Santa Fe New Mexican

AG: Las Vegas, N.M., broke open-record laws

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LAS VEGAS, N.M. — A Northern New Mexico city plagued by lawsuits and a former mayor charged with felony bribery and abuse of power is facing accusation­s that officials violated openrecord­s and ope- meetings laws.

The New Mexico Attorney General’s Office announced last week the city of Las Vegas, and its police violated state open records and opening meetings laws, the Las Vegas Optic reported. In letters sent to city officials, the office warned that continued violations could result in criminal charges.

The decision comes after the Las Vegas Optic requested police records around multiple homicides throughout 2019 and 2018.

The newspaper reported Las Vegas police denied two requests, citing exemptions that grant law enforcemen­t agencies the right to withhold parts of records.

“We have some concern as to the legal basis for the City’s decision to withhold records,” Assistant Attorney General John Kreienkamp wrote to Las Vegas City Attorney Esther Marie Garduño Montoya. “We also conclude that the City violated [open-records laws] by providing inadequate written explanatio­ns of its denials.”

Neither Garduno-Montoya nor interim City Manager Ann Marie Gallegos immediatel­y returned emails.

The Attorney General’s Office also issued determinat­ions in several complaints about violations of the state’s Open Meetings Act.

The Optic filed a complaint in July after the Las Vegas City Council scheduled a meeting without giving the public the proper notice required under open-meetings laws. The Attorney General’s Office says the city also violated those requiremen­ts.

“It is unacceptab­le for any public body in New Mexico — including the City Council of the City of Las Vegas — to fail to provide the public with reasonable advance notice for any meeting,” Kreienkamp wrote.

Then-Las Vegas Mayor Tonita Gurulé-Girón was charged last month with six felony bribery and abuse of power counts after prosecutor­s said she steered contracts to a constructi­on firm owned by a man they allege she was romantical­ly involved with.

The charges come after the Attorney General’s Office last summer raided City Hall, GuruléGiró­n’s home and the home of Marvin Salazar, who prosecutor­s say is the mayor’s boyfriend.

Gurulé-Girón recently resigned.

The charges followed several years of tumultuous local government in the New Mexico city of about 13,200 people that has been targeted by lawsuits from former workers over conflicts with Gurulé-Girón.

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