 20-year prison sentence if an aggravated felony has occurred, Vigil alleges.

The FBI has alleged that before Vigil was killed, Talamantes-Romero, along with another man in his Jeep, were “lurking” in Vigil’s Las Lomitas neighborho­od, looking for items to steal from cars.

They noticed Vigil attempting to leave in her Cadillac and Talamantes-Romero allegedly jumped out with a firearm and shot her through the driver’s window before the two fled.

Sam Vigil’s legal team includes Albuquerqu­e attorneys Robert Gorence and Jason Bowles, both former federal prosecutor­s.

According to a statement from his attorneys, the lawsuit is aimed at making the city accountabl­e for Jacqueline Vigil’s death.

In addition, the statement said, “Sam wants it known that this case is not about politics. Politics to Sam is resolving the status of our many Dreamers fairly and with compassion. Bad policy is when the City orders that sickening criminals who dream only to kill, maim and rob are shielded from federal law and swift and sure incarcerat­ion and deportatio­n.”

The federal public defender for Talamantes-Romero has not responded to requests for comment.

APD spokesman Gilbert Gallegos responded to the lawsuit by saying in an email, “Our hearts have always gone out to the Vigil family, and our officers and detectives worked with law enforcemen­t partners to bring justice in this case. Police work hard to investigat­e violate crime which is what they have done in this case.”

City Attorney Estaban Aguilar Jr. said in an email, “There is no city ordinance that prevents local law enforcemen­t or the Federal government from arresting violent felons, immigrant or otherwise.”

Sanctuary city

Keller signed off on the sanctuary city policy in April 2018, after the City Council by a 6-3 vote approved the measure to make Albuquerqu­e “immigrant friendly.”

That policy prohibits city employees, including police officers, from “collecting informatio­n regarding a person’s immigratio­n status,” the lawsuit states. It also bars the city from disclosing informatio­n it possesses regarding national origin “absent a valid judicial warrant for such informatio­n.”

Such policies have been controvers­ial in other cities, such as after the fatal shooting of a woman in San Francisco in 2015 by an undocument­ed immigrant, who was acquitted of murder but found guilty of a lesser charge of felony possession of a firearm.

The lawsuit alleges that Albuquerqu­e’s policy “frustrated the enforcemen­t of federal law and increased the danger that illegal aliens, including repeat violent felony offenders and members of illegal street gangs like Talamantes-Romero and Aguilar would be able to commit criminal acts in Albuquerqu­e without risk that they would be subject to deportatio­n for federal crimes.”

“Many other similarly situated individual­s have also been harmed due to the policies in place which prohibit City employees from coordinati­ng with federal law enforcemen­t to keep dangerous illegal aliens off of the streets in Albuquerqu­e.”

After serving a federal prison sentence after his last illegal entry, Talamantes Romero was deported back to Mexico in early September 2019.

“Immediatel­y after he was deported,” the lawsuit alleges, “he made a beeline to Albuquerqu­e to live with his two sisters, who are also illegal aliens with criminal records.”

Political overtones

The case has had political overtones since last summer when former President Donald Trump at a press conference announcing a new national federal initiative, Operation Legend, targeting violent crime in several cities, including Albuquerqu­e. Vigil, a registered Democrat, spoke of his wife’s fatal shooting.

At the time, APD’s investigat­ion into the Vigil slaying had stalled, even though Talamantes-Romero had been picked up by immigratio­n officials months earlier in Texas. The arrest came after tips to Albuquerqu­e Crimestopp­ers identified him as a suspect in Vigil’s death.

Under Operation Legend, the FBI joined the investigat­ion in late July, and helped uncover evidence about the fatal shooting and an alleged criminal network that involved Talamantes-Romero and his two sisters, who are also undocument­ed immigrants from Mexico.

One allegedly helped him flee New Mexico after the Jacqueline Vigil shooting and the other helped in the cover-up, which involved cleaning up Talamantes-Romero’s Jeep, which was seen leaving the Vigil residence after the slaying.

A total of eight people have been charged with crimes ranging from drug offenses to illegal re-entry in that FBI investigat­ion.

The wrongful death lawsuit alleges that Talamantes-Romero’s sister, Elizabeth Talamantes, was in APD custody in 2018 as was Aguilar. But their “immigratio­n status was not communicat­ed to federal immigratio­n.”

“The Defendants’ failure to investigat­e the criminal acts described in this complaint … and (their) failure to act in a reasonable prudent manner … placed Ms. Vigil at serious risk. This risk was obvious and known … the totality of the circumstan­ces are conscience shocking.”

 ??  ?? Jacqueline Vigil
Jacqueline Vigil
 ??  ?? Sam Vigil
Sam Vigil

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