HB 239
Page 1
AN ACT
RELATING TO LAW ENFORCEMENT; INCREASING THE RATE OF
DISTRIBUTION FOR TRIBAL POLICE DEPARTMENTS FROM THE LAW
ENFORCEMENT PROTECTION FUND; AMENDING SECTIONS OF THE NMSA
1978.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO:
Section 1. Section 29-1-11 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 1972,
Chapter 8, Section 1, as amended) is amended to read:
"29-1-11. AUTHORIZATION OF TRIBAL AND PUEBLO POLICE
OFFICERS AND CERTAIN FEDERAL OFFICERS TO ACT AS NEW MEXICO
PEACE OFFICERS--AUTHORITY AND PROCEDURE FOR COMMISSIONED PEACE
OFFICERS.--
A. All persons who are duly commissioned officers
of the police or sheriff's department of any New Mexico Indian
tribe or pueblo or who are law enforcement officers employed
by the bureau of Indian affairs and are assigned in New Mexico
are, when commissioned under Subsection B of this section,
recognized and authorized to act as New Mexico peace officers.
These officers have all the powers of New Mexico peace
officers to enforce state laws in New Mexico, including the
power to make arrests for violation of state laws.
B. The chief of the state police is granted
authority to issue commissions as New Mexico peace officers to
members of the police or sheriff's department of any New
pg_0002
HB 239
Page 2
Mexico Indian tribe or pueblo or a law enforcement officer
employed by the bureau of Indian affairs to implement the
provisions of this section. The procedures to be followed in
the issuance and revocation of commissions and the respective
rights and responsibilities of the departments shall be set
forth in a written agreement to be executed between the chief
of the state police and the tribe or pueblo or the appropriate
federal official.
C. The agreement referred to in Subsection B of
this section shall contain the following conditions:
(1) the tribe or pueblo, but not the bureau
of Indian affairs, shall submit proof of adequate public
liability and property damage insurance for vehicles operated
by the peace officers and police professional liability
insurance from a company licensed to sell insurance in the
state;
(2) each applicant for a commission shall
successfully complete four hundred hours of basic police
training that is approved by the director of the New Mexico
law enforcement academy;
(3) the chief of the state police shall have
the authority to suspend any commission granted pursuant to
Subsection B of this section for reasons solely within his
discretion;
(4) if any provision of the agreement is
pg_0003
HB 239
Page 3
violated by the tribe or pueblo or any of its agents, the
chief of the state police shall suspend the agreement on five
days' notice, which suspension shall last until the chief is
satisfied that the violation has been corrected and will not
recur;
(5) the goldenrod-colored officer's second
copy of any citation issued pursuant to a commission
authorized by this section shall be submitted within five days
to the chief of the state police;
(6) any citation issued pursuant to a
commission authorized by this section shall be to a magistrate
court of New Mexico; except that any citations issued to
Indians within the exterior boundaries of an Indian
reservation shall be cited into tribal court;
(7) the agreement or any commission issued
pursuant to it shall not confer any authority on a tribal
court or other tribal authority which that court or authority
would not otherwise have;
(8) the authority conferred by any agreement
entered into pursuant to the provisions of this section shall
be coextensive with the exterior boundaries of the
reservation; except that an officer commissioned under this
section may proceed in hot pursuit of an offender beyond the
exterior boundaries of the reservation, and the authority
conferred in any written agreement between the chief of the
pg_0004
HB 239
Page 4
state police and the Navajo tribe may extend beyond the
exterior boundaries of the Navajo reservation to and including
the area enclosed by the following description:
Beginning at a point where the southern boundary line of
the Navajo Indian reservation intersects the western right-of-
way line of US 666, and running thence; southerly along the
western right-of-way line of US 666 to the northerly city
limits of Gallup; thence, easterly along the northerly city
limits of Gallup to the northern side of the right of way of
I-40; thence, in an easterly direction along the northerly
side of the right of way of I-40 to the northerly limits of
the village of Prewitt; thence, in a straight line between the
northerly boundary of the village of Prewitt to the southerly
boundary of Ambrosia Lake; thence in a straight line between
the southerly boundary of Ambrosia Lake to the southerly
boundary of Hospah; thence, east along a straight line from
the southerly boundary of Hospah to the southern boundary of
Torreon; thence along the easterly side of the right of way of
state road 197 to the westerly city limits of Cuba; thence,
north along the westerly side of the right of way of state
road 44 to the southerly boundary of the Jicarilla Apache
Indian reservation; thence, westerly along the southerly
boundary of the Jicarilla Apache Indian reservation to the
southwest corner of that reservation; thence, northerly along
the westerly boundary of the Jicarilla Apache Indian
pg_0005
HB 239
Page 5
reservation to a point where the westerly boundary of the
reservation intersects the southerly side of the right of way
of state road 44; thence, northerly along the southerly side
of the right of way of state road 44 to its intersection with
the northerly side of the right of way of Navajo road 3003;
thence, along the northerly side of the right of way of Navajo
road 3003 to a point where the northerly side of the right of
way of Navajo road 3003 intersects the westerly side of the
right-of-way line of state road 371; thence, northerly along
the west side of the right of way of state road 371 to the
southerly side of the right of way of Navajo road 36; thence,
westerly along the southerly side of the right of way of
Navajo road 36 to the eastern border of the Navajo Indian
reservation; thence, along the eastern and southerly borders
of the Navajo Indian reservation to the point of beginning.
The municipalities of Cuba and Gallup and the villages
of Thoreau and Prewitt are excluded from the grant of
authority that may be conferred in any written agreement
entered into pursuant to provisions of this section; provided,
however, any written agreement may include under such grant of
authority the communities of Ambrosia Lake, Hospah, Torreon,
Lybrook, Nageezi, Counselors and Blanco Trading Post and those
communities commonly known as the Wingate community; the
Navajo Tribe blue water ranch area of the Thoreau community;
the Prewitt community, exclusive of the village of Prewitt;
pg_0006
HB 239
Page 6
the Haystack community; the Desidero community; the Sand
Springs community; the Rincon Marquis community; the Charley
Jesus Arviso and the Castillo community; and state road 264
beginning at the point where it intersects US 666 and ending
where state road 264 intersects the Arizona-New Mexico state
line; and
(9) the chief of the state police or his
designee and the tribe or pueblo or the appropriate federal
official shall be required to meet at least quarterly or more
frequently at the call of the chief of the state police to
discuss the status of the agreement and invite other law
enforcement or other officials to attend as necessary.
D. Nothing in this section impairs or affects the
existing status and sovereignty of tribes and pueblos of
Indians as established under the laws of the United States.
E. All persons who are duly commissioned federal
law enforcement officers employed by the federal bureau of
investigation; drug enforcement administration; bureau of
alcohol, tobacco and firearms; United States secret service;
United States customs service; immigration and naturalization
service; United States marshals service; postal inspection
service; United States probation department; United States
pretrial services agency; and other appropriate federal
officers whose primary duty is law enforcement related, who
are assigned in New Mexico and who are required to be
pg_0007
HB 239
Page 7
designated by the county sheriff on a case-by-case basis in
the county in which they are working, are recognized and
authorized to act as New Mexico peace officers and have all
the powers of New Mexico peace officers to enforce state laws
in New Mexico, including the power to make arrests for
violation of state laws. The department of public safety
shall maintain a registry that lists the name and affiliated
federal agency of every federal law enforcement officer
recognized and authorized to act as a New Mexico peace officer
pursuant to the provisions of this subsection. This
subsection shall not be construed to impose liability upon or
to require indemnification by the state for any act performed
by a federal law enforcement officer pursuant to this
subsection.
F. The provisions of Subsection E of this section
regarding designation of federal law enforcement officers by a
county sheriff do not apply to federal law enforcement
officers who are duly commissioned officers of a police or
sheriff's department for an Indian tribe or pueblo in New
Mexico or who are federal law enforcement officers employed by
the bureau of Indian affairs."
Section 2. Section 29-13-2.1 NMSA 1978 (being Laws
1993, Chapter 179, Section 4, as amended) is amended to read:
"29-13-2.1. DEFINITIONS.--As used in the Law
Enforcement Protection Fund Act:
pg_0008
HB 239
Page 8
A. "division" means the local government division
of the department of finance and administration;
B. "fund" means the law enforcement protection
fund;
C. "governmental entity" means a municipality,
university, tribe or a county;
D. "tribal police department" means the police
department of a tribe that has entered into an agreement with
the department of public safety pursuant to Section 29-1-11
NMSA 1978;
E. "tribe" means an Indian nation, tribe or pueblo
located wholly or partly in New Mexico; and
F. "university" means a four-year post-secondary
educational institution listed in Article 12, Section 11 of
the constitution of New Mexico."
Section 3. Section 29-13-4 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 1993,
Chapter 179, Section 6, as amended) is amended to read:
"29-13-4. DETERMINATION OF NEEDS AND RATE OF
DISTRIBUTION.--
A. Annually on or before April 15, the division
shall consider and determine the relative needs as requested
by tribal, municipal and university police and county
sheriff's departments for money in the fund pursuant to the
provisions of Subsection B of this section.
B. The division shall determine the rate of
pg_0009
HB 239
Page 9
distribution of money in the fund to each tribal, municipal
and university police and county sheriff's department as
follows:
(1) all municipal police and county
sheriff's departments shall be rated by class pursuant to this
paragraph in accordance with populations established by the
most recently completed decennial census; provided that the
population of any county shall not include the population of
any municipality within that county that has a municipal
police department. The rate of distribution to which a
municipal police or county sheriff's department is entitled is
the following:
CLASS
POPULATION
AMOUNT
1
0 to 20,000
$20,000
2
20,001 to 160,000
30,000
3
160,001 to 1,280,000
40,000;
(2) university police departments shall be
entitled to a rate of distribution of seventeen thousand
dollars ($17,000)
and tribal police departments shall be
entitled to a rate of distribution of twenty thousand
dollars ($20,000)
;
(3) tribal police departments shall be
entitled, unless allocations are adjusted pursuant to the
provisions of Subsection C of this section, to six hundred
dollars ($600) for each commissioned peace officer in the
pg_0010
HB 239
Page 10
tribe. To be counted as a commissioned peace officer for the
purposes of this paragraph, a commissioned peace officer shall
have been assigned to duty and have worked in New Mexico for
no fewer than two hundred days in the calendar year
immediately prior to the date of payment. Payments shall be
made for only those divisions of the tribal police departments
that perform services in New Mexico. No tribal police
department shall be eligible for any disbursement under the
fund if commissioned peace officers cite non-Indians into the
tribal court for civil or criminal citations; and
(4) municipal and university police and
county sheriff's departments shall be entitled, unless
allocations are adjusted pursuant to the provisions of
Subsection C of this section, to six hundred dollars ($600)
for each police officer or sheriff's deputy employed full time
by his department who has been certified by the New Mexico law
enforcement academy as a police officer or has been authorized
to act as a New Mexico peace officer pursuant to the
provisions of Section 29-1-11 NMSA 1978.
C. After distributions are determined in
accordance with Subsection A and Paragraphs (1) and (2) of
Subsection B of this section, if the balance in the fund is
insufficient to permit the total allocations provided by
Paragraphs (3) and (4) of Subsection B of this section, the
division shall reduce that allocation to the maximum amount
pg_0011
HB 239
Page 11
permitted by available money."
Section 4. Section 29-13-6 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 1983,
Chapter 289, Section 6, as amended) is amended to read:
"29-13-6. DISTRIBUTION OF LAW ENFORCEMENT PROTECTION
FUND.--
A. Annually on or before July 31, the state
treasurer shall distribute from the fund the amounts certified
by the division to be distributed to governmental entities.
Payments shall be made to the treasurer of the appropriate
governmental entity unless otherwise specified in Subsection C
of this section.
B. The state treasurer is authorized to redirect a
distribution to the New Mexico finance authority in an amount
certified by the division, pursuant to an ordinance or a
resolution passed by the municipality or county and a written
agreement of the municipality or county and the New Mexico
finance authority.
C. Annually on or before July 31, the state
treasurer shall distribute from the money in the fund money
certified by the division to be distributed to tribes.
Payment shall be made to the chief financial officer of the
tribe. If necessary, the fund may be decreased below the
level of one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000) to enable
payment to the tribes. If insufficient money remains in the
fund to fully compensate the tribes, a report shall be made to
pg_0012
the New Mexico office of Indian affairs and to an appropriate
interim committee of the legislature that reviews issues
having impact on tribes by September 1 of the year of the
shortfall." HB 239
Page 12