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The rogue’s new gallery of left-wing scoundrels

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Victor Davis Hanson

The entire career of race-baiter Al Sharpton was founded on falsehoods about the Tawana Brawley scam.

Nearly everything the left told us about the Trayvon Martin fight was false.

The “hands up, don’t shoot” Ferguson fable and the Covington Kids myth were quickly exposed.

The Duke Lacrosse and Jussie Smollett melodramas were laughable.

Russian “collusion,” “laptop” disinformation, and Joe Biden “fit as a fiddle” gaslighting were utter lies.

But more recently, the hard left lost its mind championing a host of violent, unsavory characters.

The illegal alien and El Salvadorian national, Kilmar Abrego Garcia, was portrayed as a victim of unfair deportation in the left’s larger, losing war for open borders.

Abrego Garcia became a “Maryland Man”: a supposed poor victim of Trump overreach.

He was constructed as a family man engaged in construction to feed his family, who somehow forgot to become “documented” and was deported.

In truth, Garcia is now facing felony indictments for human trafficking. He was a likely MS-13 gang member, a violent and bullying woman-beater, and rarely employed gainfully in construction.

Luigi Mangione was a rich, spoiled kid who dabbled in Jacobin politics.

Posing as a revolutionary, Mangione ambushed Brian Thompson, the CEO of UnitedHealthcare. He murdered him in cold blood near a New York hotel.

Instantly, some on the left embraced Mangione as a revolutionary hero who delivered justice to a supposedly greedy corporate capitalist.

Mohammed Sabry Soliman, like Garcia, was a violent illegal alien. He bragged about his hatred of Jews in general and Israel in particular.

So Soliman made some Molotov cocktails and tried to incinerate Jewish marchers advocating on behalf of Israeli hostages still held by Hamas.

Soliman’s wife and five children, to whom Soliman filmed a video explaining his dedication to violent jihad, were also illegal aliens.

Soliman may well have preferred to burn Jews to remind us of the fires of the Holocaust ovens.

In the mind of the mainstream liberal media, the Soliman family was cruelly detained by the evil Trump administration that was considering returning the illegal aliens to their Middle East homes.

But recently, during the LA riots, the left went completely crazy as the entire Democrat Party and California state officials sided with violent protesters and illegal aliens.

The open border rioters soon got the message that left-wing California officials were on their side.

So, throngs began burning cars. Illegal aliens waved Mexican flags and burned American flags.

Protesters spat on law enforcement and pelted them with rocks, firecrackers, and concrete blocks.

Stores were looted. Critical freeways were swarmed and shut down.

And for what?

To protest the legal efforts of ICE to serve deportation warrants to a few hundred of some 10-12 million illegal aliens who had illegally swarmed into the U.S. during the Biden administration’s four-year destruction of immigration law.

California Governor Gavin Newsom damned the federal immigration efforts as “chaotic” and “reckless” and seemed obsessed only with Trump.

Then Newsom dared ICE to arrest him.

Like some antebellum, neo-Confederate, states’ rights activist, Newsom threatened to withhold California’s federal income taxes from the federal government — a possible felony.

Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass — recently infamous for junketing in Ghana while Pacific Palisades burned down — warned ICE that “We will not stand for this.”

What did her threat mean? Did she intend to use force to support the street thugs against her fellow American officers?

California Democrat Congresswoman Norma Torres screamed at overwhelmed ICE agents seeking to issue arrest warrants with the obscene threat, “Get the f*** out of LA!”

As the mob violence increased and public outrage grew, a desperate and now embarrassed Newsom could only double down on his obsessions with Trump.

What has caused Newsom’s Trump Derangement Syndrome?

Is it because Trump called out the National Guard and Marines to aid an overwhelmed Los Angeles Police Department to stop the violence that left-wing officials and the media had appeased?

In sum, is the left once again trying to commit political suicide?

Polls showed overwhelming public support for deporting those who illegally entered and reside in the U.S., especially the nearly half a million believed criminals.

Trump’s own most supportive demographic in recent polls has been Hispanics. Like all Americans, they are appalled by violent thugs and illegal aliens waving Mexican flags who have no wish to return to Mexico while burning American flags as they demand illegally to stay in the U.S.

The more the incoherent left claimed the protests were “peaceful” and damned the Trump administration for sending them help, the more the violence continued.

And the more the public was relieved that Trump was trying to stop the riots.

Democrats currently lack sane and effective leaders.

But that is no excuse to swoon over creepy gang-bangers, spoiled-brat assassins, antisemitic burners of Jews, and illegal aliens breaking the law and damning America — while waving Mexican flags.

Victor Davis Hanson is a distinguished fellow of the Center for American Greatness. He is a classicist and historian at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University, and the author of “The Second World Wars: How the First Global Conflict Was Fought and Won,” from Basic Books. You can reach him by e-mailing authorvdh@gmail.com.

Eddy County questions ‘sanctuary’ list inclusion

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Adrian Hedden
Carlsbad Current-Argus
achedden@currentargus.com

The federal government’s designation of Eddy County as a “sanctuary” for undocumented immigrants drew pushback from county commissioners during their Tuesday, June 10, meeting as local officials maintained they were supportive of President Donald Trump’s hard-line stance on immigration.

A list published Thursday, May 29, by the Department of Homeland Security of so-called “sanctuary communities” across the U.S. included Eddy, Chaves, Lincoln and Otero counties, along with 19 other counties in New Mexico and the cities of Santa Fe and Albuquerque.

The list was removed from the department’s website by the following Monday, but Eddy County’s inclusion ignited confusion and concern among local leaders in the conservative southeast corner of the state.

It was unclear if removing the list from the website altered the apparent “sanctuary” status of the counties in New Mexico, and what the specific criteria were for inclusion or what the county’s presence on the list entailed.

In a statement released with the list, U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem said that “sanctuary city politicians” are putting Americans and local police in danger while protecting “violent criminal illegal aliens.”

Each jurisdiction on the list was to receive a “formal notification” of its non-compliance with federal immigration policy and violations of federal statutes, according to the Department of Homeland Security news release.

District 4 Commissioner Bo Bowen said when the list was publicized, the county “immediately” contacted the Department of Homeland Security for clarity and requested Eddy County be removed.

“There was a list that DHS released that identified some cities and counties as not cooperating with the federal government. Eddy County was on that list. I received a bunch of messages regarding this, and asking why Eddy County was a sanctuary county,” Bowen said. “We took action right away. There wasn’t a whole lot to their criteria for the list.”

He pointed to a resolution passed unanimously by the county commission on Dec. 17, 2024, expressly supportive of then President-elect Donald Trump’s agenda to increase border security and deport more undocumented migrants.

Bowen said the county supported the federal government’s work to remove “illegal criminals” and “send them back with (Immigration and Customs Enforcement).”

“We felt very confident that’s what Eddy County wanted,” Bowen said.

Eddy County Sheriff Matt Hutchinson, who released a statement decrying the county’s inclusion on the list in the days after it was published, said at the meeting that the sheriff’s office intended to support any law enforcement agency in efforts to maintain border security.

“We all saw what was posted and what was said online. The sheriff’s office will abide and help any law enforcement agency, regardless of the acronym. My job as sheriff is to verify the charges,” Hutchinson said.

He said as of Tuesday, that there were 28 people with undocumented immigration status in custody at the Eddy County Detention Center.

Detention Center Warden Billy Massingill said all the arrestees were brought to the jail on other charges, such as drunken driving or battery, before their immigration status was determined. He said no arrests were made due to immigration status alone.

“They already had criminal and state charges. No one is coming in just because of their non-citizenship,” Massingill said.

Bowen said that despite what he called an “error” in including Eddy County on the list, he still supported Trump and Noem’s agenda to crack down on undocumented immigration.

“I think this was a situation of misinformation being put out. I think that you can still stand behind somebody without blindly agreeing with everything they put out, and this is an example of that,” Bowen said. “It was our responsibility to reach out and make sure this error was corrected so everybody knows where we stand.”

Other business

The Eddy County Commission also voted to canvass the results of a special election for the Artesia Special Hospital District’s mill levy, which provided $7 million to the hospital last year. There were 638 votes against and 605 votes for the levy. It is put to a vote for renewal every four years, and this was the first time the levy was voted down since 1979.

Commissioners also approved a new policy intended to standardize procedures for county departments to follow in dealing with grants. The policy included regulations for grant applications and approvals, outlining procedures and reporting requirements. Finance Director Roberta Gonzales said the county did not have a defined grant policy before the vote.

Another policy was approved to allow county department heads to fund “discretionary expenses” not covered under county policy but needed, as Commission Chair Sarah Cordova said, when “things come up.”

Managing Editor Adrian Hedden can be reached at 575-628-5516, or @AdrianHedden on the social media platform X.

Artesians gather for Oil Patch Market

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Photos by Mike Smith, Artesia Daily Press

Artesia Mainstreet presented its monthly Oil Patch Market this past Saturday at the Derrick Floor. Bakers, crafters, and food trucks were part of the fun.

The markets are held monthly. For more information contact Artesia Mainstreet at 575-703-0841.

Sondra Bailey from Carlsbad sold baked goods and car leather fresheners.

An example of Sondra Bailey’s leather fresheners and baked goods sold at the Oil Patch Market.

Mary Pettus of Sun Country Homes and Gardens stands near homemade pecans.

Sydnie Faver of Pecos Petals stands with some homemade flowers.

Yvonne Wright-Padilla of Cherie Glowe was on hand at the Oil Patch Market.

Becky (left) and Randy Ingraham sold custom made crosses at the Oil Patch Market.

Escape and return

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Cal Thomas

CAM RANH, Vietnam – The story sounds like a “Mission Impossible” script.

Fifty years ago, near the end of the Vietnam war as North Vietnamese troops headed south, the director of the Cam Ranh Christian Orphanage, Pastor Nguyen Xuan Ha – known to everyone as Mr. Ha – decided it was time to escape to somewhere safe. Mr. Ha put 85 children and staff on two buses and headed for Saigon where he hoped they could flee to safety.

One of the buses was shot at by a North Vietnamese soldier and the buses separated. Somehow they re-united in Saigon. After renting a boat and getting some distance from shore, the engine quit. For five days they drifted before a Thailand tanker approached. The captain refused to help, but later changed his mind, turned around and towed them for a while. After cutting the tow line, a group of fishermen towed them toward Singapore.

Soldiers refused to let them ashore. Mr. Ha wrote a name on a piece of paper and asked a soldier if he could locate a missionary named Ralph Neighbour to help.

Dr. Neighbour (now 96), and newly arrived in Singapore, was miraculously found. He picks up the story from there in an email to me: “Singapore government kept them out on St. John’s island. Our missionary team took clothes and food out. USA embassy contacted Swiss United Nations Refugee Center. Special flight arrived. Children whisked thru Singapore on bus with windows covered. Government feared losing neutrality during war. No official record they were there.”

I knew Dr. Neighbour from when he was a pastor in Houston where I worked at a local TV station. He called and asked if I could help get the orphans and staff to the U.S and find temporary housing for them. I contacted some Washington officials I knew and permission for them to enter the country was granted. When they arrived in Houston, a church couple with a large ranch offered them shelter and food until the Buckner Children and Family Services in Dallas could assist with processing and adoptions.

I interviewed the youngest, oldest and one in between who made the anniversary trip.

Sam Schrade, who was a baby when he was rescued from the streets of Saigon, is 51 and owns a successful media business in Houston. How would his life have been different had he stayed in Vietnam? He says the fact that he is of “mixed race” (American-Asian) would make it “doubly hard” because native Vietnamese “look down upon such people. I have been told by many people I would not have had a good life here because of the race issue and a government that didn’t want me.”

Kelli St. German, now 56, thinks she might have been growing coffee beans and doing hard labor had she not come to America. She also believes she would not have developed a strong faith because of the state’s antipathy toward religion. “I became a teacher for 30 years.”

Thomas Ho, the oldest orphan, now 76, was 25 when he left Vietnam. He helped organize the evacuation and prepared small amounts of food for the children. In America he became a chef and then studied to become an engineer. He says if he had stayed in Vietnam, “I might not have survived, especially at my age now. Life here is very difficult. A lot of the food is not very healthy.”

Reuniting with these adults, many of whom I met when they were children, is a reminder that there are things far greater than politics, celebrities and the petty jealousies that are the focus of too many of us.

There are few greater blessings than to have had a role in changing these lives for the better. These former orphans are blessed. So am I.

Readers may email Cal Thomas at tcaeditors@tribpub.com. Look for Cal Thomas’ latest book “A Watchman in the Night: What I’ve Seen Over 50 Years Reporting on America” (HumanixBooks).

Remembering Walter Brueggemann, a scholar and teacher

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By Trip Jennings

Walter Brueggemann died last week. You likely have never heard his name.

But to a small population of biblical scholars whom he influenced over half a century, his many seminary students and fans at church congregations around the country, Walter Brueggemann was the closest thing to a rock star in the esoteric world of biblical scholarship.

I met Brueggemann in a seminary classroom in the mid 1990s as one of his students. By then, his classic book Prophetic Imagination had been out for nearly 20 years and I had heard the stories about his classroom presence.

Wildly waving arms, impassioned speaking voice, the joke was, ‘Don’t sit in the front row during his lectures’; otherwise, the forecast called for a strong chance of a saliva shower, testament to the passion with which Brueggemann taught his subject matter.

Some of his students — my Presbyterian minister mom among them — compared his teaching style to what they imagined the ancient Hebrew prophets’ pedagogical tendencies were. Brilliant but slightly unhinged, passionate, loud, and ready to debate all comers. Thanks to a wooly beard and deep-set eyes, others swore he resembled the ancient troublemakers whom people like Martin Luther King Jr. and countless others have quoted for centuries as they sought to change entire societies.

There is no disputing Walter Brueggemann was charismatic and mesmerizing to watch in the classroom.

But it was his questions in the quarter century since I departed seminary that have lingered. One that has shaped me more as a person and as a journalist than almost any other is, “Who is my neighbor?”

It is a natural question for a seminary professor to ask, especially if your students are acquainted with Jesus’ response to the religious authorities of his day who put to him the question, ‘What is the greatest commandment’: Jesus responded, To honor and love God and to treat your neighbor as yourself. Jesus refused to separate one from the other, as if he were saying to love God, one must also love your neighbor.

But who exactly is that?

Brueggemann talked differently than many of my childhood pastors and Sunday School teachers about neighborliness. In his definition, all humans are kin to whom we were ethically obligated. The neighbor next door, and the neighbor halfway across the globe whom I’d never met. “Radical neighborliness,” he called it.

For a kid raised on individual salvation and an obsessive focus on a relationship with God to the detriment of our obligations to one another beyond our next-door neighbors, family, and friends, such a simple question has provoked a surprisingly rich, dense conversation with myself over the past 25 years, including in the journalism I like to pursue.

I suspect many people understand neighborliness as I understood it before seminary. Be polite and friendly. Easy peas-y. But that’s not what Brueggemann meant.

Jesuit priest ,Gregory Boyle, in Los Angeles talks about “radical kinship” the same way Brueggemann speaks of “radical neighborliness” when he tells the origin story of the nonprofit he founded in the 1980s, Homeboy Industries, to get gang members off the streets by giving them gainful employment.

“We situate ourselves right next to the disposable so that they day will come when we stop throwing people away,” Boyle writes in his book, Tattoos on the Heart. “Kinship is what God presses us on to, always hopeful that its time has come.”

Father Boyle is Walter Brueggemann’s kind of guy.

Walter Brueggemann also helped to widen my understanding of the Hebrew prophets. Growing up in the Southern Baptist tradition, prophets were more often prophesiers of Jesus’ coming, always pointing to the future.

When Walter Brueggemann spoke of Jesus belonging to the Hebrew prophetic tradition, he reminded us that the tradition was full of town criers and busybodies that as frequently as not spoke truth to power, leading to quite a few being punished and murdered by ancient kings. In that way, I began to understand Jesus’ death in a different light than how I was taught as a child: Not merely as an act of self-sacrifice to save the world from sin but as an execution by a powerful empire, Rome, that feared sedition and disruption.

But angry denunciations weren’t the extent of the prophets’ message, Brueggemann repeatedly said in his lectures and in his books. They also were clarions of hope.

Perhaps it’s best to let Walter Brueggemann in his own words speak of their most potent weapon, as he did in Prophetic Imagination.

“The prophet engages in futuring fantasy. The prophet does not ask if the vision can be implemented, for questions of implementation are of no consequence until the vision can be imagined. The imagination must come before the implementation. Our culture is competent to implement almost anything and to imagine almost nothing. The same royal consciousness that makes it possible to implement anything and everything is the one that shrinks imagination because imagination is a danger. Thus every totalitarian regime is frightened of the artist. It is the vocation of the prophet to keep alive the ministry of imagination, to keep on conjuring and proposing futures alternative to the single one the king wants to urge as the only thinkable one.”

Today, I am thankful for the life and legacy of Walter Brueggemann.

Since 2005, Trip has covered politics and state government for the Albuquerque Journal, The New Mexico Independent and the Santa Fe New Mexican. He holds a Master’s of Divinity from Columbia Theological Seminary in Decatur, Ga. In 2012, he co-founded New Mexico In Depth, a nonpartisan, nonprofit media outlet that produces investigative, data-rich stories with an eye on solutions that can be a catalyst for change.

Artesia Police blotter

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April 30

SUSPICIOUS

7:35 am – Officer dispatched to 1300 block of W. Hermosa Dr. in reference to suspicious activity.

UNWANTED

7:38 am – Officer dispatched to 800 block of S. Roselawn Ave. in reference to unwanted subject.

SUSPICIOUS

8:54 am – Officer dispatched to 600 block of W. Logan Ave. in reference to suspicious trespass.

FRAUD

9:15 am – Officer dispatched to 900 block of W. Grand Ave. in reference to fraud.

DISTURBANCE

9:23 am – Officer dispatched to 200 block of s. 19th St. in reference to family disturbance.

WANTED

10:35 am – Officer dispatched to 3300 block of W. Main St. in reference to a wanted subject.

UNWANTED

11:06 am – Officer dispatched to 700 block of N. 13th St. in reference to an unwanted subject.

11:18 am – Officer dispatched to 200 block of S. 1st St. in reference to an unwanted subject.

ACCIDENT

12:09 pm – Officer dispatched to 700 block of N. 13th St. in reference to a motor vehicle accident.

THREATS

12:42 pm – Officer dispatched to 200 block of S. 20th St. in reference to threats.

WANTED

1:31 pm – Officer dispatched to 200 block of S. 1st St. in reference to a wanted subject.

HARASSMENT

2:24 pm – Officer dispatched to 100 block of W. Richardson Ave. in reference to harassment.

ACCIDENT

2:46 pm – Officer dispatched to 1600 block of W. Grand Ave. in reference to a motor vehicle accident.

ALARM

3:28 pm – Officer dispatched to 200 block of W. Quay Ave. in reference to a burglary alarm.

SUSPICIOUS

3:30 pm – Officer dispatched to 600 block of W. Logan Ave. in reference to suspicious trespass.

3:43 pm – Officer dispatched to 1300 block of W. Hermosa Dr. in reference to a suspicious person.

WELFARE

3:44 pm – Officer dispatched to 800 block of S. Roselawn Ave.in reference to the welfare of a child.

SUSPICIOUS

3:50 pm – Officer dispatched to 100 block of W. Hermosa Dr. in reference to a suspicious person.

4:41 pm – Officer dispatched to 900 block of Monterrey Way in reference to a suspicious person.

5:08 pm – officer dispatched to 400 block of W. Quay in reference to a suspicious person.

ACCIDENT

5:08 pm – Officer dispatched to 100 block of N. 5th St. in reference to a motor vehicle accident.

WELARE

5:19 pm – Officer dispatched to W. Main St. and N. 7th St. in reference to the welfare of an adult.

5:47 pm – Officer dispatched to 2700 block of W. Richardson Ave. in reference to welfare of an adult.

SUSPICIOUS

6:16 pm – Officer dispatched to 800 block of Catalina Dr. in reference to suspicious activity.

ATV

7:11 pm – Officer dispatched to 500 block of Bullock St. in reference to 4W ATV.

SUSPICIOUS

7:14 pm – Officer dispatched to N. Osborn Ave. and W. Chisum Ave. in reference to a suspicious person.

ALARM

8:03 pm – Officer dispatched to 1200 block of W. Grand Ave. in reference to a burglary alarm.

SUSPICIOUS

9:36 pm – Officer dispatched to S. 2nd St. and W. Hermosa Dr. in reference to suspicious vehicle.

WELFARE

10:09 pm – Officer dispatched to W. Richey Ave. and N. 4th St. in reference to the welfare of an adult.

10:12 pm – Officer dispatched to 2600 block of W. Main St. in reference to the welfare of an adult.

May 1

ARREST

Robert Kenneth Joseph Wayne Hubbell arrested for battery against a household member, false imprisonment.

Estevan Munoz arrested for aggravated battery against a household member inflicting injury.

SHOTS FIRED

12:21 am – Officer dispatched to 2800 block of W. Missouri Ave. in reference to shots fired in the area.

STOLEN

8:21 am – Officer dispatched to 500 block of E. Main St. in reference to a stolen vehicle.

ACCIDENT

8:29 am – Officer dispatched to N. Roselawn Ave. an W. Chisum Ave. in reference to a motor vehicle accident.

WELFARE

10:36 am – Officer dispatched to N. 26th St. and W. JJ Clarke Dr. in reference to the welfare of an adult.

SHOTS FIRED

12:13 pm – Officer dispatched to 900 block of N. 13th St. in reference to a active shooter it was a false alarm.

DISTURBANCE

12:33 pm – Officer dispatched to 1900 block of W. Richey Ave. in reference to disturbance.

ALARM

12:50 pm – Officer dispatched to 1000 block of W. Centre Ave. in reference to a burglary alarm.

SUSPICIOUS

1:29 pm – Officer dispatched to 1600 block of W. Washington Ave. in reference to suspicious activity.

1:47 pm – Officer dispatched to 900 block of S. 13th St. in reference to suspicious activity.

DISTRUBANCE

1:49 pm – Officer dispatched to 1100 block of W. Memorial Dr. in reference to disorderly disturbance.

WELFARE

2:53 pm – Officer dispatched to 600 block of N. 26th St. in reference to the welfare of an adult.

RECKLESS

3:26 pm – Officer dispatched to 1500 block of W. Cannon Ave. in reference to a reckless vehicle.

3:39 pm – Officer dispatched to W. Bullock Ave. in reference to a reckless vehicle.

DISTURBANCE

4:01 pm – Officer dispatched to 600 block of N. 13th St. in reference to disorderly disturbance.

ATV

5:18 pm – Officer dispatched to W. Hermosa Dr. and S. 4th St. in reference to an ATV 4W.

VANDAL

5:42 pm – Officer dispatched to 1900 block of W. Richey Ave. in reference to a vandal.

DISTURBANCE

6:09 pm – Officer dispatched to 800 block of S. Roselawn Ave. in reference to family disturbance.

WELFARE

7:18 pm – Officer dispatched to 2600 block of W. Missouri Ave. in reference to the welfare of an adult.

7:52 pm – Officer dispatched to 900 block of W. Bates Ave. in reference to the welfare of an adult.

8:44 pm – Officer dispatched to 900 block of S. 3rd St. in reference to the welfare of an adult.

THREATS

8:29 pm – Officer dispatched to 5500 block of Eastwind Rd. in reference to threats.

DISTURBANCE

8:34 pm – Officer dispatched to 700 block of N. 10th St. in reference to disturbance.

May 2

ALARM

9:50 am – Officer dispatched to the 1500 block of W Main St. in reference to a burglary alarm.

DOMESTIC

11:14 am -Officer dispatched to the 1100 block of West Memorial Drive in reference to physical domestic.

UNWANTED

12:44 pm- Officer dispatched to the 300 block of W Washington Ave. in reference to an unwanted subject.

VANDAL

12:58 pm – Officer dispatched to the 1000 block of W Richardson Ave. in reference to a vehicle vandalism.

ACCIDENT

1:08 pm – Officer dispatched to the W Main St. and N 13th St. in reference to a motor vehicle accident.

INCORRIGIBLE CHILD

6:10 pm – Officer dispatched to W JJ Clark Dr and Bowman Dr in reference to an incorrigible child.

SUSPICIOUS

6:27 pm – Officer dispatched to the 1700 block of W Main St. in reference to a suspicious person.

7:02 pm – Officer dispatched to the 700 block of N 7th St. in reference to a suspicious person.

7:50 pm – Officer dispatched to the 700 block of N 10th St. in reference to a suspicious trespass.

10:16 pm – Officer dispatched to the 400 block of S 20th St. in reference to a suspicious person.

DOMESTIC

11:53 pm – Officer dispatched to the 300 block of S 20th St. in reference to a physical domestic.

Trout, catfish and northern pike biting at New Mexico lakes

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Information and photos provided by New Mexico Department of Game and Fish

Good fishing conditions abound at all lakes and streams in New Mexico this week as various species are being caught by anglers.

In northern New Mexico at the Pecos River, the streamflow Wednesday morning near Pecos was 124 cubic feet per second (cfs). Fishing for trout was good using Panther Martin spinners.

Fishing for trout at Clayton Lake was fair to good using Salmon Peach PowerBait.

Streamflow along the Rio Grande below the Taos Junction Bridge was 523 cfs as of Wednesday morning. Fishing for northern pike was slow to fair using Rooster Tail spinners below the Taos Junction Bridge.

Fishing for catfish was very good using hot dogs at the Albuquerque Area Drains.

At Bluewater Lake, fishing for catfish was fair to good using worms. Fishing for tiger muskie was fair to good when using Joe’s Flies.

Fishing for northern pike was good using live minnows at Cochiti Lake. Fishing for walleye was good using flies.

Fishing for trout was good using worms at Fenton Lake and fishing for trout was good using Black Ants and Rainbow PowerBait at Trout Lakes.

At Bonito Lake in Lincoln County, fishing for trout was very good when using worms.

Near Truth or Consequences, fishing for white bass was slow to fair using nightcrawlers.

Fishing for catfish was very good using sponge hooks dipped in Hog Wild Dip Boat at Elephant Butte Lake.

Near Silver City, fishing for trout was good using PowerBait and spinners at Lake Roberts.

This fishing report, provided by the New Mexico Department of Game and Fish, has been generated from the best information available from area officers and anglers. Conditions encountered after the report is compiled may differ, as stream, lake and weather conditions alter fish and angler activities.

State Game Commission gains new member

Christopher Witt has been appointed to fill the vacant District 5 seat on the New Mexico State Game Commission. Witt was appointed June 11 by Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham, according to a news release from the governor’s office. District 5 takes in Bernalillo County, the release said.

Witt, a professor in the Department of Biology at the University of New Mexico and a director of the Museum of Southwestern Biology, has conducted extensive scientific research on birds including game species such as waterfowl and cranes, according to the release. He holds a Ph.D. in Biological Sciences from Louisiana State University and is a lifelong angler and hunter who has lived in New Mexico since 2007.

Artesia Garden Club and City of Artesia honor Blue and Gold Star families

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Photos by Mike Smith, Artesia Daily Press

Thursday two memorials for Artesia’s Blue and Gold Star families were dedicated in front of City Hall.

A color guard from Boy Scout Troop 228 and Cub Scout 270 were part of the ceremonies.

Artesia Mayor Pro Tem Jeff Youtsey presented proclamations and history of the Blue and Gold Star families.

New Mexico State Garden Club president Johnese Turri was on hand as well during the ceremonies.

According to the U.S. Army website, a Blue Star indicates a member of a family is serving in the military. The Gold Star symbolizes the death of a family member in combat.

A memorial honoring Blue Star families is on display in front of Artesia’s City Hall.

Members of Artesia High School’s choir sing “The Star Spangled Banner” during the Blue and Gold Star dedication.

New Mexico State Garden Club president Johnese Turri speaks during the Blue and Gold Star dedication ceremony Thursday in Artesia.

Flags wave in the breeze during the Blue and Gold Star ceremonies near Artesia’s City Hall.

Members of Boy Scout 228 unfurl the American flag on Thursday.

Artesia Mayor Pro Tem Jeff Youtsey offers a history lesson during the Blue and Gold Star dedication ceremonies.

Harken races in Mountain Top Derby

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Ruidoso Downs Race Track

New Mexico-bred Harken and jockey Sergio Becerra Jr., the 2-1 morning line favorite in Saturday’s running of the Mountain Top Derby, will race for more than a trophy and the winner’s share of the $200,000 purse.

A win would also put Harken into the mix with open company to compete in the All American Derby trials later this summer at Ruidoso Downs, according to trainer Jesus Soto.

“It we do good in the Mountain Top, our plan is to supplement Harken into the All American Derby,” Soto said. “He’s already paid to enter into the Zia Derby, but if this horse wins Saturday we’ll give him the added bonus to face the fastest horses in the country.”

Harken already defeated open company in the West Texas Derby at Sunland Park on March 1. The gelding has now won four straight races including his trial race for the state-bred Mountain Top by nearly two lengths on May 31 in the fastest time of the day, 17.343 seconds for 350-yards.

Soto, who has been training at Ruidoso Downs for more than 20 years, said Harken is his fastest horse he’s ever trained.

“My sister Nancy [Islas] owns the horse and our family has had good luck with him so far with the exception of the State Fair Futurity in Albuquerque,” Soto said.

Harken suffered a troubled trip in that specific race last fall to run seventh — the last time Harken lost.

Jockey Sergio Becerra, Jr. has been the only rider in Harken’s career. He exercises Harken most every day and knows how special the gelding has been for everyone involved with his conditioning.

“Harken is super smart,” Becerra said. “You can ask him for an extra gear in a race and he’ll give it to you. He usually doesn’t let other horses come up and get even with him. He’s very competitive. That’s the difference between Harken and many other horses.”

Soto says his sister confirmed that she is willing to put up the $50,000 supplement payment to enter the All American Derby should he win the Mountain Top on Saturday.

“We’ve already talked about it,” Soto said. “We feel like Harken deserves the chance. It all starts with a win in the Mountain Top.”

Harken will be No. 5 in the tenth race on Saturday with first post time scheduled for 1 p.m.

Artesia General opens medical assistant program

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Staff reports

Artesia General Hospital (AGH) announced the next class for its Certified Clinical Medical Assistant (CCMA) Program, a nationally accredited nine-month hybrid training course through the AGH Advanced Learning Center. Designed to prepare students for healthcare environments, the program will begin September 2025, and is now accepting applications through Friday, July 3, 2025.

Offered in a flexible hybrid format combining in-person instruction and online learning, the CCMA Program equips students with both administrative and clinical skills required for ambulatory and outpatient care settings. Upon successful completion, students will earn national certification through the National Healthcareer Association (NHA).

“This program is about more than just technical training—it’s about building confidence, career readiness, and opening doors,” said Torey Salgado, lead instructor of the program. “We welcome students from all backgrounds who are ready to take the next step in their healthcare careers.”

Students will benefit from a blend of classroom instruction and weekly online coursework, supported by optional tutoring services. Emphasis is placed on practical, real-world skills including vital signs, electronic health records, patient prep, scheduling, and billing, Salgado said.

“Medical assistants are the backbone of ambulatory care. They’re often the first and last point of contact for patients and play a crucial role in both care and communication,” said Kimberly Salgado, program coordinator and director of the AGH Foundation.

Program overview

• Program Length: nine months

• Schedule: Tuesdays & Thursdays, 5:30 – 7:30 p.m.

• Start Date: Tuesday, Sept. 2.

• Location: AGH Advanced Learning Center – 702 N 13th St., Suite J, Artesia

• Tuition: $1,300 (includes all materials and certification exam)

Eligibility requirements

To be considered for the program, applicants must:

• Be at least 18 years old by the time of program completion

• Have a high school diploma or GED

• Submit one sealed professional letter of recommendation

• Provide a valid photo ID

• Be up to date on all required vaccinations and health screenings, including Hepatitis B, MMR, Tdap, Varicella, and TB testing

Interested individuals should submit a completed application packet, including a letter of recommendation and photo ID, by the deadline. Applications can be delivered in person or emailed.

For questions or application assistance, contact: Torey Salgado, CCMA Program Lead Instructor at tsalgado@artesiageneral.com