Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The State Bar of New Mexico first met on January 19, 1886, in Santa Fe, New Mexico, [2] as a voluntary professional organization. There were 29 original members, and William A. Vincent was the first president. [3] In 1925, state statute caused the State Bar to operate as an agency of the New Mexico Supreme Court.
Edith Gutierrez: [37] First female (non-attorney) judge in Silver City, New Mexico [Grant County, New Mexico] Bettye Dean: [38] First female magistrate in Lincoln County, New Mexico (1983) Angela "Spence" Pacheco: [39] First female to serve as the judicial district attorney in Los Alamos, Rio Arriba, and Santa Fe Counties, New Mexico (2008)
This page was last edited on 12 January 2009, at 23:43 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
New Mexico Attorney General articles at ABA Journal; News and Commentary at FindLaw; New Mexico Statutes at Law.Justia.com; U.S. Supreme Court Opinions – "Cases with title containing: State of New Mexico" at FindLaw; State Bar of New Mexico; New Mexico Attorney General Hector Balderas profile at National Association of Attorneys General
Javier Martínez is an American attorney, activist, and politician who is the current Speaker of the New Mexico House of Representatives since 2023. A Democrat, he represents the 11th district, which includes Bernalillo County, New Mexico and the city of Albuquerque [ 1 ]
Hector Hugo Balderas Jr. (born August 16, 1973) is an American lawyer and former prosecutor who served as the attorney general of New Mexico from 2015 to 2023. In 2006, Balderas became the youngest statewide Hispanic elected official in the nation when he won his first race for New Mexico state auditor at the age of 33. [1]
Carol Jean Vigil (October 24, 1947 – March 27, 2009 [1]) was an American judge based in the state of New Mexico. Vigil was the first Native American woman to be elected as a state district judge in the United States, and the first female Native American to be elected a state court judge in New Mexico. [2] She was a member of the Pueblo people.
Louis had her daughter, Jonisha, when she was a sophomore in high school. [10] Louis and her daughter live in Albuquerque, New Mexico. [11]On February 14, 2022, Louis was booked into a Santa Fe County jail on an Aggravated DWI charge, in addition to being charged with "speeding, driving without insurance and failing to show proof of registration."