Category: Media

  • Woman held in infant death granted release in Santa Fe

    (c) 2018 Santa Fe New Mexican Republished with Permission
    Woman held in infant death granted release

    Rachel Smith sits with attorneys during a hearing in District Court on Tuesday. Smith was being held in the death of 3-month-old she was baby-sitting. PHAEDRA HEYWOOD | THE NEW MEXICAN

    Rachel Smith, 27, had been in jail since her March 2017 arrest in connection with the death of the baby boy at a Cerrillos Road motel.

    The infant’s mother — then 17 years-old — had left two children with Smith for five days preceding the death, according to court records, and Smith was living with the children in the Thunderbird Motel when she woke up one morning to find the baby was not breathing.

    Investigators originally speculated that Smith — a heroin addict who admitted shooting up in the bathroom while she was watching the boy and his 2 year-old sister — might have rolled over on the boy. However, an autopsy later revealed the infant had bleeding in his brain consistent with “blunt force trauma.”

    Smith’s defense attorney, Stephen Aarons, filed a motion in November seeking to have the charges dismissed on grounds that her rights to a speedy trial and discovery of evidence had been violated. Among other things, he argued that it took prosecutors about a year to produce Children Youth and Family Department records that could include evidence that the infant’s mother had abused him.

    State District Judge Mary Marlowe Sommer postponed her decision on that motion during a hearing Tuesday, saying she needed to review the Children Youth and Family Department records before ruling.

    Aarons also filed a motion challenging one of the state’s expert witnesses, saying the proposed witness’s opinions on “shaken baby syndrome” as it relates to pinpointing when the child received the fatal injury are not typical and have been contradicted in literature that says determining time of injury is the unreliable “Achilles heel” of forensic pathology.

    Sommer also postponed ruling on that motion Tuesday, directing Aarons and Assistant District Attorney Larissa Breen to expand written briefs on the issue before the judge considers the matter again next month

  • Santa Fe puts DWI vehicle forfeiture program on hold

    SANTA FE, N.M. — The city of Santa Fe today announced that it has put its DWI vehicle forfeiture program on hold.

    According to a news release, the New Mexico Court of Appeals on Dec. 5 ruled that state law preempts Albuquerque’s civil forfeiture ordinance.

    “Although the case was specific to Albuquerque, in a broad ruling the court held that state law was intended to allow only criminal—not civil forfeiture, in any jurisdiction in the state,” the city said in a news release. “In response, we’re putting a moratorium on our DWI Vehicle Forfeiture program. The moratorium will hold until further notice.”

  • Investigation into fourth Martens suspect ‘has stalled’

    BY KATY BARNITZ / JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

    Two detectives assigned full time to the Victoria Martens homicide case will begin work on unrelated investigations after attempts to identify an elusive fourth suspect have stalled, according to the District Attorney’s Office.

    “In the absence of Jessica Kelley’s continued cooperation following the District Court’s rejection of her plea agreement, the investigation into the unidentified male has stalled,” Michael Patrick, DA’s Office spokesman, said in a statement. “Detectives will continue to work any new leads that are developed, but it is our understanding that they will also support other investigations.”

    In September, Kelley had been set to plead guilty to multiple charges under an agreement that required her to testify at related trials and to offer statements to authorities. District Attorney Raúl Torrez said then that her cooperation was critically important to the state’s investigation into the well-dressed stranger that Kelley says killed the 10-year-old girl. But Judge Charles Brown rejected the plea, saying he was not presented with enough evidence that Kelley committed the crimes to which she was pleading.

    Gilbert Gallegos, spokesman for APD, said the detectives “hit a critical point” in their investigation into the mystery suspect and expressed to their supervisors that they “felt like they could be doing additional work (in other cases) while they wait for these new leads.”

    “They’re still on the case – they’ll still be prepared to go forward if they develop new leads,” he said. “A new lead could come in any number of ways.”

    City spokeswoman Alicia Manzano said in an email Monday that the city is “committed to seeing the case through to the end,” but the police department is “also working on other crimes throughout the city, and needs to make the best use of resources, including detective time.”

    Kelley is set for trial next month; her attorney declined to comment on the development.

    But the announcement came as no surprise to Steve Aarons, the Santa Fe attorney who is representing Kelley’s cousin and co-defendant, Fabian Gonzales.

    “The fourth suspect is a figment of Jessica Kelley’s imagination, just one more false statement to avoid life in prison for her murder of Victoria Martens,” he wrote in an email.

    Kelley said during a September hearing that she was high on meth and baby-sitting Victoria when a man she did not know walked in and killed the girl. Prosecutors said he then told Kelley to clean up the mess or she and her children would be next. Prosecutors say the child was killed in an act of retaliation after Gonzales made threats to members of a rival gang.

    When police were called to the Martens family’s apartment on the West Side hours later, they found the child’s body burning in a bathtub. Kelley and Gonzales, who was dating Victoria’s mother at the time, are accused of dismembering the girl.

    Michelle Martens, the child’s mother, has pleaded guilty to various crimes and faces up to 15 years in prison. Contrary to early accounts of the crime, prosecutors say neither she nor Gonzales was at the apartment at the time of Victoria’s death.

    Kelley had been expected to plead guilty to child abuse resulting in death and lesser charges, and she faced nearly 50 years in prison.

    But Brown said he would not accept that agreement, saying there was no indication that Kelley knew or should have known that the person who entered the apartment intended to kill the child.

    In a press conference shortly after that hearing, Torrez suggested that the rejection would harm his office’s ability to prosecute remaining suspects and to identify the fourth one. And Gallegos said Monday that if Kelley were to accept another plea agreement, detectives could wind up with new leads.

    At trial, she faces numerous charges, including murder and child abuse resulting in death.

    Detectives ‘disappeared’

    Monday’s announcement regarding the investigation comes after the two APD detectives working the case cleared out their workspace at the DA’s Office on Thursday night and left their key cards behind without first notifying prosecutors, Patrick said Friday.

    “There’s no reason for it. They’ve been investigating this case for the better part of two years,” Patrick said. “Suddenly they’ve – without notice or even a phone call – they’ve disappeared.”

    They had been working in a shared space with the DA’s Office, focusing solely on the Martens case.

    Gallegos said that night that the detectives received permission from their supervisors “to work on additional investigations in the department while the prosecution wraps up its trial work in this case.” He said detectives would be available to pursue new leads as they arise.

    By Saturday morning, Patrick said he had been told by APD leadership that “the two detectives will be back on Monday.”

    “It doesn’t appear that the mayor knew that they had been pulled,” Patrick wrote in a text.

    Patrick sent an email Monday afternoon acknowledging the detectives would be working other cases as well.

    Copyright © 2018 Albuquerque Journal

    Reprinted with Permission

  • Man gets 7 years for kidnapping, battery in Santa Fe

    Man gets 7 years for kidnapping, battery in Santa Fe
    Daniel Tadege is led to the podium during his plea hearing in June in District Court. Phaedra Haywood/New Mexican file photo

    A judge on Monday sentenced an Ethiopian immigrant to seven years in prison for his role last year in the drug-related kidnapping and pistol whipping of a Santa Fe teenager.

    Authorities said Daniel Tadege, 21, and two or three other people went to the home of a 17-year-old boy, forced the victim into a Jeep at gunpoint, then beat and threatened the teen with a gun before abandoning him on Mutt Nelson Road.

    Tadege in June pleaded guilty to kidnapping and aggravated battery in a plea deal that exposed him to between two and 10 years in prison.

    Defense lawyer Stephen Aarons said Tadege had been left alone in the United States at the age of 18 when his mother and sister returned to Ethiopia, and that Tadege began dealing cocaine to support himself and pay tuition at Santa Fe Community College.

    Aarons said the victim was a customer who had robbed Tadege of money and drugs at gunpoint a few days earlier.

    Tadege’s assaulted the younger man, Aarons said, “to take his stuff back and teach [the victim] never to jump him again.”

    “It doesn’t justify it,” the lawyer said, “but it does explain it.”

    Aarons said Tadege’s mother had flown in from Ethiopia to attend the hearing, but she did not speak Monday. Another Ethiopian woman, a friend of the family, did speak on Tadege’s behalf, begging the judge to “correct the real horror” that had befallen him when he was left alone in a country that was not his own.

    “They brought him here and left him on the street,” she said.

    Aarons asked District Judge Mary Marlowe Sommer to send Tadege to a two-year program at the Delancey Street Foundation, a residential self-help program aimed rehabilitating substance abusers, ex-convicts and others.

    But prosecutor Blake Nichols asked the judge to give Tadege prison time.

    “The state is not immune to the plight of immigrant youth and does not oppose folks coming to this country for opportunity,” Nichols said. “The opportunity to sell cocaine and beat someone within an inch of his life is not the opportunity they came here for.”

    Tadege also addressed the court, saying he recognized that he made mistakes that hurt the victim and his family and asking for “a chance to get a grip” on his life at Delancey Street.

    But the judge sentenced Tadege to prison, noting that Tadege had a job in a restaurant when his mother left the country but, apparently unsatisfied with the money he earned there, resorted almost immediately to “illegal activity and significant violence.”

    The judge said Tadege would receive credit for about a year and a half spent behind bars but would have to serve 85 percent of his prison term — ineligible for day-for-day good time credit — because the crime was a serious violent offense.

    Sommer said Tadege would likely be deported upon completing his sentence. But Aarons said Tadege received a renewal of his 10-year green card while the case was pending and might have some time to remain in the country legally after his release.

    Tadege’s mother declined to comment following the hearing.

    District Attorney Marco Serna, asked whether the other participants in the kidnapping had been prosecuted, said “the victim was unable to identify either of the other adults who allegedly participated. The other defendant that was identified is a juvenile, and I cannot comment on juvenile cases.”

  • Murder charge against youth dropped, but he remains a suspect

    by Sami Edge The New Mexican | © The New Mexican | reprinted with permission

    District Attorney Marco Serna said Tuesday he will dismiss a murder charge against a 17-year-old Santa Fe boy, but the youth remains a suspect in the shooting death of a man from Michigan.

    The defendant, Zachary Gutierrez, was charged in the murder of 64-year-old Richard Milan. Milan died after being shot in September while walking his dog near Airport road.Serna said his staff does not have time to present the case to a grand jury before a Dec. 13 deadline. Even so, Gutierrez remains a suspect in Milan’s death, Serna stated in an email.

    Earlier this month, Serna told The New Mexican that pursuit of an indictment against Gutierrez had been postponed because his office was reviewing new information. Neither he nor police would elaborate on the new information.

    But Gutierrez’s attorney, Stephen Aarons, wrote on his website Tuesday that he recovered new video recordings of eye witnesses in the case which, he says, “confirmed that Gutierrez was an innocent bystander, not the shooter.”

    “We commend the prosecution and Santa Fe Police Detectives in reopening their investigation in light of new evidence,” Aarons wrote. “What is important now is to find the truth and prosecute the real shooter for this senseless murder.”

    Serna said Gutierrez will remain incarcerated at a youth detention center until mid-December. Milan, of Kalamazoo, Mich., was in Santa Fe visiting relatives when he was shot.

  • Murder charge dropped against Santa Fe teen

    By Edmund Carrillo / Journal Staff Writer © Albuquerque Journal 2018 | reprinted with permission

    SANTA FE — A murder charge is going to be dropped against a Santa Fe teen Tuesday, according to the boy’s defense attorney. Santa Fe lawyer Steve Aarons said in a press release Tuesday morning that charges of murder and tampering with evidence will be dismissed against 17-year-old Zachary Gutierrez.

    Aarons said he provided video that proves Gutierrez was an innocent bystander and not the shooter in 64-year-old Richard Milan’s death on Airport Road on Sept. 26. “I was very happy to tell Zach and his family this morning that they are dropping the murder case against him,” Aarons wrote.

    Santa Fe Police Department reports say Milan, of Kalamazoo, Mich. – who was on a cross-country trip and visiting relatives in Santa Fe – was walking his dog along Airport Road when he encountered a group of young people at the intersection of Lucia Lane.Surveillance video from a nearby business captures Milan going down from two gunshot wounds to his lower body. He later died from blood loss at the hospital.

    Aarons provided an email that he received from Santa Fe prosecutor Heather Smallwood Tuesday morning that said, “I wanted to give you a heads up that I am filing a dismissal in this case today.” No one from the Santa Fe District Attorney’s Office could immediately be reached.

    SFPD spokesman Greg Gurule said early Tuesday afternoon that the department was not aware of the District Attorney’s decision to dismiss the case.“The case remains under investigation there have been no additional arrests,” Gurule said in an email. “No suspects on the loose.”

  • DA Drops Murder Case

    Santa Fe, New MexicoThe prosecution is dropping its murder case against Zachary Gutierrez. On September 26, 64-year old Richard Milan, a resident of Kalamazoo, Michigan, was visiting his daughter in Santa Fe when he was shot in the leg while walking his small dog on Airport Road near Lucia Lane. He later died at the hospital.

    On October 6th, police arrested Gutierrez, age 17, and charged him with an open count of murder and tampering with evidence. He has been held in juvenile detention ever since. One day before the case was headed to the grand jury, however, defense attorney Steve Aarons produced video recordings of eyewitnesses who confirmed that Gutierrez was an innocent bystander, not the shooter. At 8:20 am, Heather Smallwood, Senior Trial Attorney, sent an email to Aarons stating that she “wanted to give a heads up” that she is “filing a dismissal in this case today.”

    We commend the prosecution, and Santa Fe Police Detectives, in reopening their investigation in light of new evidence. What is important now is to find the truth and prosecute the real shooter for this senseless murder. I was very happy to tell Zach and his family this morning that they are dropping the murder case against him.

  • Suspect in fatal shooting to remain in jail until trial

    A state District Court judge in Santa Fe ruled Friday that Anton Martinez, one of four adult suspects charged in last week’s fatal shooting of a teen on a highway north of Española, was too dangerous to be allowed out of jail while awaiting trial.

    District Attorney Marco Serna said Martinez, who faces a murder charge, proved he was a threat to the community when he armed himself with a Colt 45 provided by his friend Mark Hice and began shooting, indiscriminately, at a car full of teenagers when Hice gave the order.

     

    New Mexico State Police believe the shooting victims — Cameron Martinez, 18, a popular graduate of Española High School who was killed by a gunshot wound, and three others who were injured — were targeted by mistake.

    Serna said Hice told police he had fired nine shots during the incident, while another suspect “fired a full magazine” and 19-year-old Anton Martinez fired once.

    But Anton Martinez’s attorney, Stephen Aarons, argued that witnesses gave conflicting testimony about whether his client had fired any shots.

    Anton Martinez’s older brother took the stand Friday, testifying that another teen riding in the car that night had said in social media messages that Anton had not fired on Cameron Martinez and his friends. Instead, the brother said, Anton Martinez had joined other occupants of the vehicle in urging Hice to stop firing.

    District Judge Jason Lidyard ruled in favor of state prosecutors, however, saying Serna had presented sufficient evidence Anton Martinez was a threat to the community and should not be released pending his trial.

    Anton Martinez is one of seven people — three of them minors — who have been arrested since the shooting, which occurred around 9:30 p.m. Oct. 4 on N.M. 68 near the Ohkay Hotel Casino.

     

    State police have charged Anton Martinez, Hice, 22, and Alex Zamarron, 17, with first-degree murder. Arrest warrant affidavits say Hice admitted to officers that he gave guns to several of his friends, and they drove around in two cars Oct. 4, prepared to open fire on people who had been threatening him on social media.

    Hice’s girlfriend, Brittany Garcia, 21, along with Katryna Moya, 17, and Alejandra Gonzalez, 16, have been charged with lesser crimes, including tampering with evidence and conspiracy.

    State police Officer Ray Wilson, a spokesman for the agency, said a seventh suspect, 23-year-old Savannah Martinez, turned herself in around 3 p.m. Thursday. It was unclear what charges she may face.

    According to initial police reports, Hice, Anton Martinez, Garcia and Savannah Martinez were in one car and Zamarron, Moya and Alejandra Gonzalez were in another.

    The group had been cruising N.M. 68 on high alert, Hice told police. Some of them had been involved in an altercation on the highway earlier in the day, firing shots at another group of teens.

    When they encountered the vehicle carrying Cameron Martinez and his friends, they mistook them for some of their “enemies” and opened fire, realizing later they had targeted the wrong people, according to reports.

    Detention hearings for Hice and Garcia also were scheduled Friday, but their attorneys said they were waiving their rights to expedited hearings on prosecutors’ motions to detain them without bail until trial. The attorneys wanted more time to prepare for the hearings, they said.

     

    Friends and family members of both victims and suspects — many of them young people — packed Lidyard’s courtroom for the Friday hearing. Many of them were in tears over the fatal shooting, which has deeply affected residents of the Española Valley.

     

    Anton Martinez’s aunt, Nancy Martinez, said after the hearing she didn’t feel the state had proven her nephew fired a gun.

    But, she said, she understood the community’s need for some type of justice and felt it would help those in mourning “knowing something was being done.”

    “I think the community needs to grieve,” she said. “The judge not letting him out protects him in a certain way, too, because the community is really angry. And he’s just a kid, too.

  • Gang ties doubted in Martens case

    By Elise Kaplan / Journal Staff Writer Updated: Tuesday, October 2nd, 2018 at 9:02pm

    While the core of the state’s case against Fabian Gonzales rests on his ties to a local street gang and retaliation for threats prosecutors say he made toward rival gang members, Gonzales’ defense attorney has filed motions recently that cast doubt on that narrative.

    The District Attorney’s Office has said that 10-year-old Victoria Martens was raped and strangled in her mother’s apartment in August 2016 because Gonzales threatened rival gang members after a fight at a barbecue a couple of days earlier.

    Prosecutors have written that “the nexus between defendant’s threats to rival gang members and the retaliation that ensued and led to the homicide of Victoria is more than apparent” and claimed repeatedly that Gonzales is a member of the notorious street gang “Thugs Causing Kaos.”

    He is charged with reckless child abuse resulting in death and several counts of tampering with evidence.

    But motions filed by Gonzales’ attorney, Stephen Aarons, question Gonzales’ gang connections.

    “There is no evidence that defendant has ever participated in gang activities or assisted a member of any known gang,” he wrote in a motion. “Defendant did not retaliate for receiving a black eye from a girl, and it is illogical to think he would retaliate in his own home or that some fictitious gang members would retaliate because he was punched in the eye by a girl.”

    In response to emailed questions, Aarons said he believes the District Attorney’s Office is struggling to come up with a motive for the crime.

    “They are NOT saying that Fabian or a member of his ‘gang’ retaliated after he got beat up and hired a hit man to strangle his new girlfriend’s daughter in her bedroom,” he wrote. “Rather, the prosecution is claiming that a RIVAL gang – the judge asked at a recent hearing whether the state thinks there is another gang besides Fabian’s or not – retaliated against something Fabian did after he was beat up at the barbecue party a few days before the murder. The crux of their argument is that an as-yet unidentified gang retaliated when Fabian made threatening texts for several hours after the BBQ.”

    Gang affiliation

    During a stint at the county jail in September 2006, Gonzales did self-identify as a member of the gang “Kriminal Minded Kaos” in an inmate identification sheet, but he said at that time that the gang had disbanded.

    Gonzales, then 21, said that he joined KMK when he was 17. In response to the question, “What did you expect to gain by joining?” Gonzales answered, “I didn’t expect anything I just wanted to show my brother that I love him and I am down for him.”

    Gonzales has “KMK” tattooed on his abdomen and “thug” and “life” tattooed on his forearms, according to booking sheets.

    In response to questions about whether the group is “at war” or enemies with other groups Gonzales said, “The group is gone.”

    A spokeswoman for the Metropolitan Detention Center said that was the only formal interview Gonzales did with the jail’s gang security officers. After subsequent arrests, she said, officers would have kept an eye on Gonzales for any new gang tattoos and would have talked with him about any changes in affiliation.

    If the officers had found signs that he had joined another gang, they would have had him do another formal interview.

    Although initially Gonzales, his cousin Jessica Kelley and Victoria’s mother, Michelle Martens, were charged with rape and murder in the killing of the little girl, last month prosecutors announced a new theory about what happened.

    Kelley has said she was high on methamphetamine and baby-sitting Victoria when a “well-dressed” Mexican man came to the apartment, asked for Gonzales by his street name, and then went into Victoria’s bedroom and killed her.

    In the motions, attorney Aarons downplayed the fight at the barbecue and said interviews with the hosts show that they didn’t believe he was referencing TCK.

    “Further, the people at the barbecue party do not claim to be gang members and did not take defendant seriously when he was upset for getting punched in the eye,” he wrote in a motion.

    The woman who lived in the home and who Gonzales is said to have threatened is not listed in the Metropolitan Detention Center database of gang members, according to a jail spokeswoman.

    Prosecutors say the woman’s boyfriend is in a rival gang, but the man told the defense team’s investigator that he had “left that nonsense when I was a kid,” according to an interview transcript.

    A spokesman for the DA did not answer questions about Gonzales’ gang ties.

    The Court of Appeals is reviewing an appeal by the state on the judge’s ruling excluding statements and other evidence.

    Judge Charles Brown will rule on Aarons’ motions after the case returns to the 2nd Judicial District Court.

    DNA disputed

    Along with gang retaliation, DNA has also been a focus in the evolving case.

    Over the summer, the District Attorney’s Office said it found a partial DNA sample – likely from saliva, hair or skin cells – from an unidentified male on Victoria’s back. More recently, it has said that male DNA was also found under her fingernails and around her neck.

    Last week, Aarons asked for the state to be sanctioned for not turning over all the DNA evidence, a charge prosecutors have disputed.

    “The defendant’s motion is not only without merit but it is in fact wholly frivolous and full of factual misstatements,” prosecutor Greer Rose wrote in response.

    Although Aarons presented the theory that a mixture of DNA from at least five individuals was found on the crotch of a jumpsuit worn by Kelley and could have been transferred to Victoria, Rose said that was “not only outlandish but completely divorced from the actual evidence.”

    The jumpsuit in question did not belong to Kelley. A DA spokesman said the jumpsuit possibly belonged to Victoria and the DNA was not found on the crotch, but on the bottom and the straps.

    While the criminal case is ongoing, Aarons has submitted a tort notice of claim to the city to protect Gonzales’ right to sue for a violation of civil rights.

    On the notice, he says the city is at fault because Gonzales was “wrongfully arrested and detained for the murder of Victoria Martens. Police extracted false confessions and withheld evidence.”

    Copyright © 2018 Albuquerque Journal
  • Trial for Fabian Gonzales postponed

    Kai Porter
    September 27, 2018 05:45 PM

    ALBUQUERQUE, N.M.— The trial for one of the suspects charged in the child abuse death of 10-year-old Victoria Martens is now on hold.

     

    Fabian Gonzales’ trial was scheduled to start Oct. 15.

    However, Judge Charles Brown canceled Gonzales’ trial date during what should have been a routine status hearing.

    Brown made the decision after prosecutors said they wanted the New Mexico Court of Appeals to decide if certain evidence the judge banned from the trial should actually be allowed.

    The evidence includes statements made by Gonzales’ cousin, Jessica Kelley, who is also charged in connection with Victoria’s death.

    “She made some statements that implicated herself and this defendant,” said deputy district attorney Greer Rose. “We feel those statements are key in showing this defendant’s role in the murder of Victoria.”

    Prosecutors are also hoping the court of appeals will reverse Judge Brown’s decision to not allow evidence about Gonzales’ drug use during the trial.

    “It wasn’t just his past drug use,” said Rose. “It was evidence of drug use right around the time of the murder. We feel like that’s important to show the overall picture of what’s going on.”

    There’s no timeline for when the court of appeals will make a decision.

    Once it does, Judge Brown will set a new trial date.

    In response, the defense has filed a demand for a speedy trial.

    The defense claims the state’s appeal was filed to delay the trial and gain a strategic advantage.