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Couple sentenced in Cattle Baron embezzlement

Man sentenced in stabbing of his grandfather

Less than a year after investigators say he stabbed his grandfather to death, 20-year-old Joel Hernandez on Tuesday pled guilty to charges of second-degree murder and aggravated battery of a household member.

Suspect in drive-by shooting to be held without bond

Copyright © 2021 Roswell Daily Record The suspect in a Sunday morning drive-by shooting in Roswell that left one man injured will remain detained pending trial. Judge Thomas Lilley of New Mexico’s Fifth Judicial District Court, at a hearing Thursday, granted a motion filed by the District Attorney’s Office to hold Austin York, 22, without bond until trial or unless otherwise ordered by the court. Lilley said evidence presented by the prosecution that York would be a danger to the safety of both the shooting victim and a witness to the incident is clear and convincing. “I find the state has met their burden of proof, proving by clear and convincing evidence that the defendant is a danger to at least those two people if not the community as a whole,” he said.

Man charged in accidental shooting to be held without bond

Copyright © 2021 Roswell Daily Record A man accused of accidentally shooting to death his sister while he was visiting her, and while her children were in the house, will remain incarcerated up through his eventual trial per order of a local judge. Jack Salcido (Submitted Photo) Jack Salcido, 31, of Roswell, who is charged with involuntary manslaughter; receipt, transportation or possession of a firearm by a certain person, felon; and two counts of child abuse, will be detained without bond while he awaits trial. “The court believes the danger to the community and the danger, actually to the people the defendant is around, is extremely significant,” Judge James Hudson of New Mexico’s Fifth Judicial District Court said during Thursday’s pretrial detention and concurrent preliminary examination.

Jury trials resume after suspension since November - Roswell Daily Record

The entrance to the Chaves County Courthouse at 400 N. Virginia Ave. Criminal and civil jury trials were allowed to resume in New Mexico’s 5th Judicial District and around the state Monday after being halted in November by the New Mexico Supreme Court due to a surge in cases of COVID-19. (Daily Record File Photo) Copyright © 2021 Roswell Daily Record Jury trials in New Mexico were officially allowed to resume Monday in New Mexico’s Fifth Judicial District and throughout the state. Trials in criminal and civil cases involving juries were put on hold by the New Mexico Supreme Court in November due to a surge in COVID-19 cases and deaths. However, other administrative court functions were allowed to proceed.

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