logo
Former LCPD officer Felipe Hernandez goes on trial June 2. Here's what to know

Former LCPD officer Felipe Hernandez goes on trial June 2. Here's what to know

Yahoo31-05-2025
On June 2, 2025, former Las Cruces Police Department officer Felipe Hernandez will face a jury trial for his involvement in the death of 45-year-old Teresa Gomez in 2023.
Hernandez is charged with second-degree murder with a firearm enhancement. He is accused of allegedly shooting Gomez in October 2023. Body camera footage showed Hernandez firing at Gomez several times as Gomez attempted to drive away after an interaction at an apartment.
Former Doña Ana County District Attorney Gerald Byers announced charges in January 2024.
Hernandez is no longer employed by LCPD, according to the City of Las Cruces. He was a LCPD officer for eight years and was assigned to the Community Outreach unit.
The criminal trial, originally scheduled for December 2024, was moved to June 2025.
The trial is scheduled to last four days with 3rd Judicial District Court judge Richard Jacquez presiding.
On Oct. 3, 2023, Hernandez was bicycle patrolling when he approached Gomez, who was sitting on the driver side of a parked vehicle with Jesus Garcia in the passenger seat. They were parked outside a public housing complex.
Hernandez shouted various expletives and commands at the two people, threatening to use his stun gun on them if they did not comply, according to the incident report. After several minutes of exchanges, exiting and returning to the vehicle, Gomez was attempting to drive away when Hernandez shot at her three times.
Court records note that Gomez's manner of death is listed as homicide by the University of New Mexico Office of the Medical Examiner. The cause of death is reported to be 'gunshot wound of chest.'
'What we can tell you is that from the very beginning of Mr. Hernandez's interactions with Ms. Gomez, ability to manage protocol is non-existent. His interactions with her just on a human level was exceptionally subpar and certainly did not meet the standards that LCPD demands of its officers when they are encountering civilians in the field,' Byers said.
In November 2024, the Sun-News reported on a $20 million settlement to a wrongful death lawsuit that the estate of Teresa Gomez filed in January 2024 in U.S. District Court.
The settlement is the largest civil lawsuit in the history of the City.
The City of Las Cruces, Hernandez, the Las Cruces Police Department, LCPD Chief Jeremy Story, former chief Miguel Dominguez and Deputy Chief Sean Mullen were listed as defendants.
In January 2025, Las Cruces City Council approved a financing option to pay out the settlement.
Per the November 2024 settlement agreement, the City has already issued an initial $2 million from the City legal department liability fund. The remaining monies will be financed through the issuance and sale of Taxable Municipal Gross Receipts Tax Revenue Bonds. The move will not raise taxes.
Hernandez has also filed a breach of contract lawsuit against the Las Cruces Fraternal Order of Police Lodge #8. The lawsuit states that a portion of Union dues are used for a legal defense fund for officers who are involved in officer involved shootings.
The lawsuit was filed on March 12, 2025.
According to court documents, Hernandez applied for legal defense funding, but was denied due to what Union representatives described as a lapse in dues in March 2022 that had not been re-instated. According to the lawsuit, Hernandez said his dues were current.
This article originally appeared on Las Cruces Sun-News: LCPD officer Felipe Hernandez tried in homicide of Teresa Gomez
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

'Officer, what's your badge number?': El Paso police bodycam video shows fatal I-10 arrest
'Officer, what's your badge number?': El Paso police bodycam video shows fatal I-10 arrest

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Yahoo

'Officer, what's your badge number?': El Paso police bodycam video shows fatal I-10 arrest

A newly-released El Paso police body camera video shows a struggle quickly intensifying, ending in the death of a man on Interstate 10. Xavier Guadalupe Hernandez, 30, was on the side of a busy I-10 freeway, apparently threatening to jump over the ledge above the Yarbrough Drive overpass, when an officer arrived on July 13 on the East Side, according to an EPPD video of the incident released on Monday, Aug. 18. Hernandez's death was deemed a homicide by the El Paso County Medical Examiner's Office. An autopsy report stated his death was caused by "asphyxia due to chest compression during law enforcement subdual and restrain" with cocaine toxicity as a "significant contributing condition." Three separate investigations by the El Paso Police Department's Crimes Against Persons Unit, Internal Affairs and the Texas Rangers of the Texas Department of Public Safety continue looking into the death, police spokesman Sgt. Robert Gomez said Monday in the 11-minute EPPD video, including body camera video. "Conclusions on whether the officer's actions are consistent with the law and department policy will not be made until all facts are known and the investigation is complete," Gomez said on the video statement. The names of the officers involved have not been disclosed. More: El Paso medical examiner rules man who died in police struggle as a homicide The body camera video begins at 10:13 a.m., showing a police officer driving up to the median and then seeing Hernandez on the other side of four freeway lanes of traffic on the edge of the overpass. Hernandez is wearing a sweaty blue T-shirt and gray shorts. He has no shoes on, only black socks and appears agitated. "Someone call 911, please," he repeatedly yells as the officer walks up to him. The officer tells him that help is here, according to the video. 'Officer, what's your badge number?' The video shows the officer telling Hernandez to sit down, but the situation intensifies when the officer attempts to grab Hernandez by his arms and Hernandez pulls away. "Officer, what's your badge number?" Hernandez repeatedly begins yelling. "Get the (expletive) down or I'm going to tase you," the officer yells, drawing his yellow Taser electric stun gun as Hernandez gets on his knees, his hands on the top of his head, the video shows. The officer orders Hernandez to lie down. He doesn't and the officer deploys the Taser as Hernandez yells, continuing to repeatedly say "Officer, what's your badge number?" The first Taser shot is at the 10:14:51 timestamp on the body camera video. There are repeated Taser shocks as a struggle continues with Hernandez still on the ground. "Get the (expletive) down!," the officer yells on the video. More: Man's death in I-10 struggle during El Paso police arrest under investigation Body camera time 10:15:51: A man in a black T-shirt and black baseball cap runs up to help the officer wrestle Hernandez, who is on his back, teeth clenched and refusing to roll over onto his stomach. "Roll over (expletive)," the officer orders. "Officer, what's your badge number?" Hernandez keeps repeating in between screams before the officer and two other men are able to pin him down on the asphalt, the video shows. The officer never tells Hernandez his badge number. Eventually, other police officers arrive and Hernandez is held down on the shoulder of the freeway. "Help me," Hernandez appears to say as he is held down as police officers discuss getting shackles to transport him in an ambulance. "Chill out," someone tells Hernandez, who has become quiet. Body camera time 10:27:23: A police sergeant is holding Hernandez facedown with another officer at his legs. Hernandez, by that time, is handcuffed behind his back. "He's not breathing, man," an officer said on the video after another officer noticed that Hernandez was not breathing and he was rolled over. A police officer begins CPR, which is then continued by a paramedic already at the scene. Hernandez was taken to nearby Del Sol Medical Center, where he was pronounced dead. Daniel Borunda may be reached at dborunda@ and @BorundaDaniel on X. This article originally appeared on El Paso Times: El Paso police bodycam video shows death of man in struggle with officer

Can L.A. decide on the Dodger Stadium gondola, or anything, in a timely manner?
Can L.A. decide on the Dodger Stadium gondola, or anything, in a timely manner?

Los Angeles Times

timea day ago

  • Los Angeles Times

Can L.A. decide on the Dodger Stadium gondola, or anything, in a timely manner?

Shohei Ohtani was four weeks into his major league career when former Dodgers owner Frank McCourt pitched a gondola from Union Station to Dodger Stadium. Ohtani, then a rookie with the Angels and now a global superstar with the Dodgers, was 23. Today, Ohtani is 31, and McCourt still has no official response to his pitch. In an effort to accelerate a decision, as The Times reported last month, McCourt's lobbyists latched onto a state bill designed to expedite transit projects and persuaded legislators to add language that would put an even speedier timeline on potential legal challenges to the gondola. That bill is scheduled for consideration by an Assembly committee Wednesday, and more than 100 community members rallied Monday in opposition to the bill — or, at least, to the part that would benefit the gondola project. The Los Angeles City Council last week approved — and Mayor Karen Bass signed — a resolution urging state legislators to drop the gondola part of the bill or dump the bill entirely. 'We are fighting a billionaire,' City Councilmember Eunisses Hernandez told the crowd. 'How you doing today?' There were snacks and stickers, T-shirts and tote bags, even bandanas for dogs (and there were lots of very good dogs). There were signs, both earnest and amusing ('Frank McCourt and the Aerial Cabins of Doom'). Even if McCourt wins in Sacramento, Hernandez said, the City Council must approve the gondola project. In 2024, the council authorized a Dodger Stadium traffic study, intended to evaluate alternatives to the gondola, which could include expanding the current bus shuttles from Union Station and introducing the park-and-ride buses such as the ones that have operated for years at the Hollywood Bowl. Last month — 16 months after the council authorized the study — the city's department of transportation invited bidders to apply to conduct the study, via a 56-page document that explains what the city wants done, how to do it, and when the work should be completed. Sixteen months? Colin Sweeney, spokesman for the transportation department, said the preparation of contracts requires compliance with various city rules, coordination with several city departments, and availability of city staff. 'This process can take up to 24 months,' Sweeney said. The traffic study is due next fall. If it is delivered on time, that could be nearly a three-year wait for one study in advance of one vote for one of the several governmental approvals the gondola would require. Is the city — or, at least, the elected representatives opposed to the gondola — slow-walking the project? 'We're not slow-walking nothing,' said Hernandez, whose district includes Dodger Stadium. 'This is how the city moves.' The councilmember pointed to the tree behind her. 'It takes us 15 years to trim a tree,' she said. Excuse me? 'We'll trim this tree this year,' Hernandez said, 'and we won't get to it again for 15 years.' The industry standard, she said, is five years. In L.A. she said, it can take 10 years to fix a sidewalk, three to five years to cut a curb for a wheelchair, nine months to one year to repair a street light. 'When you have enough resources, you can do things like put a new section into a bill to fast-track your project,' Hernandez said. 'When you have money, you can do that.' But I wanted to flip the question: If McCourt can spend half a million bucks on lobbyists to try to push his project forward, and if he is approaching a decade with no decision, what hope do the rest of us have? We need housing. We need parks. We need shade. And, yes, we need better ways to get in and out of Dodger Stadium. 'Do I believe we need to fast-track really good projects that have shown that there are financial plans behind them that will benefit the community?' Hernandez said. 'If there are ways to do that ethically, let's do it. But, if we're talking about fast-tracking a project because you've got access to change state law, that's not something we should be doing. 'Do I think there's a lot of barriers to achieving good projects, whether they are housing developments or other transportation? I do. I think we can cut through some of that. I think we should. 'We need to deliver quicker for our people.' It's not just the city of Los Angeles. The gondola project has slogged through Metro since 2018. Love him or loathe him, like the gondola or hate it, does Hernandez believe McCourt — or any other developer — should be able to get a yes or no on his proposed project within eight years? 'I believe he should, yeah,' Hernandez said. 'One hundred percent. I think he should.' Even if the gondola is approved, who knows whether any fan would be able to ride it to see Ohtani play? For now, the gondola is not approved, not financed, and not under construction. Ohtani's contract with the Dodgers expires in another eight years.

‘I'm being stonewalled.' Community leaders want release of undocumented immigrant
‘I'm being stonewalled.' Community leaders want release of undocumented immigrant

Yahoo

time3 days ago

  • Yahoo

‘I'm being stonewalled.' Community leaders want release of undocumented immigrant

On Friday morning, a news conference was held about the release of Muscatine resident Jesus Hernandez, whose full name is Felipe de Jesus Hernandez Marcelo. He came to the United States from Mexico in 2021, and has relatives in the Muscatine area. Hernandez's attorney says he is not facing removal, which is the legal term for the expulsion of a non-citizen from the United States. His lawyer, Emily Rebelskey, was at the news conference, along with family, and friends. Hernandez, an immigrant without legal status, was shot in his car while thieves tried to steal it early June 21 while he was driving to his construction was taken to a hospital for his injuries. His attorney says he was shot through his right wrist, his right thigh, and he also was wounded in the calf of one leg. She said he developed an infection while he was incarcerated in Muscatine County Jail, and was treated for it at a hospital. When Hernandez went to pick up his car, he was detained, his lawyer said. Rebelskey says Muscatine County Attorney Jim Barry is refusing to compromise for Hernandez's release. 'I'm being stonewalled by Jim Barry,' said Rebelskey. 'I have asked Jim Barry three times to sign a U-visa certification, and his position is that he does not negotiate on immigration status,. My question for Jim is 'Why not?'' A U-visa is a non-immigrant visa designed for victims of certain kinds of crimes who have suffered physically or mentally, and are willing to assist law enforcement in the investigation or prosecution of a crime. A U-visa allows eligible people to temporarily live and work in the United States, and possibly pursue legal permanent residence. Hernandez was denied a U-visa, and Rebelskey says city officials are refusing to talk to her. Our Quad Cities News tried to reach Barry on Friday but his staff said he was in court. Hernandez is in custody in the Muscatine County Jail. This is a developing story. Our Quad Cities news will provide details about the case and upcoming court hearings as they become available. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Solve the daily Crossword

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store