Sunday, March 31, 2013

Restricting speech in limited public forums, according to Esquivel

On May 16th, the NM Foundation for Open Government and the Alb Journal will host their Continuing Legal Education Seminar on Public Access to Government; Understanding and Implementing NM's Public Records and Open Meetings Laws.

According to the agenda, link, at about 3 in the afternoon, Defendant Marty Esquivel will be teaching the attendees, how to maintain order without infringing on constituents’ constitutional rights.

I suspect he will not be showing the video of his own performance; conduct which has him headed for an ass-handing in federal court. 



3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Ched,
This is worth investigating and reporting to the public: on 2/21/2013 the wife of the UNM interim head men's basketball coach assaulted an APS high school administrator at an APS boys basketball game. Even though APS police and security witnessed the offense, APS police only issued an informational report-and not the battery report against a school employee-and no action was taken against the offender. The victim-who is currently suing Brooks for sexual harassment and retaliation-had no choice but to file charges against the offender through APD: State of New Mexico Uniform Incident Report ORI No 0010100 Case No 130017577: Battery on School Employee. The report has been forwarded to the District Attorney's office. It is shockingly evident that Brooks continues to further inflict harm onto the APS employee who is suing him for other flagrant breaches of employment law. Also, could it be that Brooks is not protecting the APS administrator because he has season tickets to Lobo men's basketball games? The Journal and the local TV stations know about the offense against the APS administrator, but they are silent. One can only hope that when a new lawsuit against Brooks is filed that the local media will reveal it to the public.

Edwina (George) Hewett said...

Refusal to listen to and answer the public is a growing theme throughout all levels of government in New Mexico. Thanks for fighting the good fight and taking these elected's to task. Fighting corruption is like fighting the wind in New Mexico, the entire government is networked for self protection first, public protection last. This has to change! I applaud your tireless efforts! Appreciate what you are doing!

ched macquigg said...

It would appear that you are having some success yourself out in Torrance County - good job.