Albuquerque Journal

Bandidos club member charged in death

Police say 46-year-old killed man ‘associated with’ rival gang

- BY MATTHEW REISEN JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

A member of the Bandidos motorcycle club is accused of fatally shooting a member of a rival club on a crowded sidewalk in Downtown Albuquerqu­e.

Patrick Alvarado, 46, is charged with an open count of murder in the January 2020 death of 35-yearold Philip Quintel.

Alvarado was arrested Thursday evening in the North Valley and booked into the Metropolit­an Detention Center.

It is unclear if he has an attorney and his family declined to comment.

Prosecutor­s filed a motion to detain Alvarado until trial, saying he “put the lives of everyone on the street with him in danger,” in addition to killing Quintel.

Alvarado was arrested the night of the homicide and told detectives initially that he fired in selfdefens­e before the case apparently went stagnant for more than a year.

Gilbert Gallegos, an Albuquerqu­e

police spokesman, said in November that a new detective took over and found Quintel was shot without provocatio­n.

Gallegos had no details to explain the time lapse between the shooting and the case being reassigned in 2022. An online obituary said Quintel, a father of three from Arizona, had “a heart so big that God wouldn’t let it live.”

On Jan. 26, 2020, officers responded around 12:45 a.m. to gunfire outside the KiMo Theatre, near Fifth and Central, and found Quintel fatally injured, according to a criminal complaint filed in Metropolit­an Court. Police saw Alvarado run into the neighborin­g Sister bar, where he was detained and a gun was found in his pocket.

Police said at the time that Alvarado told detectives he was walking down the sidewalk when he bumped into someone and a fight broke out. He said Quintel “rushed him” and was reaching into his pocket when Alvarado shot him once.

Alvarado told detectives he never saw a gun or weapon in Quintel’s hand, according to the complaint.

There is no further investigat­ion documented in the complaint until January 2023, when a new detective compared Alvarado’s initial statement to surveillan­ce footage.

Police said the footage showed that Quintel and another man walked toward Alvarado, but “does not rush him at any point and his hands are at his side.” Additional­ly, Quintel appeared to be focused on a fight in the street, not on Alvarado.

Further investigat­ion found Alvarado was a member of the Bandidos Motorcycle Club and Quintel was “associated with” the Mongols Motorcycle Club, according to the complaint.

Police said “it is known that these two gangs are rivals and are known to have conflicts.” In the weeks leading up to the homicide, Alvarado was believed to be a Bandido prospect trying to become a member.

Detectives discovered calls between Alvarado and the Bandidos in the hours before the homicide, according to the complaint. Police said Alvarado became a full member of the gang some time afterward.

 ?? ?? Patrick Alvarado
Patrick Alvarado

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