A South Carolina man has pleaded guilty to charges that he gunned down a New Mexico state police officer who had stopped to help him.
Albuquerque police say social media companies need to be held accountable for their role in our cities homicides.
The Albuquerque Police Department says fatal crashes decreased by nearly 8% last year as officers issued more than 72,000 traffic tickets to errant drivers — though around 5,000 fewer than
The Albuquerque Police Department announced the city is seeing a decrease in car thefts. From 2016 to 2018, Albuquerque ranked number one for car thefts across the U.S according to the National Insurance Crime Bureau.
Human trafficking impacts millions of people, and the Albuquerque Police Department says it is committed to bringing down the multibillion-dollar industry.
The Albuquerque Police Department (APD) is looking for an Arizona man they say is connected to a murder from four years ago. In January 2021, police responded near Central and Pennsylvania to reports of a man being shot.
There are more than 1,700 miles separating Dillon County from New Mexico’s capital city, but officials in both communities have been side-by-side for nearly
Federal Prosecutors are considering the death penalty in the case against South Carolina man who is accused of killing New Mexico State Police Officer Justin Hare. Jaremy Smith, 33, of Marion, South Carolina,
January 18, 2025, will mark one year since the public learned about federal agents raiding the homes of Albuquerque police officers. It was part of an FBI investigation into a public corruption scheme involving officers accused of taking money to get DWI cases dismissed.
The New Mexico Attorney General and a state senator are calling on lawmakers to create new criminal and civil penalties for those who engage in hazing and cyberbullying, the officials announced at a Thursday news conference in Albuquerque.
A new database launched Wednesday gives the public, journalists and policymakers greater insight into police officers in New Mexico who lose their jobs with one agency, sometimes for serious misconduct,
According to APD, in 2024, there was a 7% decrease in auto thefts in Albuquerque. Medina told KOAT that, since 2017, auto thefts have been on the decline in the city.