Is Doña
Ana County Sheriff's Office a disaster waiting to be exposed as such?
[Three columns will explore that question.]
Sheriff Enrique Vigil lacks relevant
experience. He was a long-time U.S. Marshal; but he hasn't dealt
with state laws or the variety of situations a cop faces. He's not a
state-certified law-enforcement officer.
Vigil wisely compensated for that
inexperience by naming Eddie Lerma as Undersheriff. Lerma had served
two other sheriffs as undersheriff, had many years of experience with
DASO, and seems generally respected.
But Vigil soon replaced Lerma with Ken
Roberts, a far less experienced DASO officer who reportedly told five
deputies he had “axes to grind” with formerly superior officers,
though Roberts has denied that. (Vigil, who's free to choose his
undersheriff, announced he had accepted Lerma's resignation; when
others called to congratulate Lerma, he was startled to hear he'd
resigned.)
Roberts
makes a great first impression but has limited qualifications.
Before getting demoted, he was a police sergeant in Shawnee,
Oklahoma, many years ago. He served in the military police. He
failed to complete the Border Patrol training program. In 2008, he
applied to DASO as an uncertified cadet. Folks in and outside DASO don't give him high
marks as a detective.
Good officers are fleeing DASO.
“Hundreds of years of experience have been lost,” a current DASO
officer said recently.
“They'll say they're cleaning
house,” said a former officer. “That we don't fit in with their
philosophy. We don't. We don't fit in with a philosophy of
favoritism, cronyism, head-hunting, and lying.” LCPD Chief Jaime
Montoya confirms that in asking DASO refugees why they wanted to make
a change, he's hearing complaints of “targeting of officers.”
I've heard the same from several, have read it in formal complaints,
and wouldn't be surprised by a new flurry of lawsuits.
Current and former officers paint a
consistent picture: senior officers who speak up or ask questions get
punished; officers are threatened, or receive written reprimands for
minor offenses that go unpunished in others.
There are allegations of Whistleblower
Act violations, bullying, and harassment. There are allegations
that people who should be terminated are not, and that hirings and
promotions are made easier for friends and allies. That sort of
office politics is annoying anywhere; but with people who take guns
into difficult situations, it could prove dangerous. (Some also say
Roberts's relative inexperience with SWAT teams negatively affected a
SWAT call-out earlier this month.)
Many officers believe (or hope!) that
Vigil often doesn't know of questionable decisions by Roberts. They
say they can't talk to Vigil, that Roberts always says “I've spoken
to the Sheriff, and he agrees with my view on this,” but that in a
couple of cases where an officer who heard that ran into Vigil later,
Vigil said he knew nothing about it and would fix it. I hope they're
right. I believe people close to Vigil have warned him that Roberts
could bring him down.
Deputies who talk with me fear
retribution. County officials say that Vigil and Roberts seem a lot
more interested in identifying the complainant than in the merits of
the complaints. Vigil asked Montoya which DASO officers had applied
to LCPD. Montoya declined to answer. DASO set an event for the day
LCPD had scheduled tests for applicants.
Vindictiveness may play a role in
what's happening. (One senior officer's complaint claims Roberts
said he'd retaliate against the officer.) But I'd note that neither
Vigil nor Roberts knows much about running DASO. When you're out of
your depth, it's tempting to eliminate anyone who might recognize
your mistakes or speak up about them.
-30-
[The column above appeared in the Las Cruces Sun-News this morning, Sunday, 29 January 2016, went up on the newspaper's website the newspaper's website Saturday evening, and on KRWG-TV's website KRWG-TV's website this morning. I invite comments, here or on those sites, positive or negative or adding information.]
[The whole DASO situation is unfortunate. A couple of years ago, when an earlier sheriff made a bad hire and couldn't be convinced it was bad, I saw some folks who seemed like good people and good officers suffering in the workplace. That sheriff never did see the light. His friend sued me and many others, but lost badly. Some at DASO have said this situation is worse. I hope it will resolve itself in a positive way somehow. As in the earlier situation, the views I'm hearing are widely shared.]
[I've made repeated efforts to obtain comment from the Sheriff and Undersheriff. I still hope they'll articulate their views -- and, if they feel I have any facts wrong, point those oout. I have, as an expert I consulted recently on one aspect of this said recently, no dog in this fight. I voted for Mr. Vigil. I liked Mr. Roberts when I first met him; and, personally, I've had only pleasant encounters with him. However, I'm troubled by what I see, and am just trying to see and share the truth.]
[I've asked the County and DASO for documents, pursuant to IPRA. I've received some, and expect others soon. I prefer not to rely solely on what I'm told.]
[Readers will notice I haven't quoted present and former DASO officers and deputies by name. For obvious reasons, that's the way it is. Some have talked to me, others have not. I can only say that in such a situation I'm particularly careful. Thus I've spent a lot of hours researching this situation and will continue to do so.]
[Note: I realized I shortchanged former Undersheriff Edward Lerma in describing his experience. He actually had served three previous sheriffs, not two: Jan Cary, Jim Robles, and Todd Garrison. I know Garrison was a Republican and Vigil is a Democrat, too.]
[Note: I realized I shortchanged former Undersheriff Edward Lerma in describing his experience. He actually had served three previous sheriffs, not two: Jan Cary, Jim Robles, and Todd Garrison. I know Garrison was a Republican and Vigil is a Democrat, too.]
Thank you for bringing this to light. I will agree, Roberts and Vigil need to go. Enough said!
ReplyDeleteWithout me saying my name I would be a coward at this point..... My name is Jon and I recently retired from DASO, and I can confirm there is definitely retaliation and head hunting going on at DASO! I for some reason made someone in admin upset about speaking my mind.....Over the next year I was written up 6 times and "randomly" drug tested 3 times.... twice in one month. ALL my writeups were from not making a simple phone call, to a citizen that had beef with cops in general, claiming I changed lanes in an intersection in my unit. ALL were unfounded, but that didn't stop admin from trying to fire me. So I say YES to the broken system at DASO. IT NEEDS DESPERATELY TO BE FIXED. And as fas as favoritism, it doesn't get any stronger than it is right now.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Jon. If I can deduce your last name from rosters and such, I may contact you.
ReplyDeleteMy daughter sent me an article this morning, on Eddie.. Eddie's experience is far more vast, he was with LCPD during the 70's and into the 80's.. also worked in Tularosa as Chief for a period of time. Very well trained and knowledgeable.. I worked with Eddie for over 5 years in Cruces, really shocked that anyone would just up and replace him. True the Sheriff's Office has problems..
ReplyDelete