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‘DWI King' cashing in while his cases crumble
‘DWI King' cashing in while his cases crumble

Yahoo

time13 hours ago

  • Yahoo

‘DWI King' cashing in while his cases crumble

LOS LUNAS, N.M. (KRQE) – He was known as the 'DWI King,' making hundreds of drunk driving arrests for the state's largest police force, before his name was connected to the ongoing federal DWI corruption investigation. KRQE Investigative Reporter Gabrielle Burkhart reveals how this is impacting recent drunk driving cases, and how much the officer is getting paid to stay off the force. Latest from KRQE Investigates Former APD officer tied to DWI scandal now working in Durango 'DWI King' cashing in while his cases crumble Behind The Story: Kids Sleeping In CYFD Offices 8th officer pleads guilty for role in DWI Unit scandal KRQE Investigates: Can CYFD finally end kids sleeping in offices? New Mexico State Police Sergeant Toby Lafave is known for cracking down on drunk driving in New Mexico. 'I love this uniform, I like serving the public,' he told KRQE News 13 during a 2019 interview. Lafave held a long reputation for holding people accountable. His own dash and lapel police cameras capture his hundreds of arrests over the years. The so-called 'DWI King' joined the force more than 20 years ago, and was featured on billboards for the state's 'ENDWI' campaign. 'By the time someone is arrested for DWI, it's not usually their first time,' explained Barbara Romo, District Attorney for the 13th Judicial District. 'It's just the first time they get caught, right?' The idea that Lafave was a straight shooter — one who upheld the law and kept the streets safer — made it all the more shocking when his name got tied to the ongoing federal investigation into the state's biggest DWI corruption scandal. It's a scheme involving officers working with a now-disgraced defense attorney, accepting cash to get DWI cases dismissed. Thomas Clear III and his paralegal, Ricardo 'Rick' Mendez, have since pleaded guilty in federal court to RICO conspiracy charges. Lafave's name was placed on the Bernalillo County District Attorney's 'Giglio list' in February, joining more than a dozen other law enforcement officers who are no longer considered credible witnesses in court. It's part of the pending federal investigation into officers participating in the corruption scheme. 'If you're betrayed by a stranger, it's like, well, that's that person – what can you do?' Romo explained. 'But then it starts getting, it hurts a lot more. It stabs you a little bit deeper when it's someone that you should be able to trust with these cases,' she added. DA Romo is responsible for prosecuting cases in Cibola, Valencia, and Sandoval counties. But without an arresting officer's testimony, a conviction, especially in a DWI case, isn't possible. 'We can't prosecute any of his cases where he's the primary officer,' Romo explained. 'I've been doing this a long time, so you think that you've seen it all, but then something like this happens and you realize that you haven't,' New Mexico State Police Chief Troy Weisler told KRQE in a February interview. Chief Weisler said he got a call from the FBI and immediately placed Lafave on administrative leave on February 13th. The pending cases Lafave handled were automatically dismissed in court, with no consequences for the accused. 'I've never been to jail, please, sir! Please!' One driver pleaded with Lafave during her DWI arrest in December. The woman admitted to drinking and driving, confessing to her arresting officer, Sgt. Lafave, 'I drink sending my kids to school.' She's heard on lapel video telling the Sgt., 'I need to contact my father because honestly, he's probably super mad at me.' Lafave replied, 'At least you're alive, you know?' What could have been a harsh lesson for that young mom is now a lucky break. It's a similar story again and again. 'I'd rather you be late for curfew than me scrape your body off the roadway because someone chose to drive drunk,' Lafave is heard on lapel video telling young passengers during a recent DWI stop. Dozens of Lafave's most recent encounters with apparent drunk drivers – many of them young – now amount to dozens of free passes in court. In one traffic stop, Sgt. Lafave made in September, he asked the young driver how old she was. 'I'm 19,' she replied. 'I was trying to catch up to you,' Lafave told her. 'You actually reached a speed of 98 miles an hour.' The teenage driver he stopped from flying on the freeway around 4 a.m. that day is seen on lapel video failing field sobriety tests. Below is a transcript from a portion of her field sobriety test administered by Lafave, as he attempts to have her recite a portion of the alphabet: Lafave: Starting with the letter H as in Henry, stopping at the letter R as in driver: I can't do You can't do that test? Why not?Teen driver: Wait, H?Lafave: start at H and stop at driver: I can' Why not?Teen driver: I've never had to count backwards by Okay. One, you're not counting. You are reciting the alphabet forward. Lafave arrested the 19-year-old for DWI. While handcuffed in the backseat, the teenage driver gives Lafave attitude. 'It's gonna automatically get duh-missed,' she shouted from the backseat. 'Duh-missed?' He replied. 'I ain't gonna get charged with s***!' She told Lafave, while calling him names during the remainder of her arrest. As fate would have it, she was right. Her case was dismissed this year, but not because she proved to anyone that she wasn't driving drunk that night. It's a glimpse of the nearly 40 pending DWI cases prosecutors were forced to drop due to Lafave losing credibility. Hers is among the seven case dismissals that reach beyond the metro. 'Yeah, it doesn't send a good message,' explained DA Romo. 'But by the same token, I can honestly say that the vast, vast majority of law enforcement officers I've worked with across the state, they're out there doing their job, and I guarantee you they hate this more than anybody,' she added. Lafave is still on administrative leave pending the federal and now internal investigation by New Mexico State Police. KRQE Investigates confirmed through public records that Sergeant Lafave is still making a full $54-an-hour paycheck while on leave. That amounts to Lafave getting paid more than $39,000 and counting to stay off the streets. And while the public has seen at least seven officers criminally charged in the scheme, the feds so far have not charged Lafave. His long-standing crusade against drunk drivers is now clouded with questions about his own conduct. In Bernalillo County, the District Attorney's Office was forced to dismiss nearly 300 DWI cases as a result of officers losing credibility in court. New Mexico State Police tells KRQE their internal investigation into Lafave is still ongoing. While DA Romo was forced to dismiss pending cases involving Lafave, she said she will not be going back through adjudicated cases handled by compromised officers. That is, unless a defense attorney files a motion to do so. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

New Mexico State Police place DWI officer on leave in FBI corruption case
New Mexico State Police place DWI officer on leave in FBI corruption case

Yahoo

time15-02-2025

  • Yahoo

New Mexico State Police place DWI officer on leave in FBI corruption case

Feb. 14—New Mexico State Police placed its poster boy for DWI enforcement on administrative leave as the FBI investigates a racketeering case in which a prominent attorney paid off law enforcement officers to sabotage their own drunken driving cases. State Police Chief Troy Weisler on Friday said Sgt. Toby LaFave is on paid leave as the agency does its own internal investigation into allegations that LaFave — featured for years in state ENDWI campaigns — was involved in one of the largest public corruption cases to hit the state. LaFave, referred to as the "DWI King" for amassing thousands of such arrests, has not been criminally charged. He is the first State Police officer to be tied to the FBI's investigation in the 14 months since the decadeslong racketeering and bribery criminal enterprise became public. Over the past three weeks, federal prosecutors have secured guilty pleas from three former Albuquerque Police officers, attorney Thomas Clear III, the self-admitted leader of the operation, and his law firm's paralegal Ricardo "Rick" Mendez. All five have pleaded guilty to criminal charges that included bribery, racketeering conspiracy and extortion. Clear and Mendez stated in court records that the so-called "DWI Enterprise" involved law enforcement officers from the Albuquerque Police Department, Bernalillo County Sheriff's Office and New Mexico State Police. The two admitted that, typically, the DWI officers would arrest a suspect for drunken driving, and then refer them to Clear to get their criminal case dismissed. To ensure that happened, the officer would miss required pretrial interviews, court hearings, or fail to turn over evidence. Then Clear would file a motion to dismiss the case as a sanction. The investigation came to light in January 2024 after FBI agents raided the homes of several officers, Mendez's home and Clear's law office. APD has since placed 12 officers on leave, 10 of whom have since resigned, retired or been fired as the department conducted its own internal probe into the allegations. BCSO has placed one deputy on leave in connection with the FBI's case, but Sheriff John Allen has said BCSO is not yet planning to start an internal investigation of its own. Weisler said in a statement Friday that the internal investigation into LaFave "is a top priority" for State Police. "Let me be clear — any misconduct or criminal behavior within our ranks will not be tolerated..." Weisler said in a statement. "If it is found Sergeant LaFave's actions have violated the law or our policies, he will be dealt with swiftly and decisively." LaFave, who joined State Police in 2012, said in an online video posted this week that he had made 3,000 arrests during his 20 years in law enforcement. In those same videos, he is referred to as holding the record for the most DWI arrests in the history of the agency. Last year, LaFave made headlines when he arrested an APD officer for driving drunk in his police SUV. Court records show LaFave has filed at least 1,300 felony and misdemeanor DWI cases from 2009 to this month. Of the 31 DWI cases where LaFave was the arresting officer and Clear was the defense attorney, 17, or 57%, were dismissed. During his time with State Police, LaFave has been lauded for his work. In 2018, LaFave was given a plaque and recognized by lawmakers and Mothers Against Drunk Driving at the state Legislature for making more than 100 DWI arrests in a year. He has been repeatedly featured in posters and commercials for the New Mexico Department of Transportation's ENDWI campaign, from 2015 to several months ago. "We undertake a variety of narrative approaches for our ENDWI campaigns," a NMDOT spokesperson said Friday. "Officer participation is at the discretion of New Mexico State Police. We have no comment on the involvement of Sgt. LaFave in previous campaign materials; he is not featured in current ENDWI material." Six months ago, the campaign featured LaFave, a re-creation of him knocking on someone's door to tell them their relative died in a DWI crash. In a video published on the Facebook page of True Crime News earlier this week, LaFave addressed his moniker, saying "if it means I'm the King of DWI, I'll take it." LaFave described his job as a "cat-and-mouse game." "People are out after work, drinking in a bar. I'm at home, getting ready to go to work and, eventually, our paths are going to cross," he said in the video. "Hopefully, it will be a life-changing event for them." Another officer interviewed in the video said LaFave has "a knack for being in the right place at the right time." The officer, who said he trained LaFave, said "you could tell from the get-go that there was something unique about him."

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