Sign up for Red Sox updates⚾
Get breaking news and analysis delivered to your inbox during baseball season.
Red Sox
SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) — A Democratic district attorney in the eye of New Mexico’s tempest over crime and accountability launched his candidacy for governor Thursday as the National Guard prepares to deploy to the state’s largest city to shore up public safety.
Albuquerque-based District Attorney Sam Bregman — the father of Major League Baseball star Alex Bregman of the Boston Red Sox — is touting his crime-fighting credentials in a city plagued by gun violence as he vies for the party nomination against former U.S. Interior Secretary Deb Haaland.
No Republican has entered the race yet, with Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham set to term out of office at the end of next year. Candidates for governor have a February 2026 registration deadline.
Persistently high rates of violent crime in Albuquerque and New Mexico far exceed the national average, and residents were left reeling most recently by a litany of fatal shootings involving youths.
But many voters are no longer shocked and see it more as a confluence of social challenges that will be unavoidable for the next governor, said political analyst Sisto Abeyta, president of Tri-Strategies New Mexico. He pointed to pressing concerns about low-wage jobs, an affordable housing shortage and scarce access to addiction and mental health services.
“The economy equates to crime, housing equates to crime,” he said. “Why are there drug addicts? There’s not enough mental health” services.
Bregman asserts that law enforcement is starting to turn the tide against crime, and that voters want a governor who can effectively push back against Donald Trump, who lost the vote in New Mexico three times — but narrowed the margin in 2024.
“I think most voters are tired of the radical right, and they’re not very receptive to the radical left either — and I’m not either,” Bregman told The Associated Press. “Most people want someone who is just going to focus on the same issues that they do when they’re at the breakfast table.”
That includes wages, health care, education for their kids and whether their neighborhoods are safe, he said.
The centrist political pitch arrives days after the enactment of an election bill allowing independent voters to begin voting in major party primaries. About 23% of registered voters in New Mexico — roughly 310,000 residents — have no party affiliation.
“Many of these younger, unaffiliated voters are disenchanted with the major parties, which is why they’re declining to state a party affiliation,” Albuquerque-based pollster Brian Sanderoff said. “Now, all of a sudden, the state’s taking away a barrier” to participation in primaries.
Law enforcement has been prolific “steppingstone to higher office in New Mexico,” Sanderoff noted, including the ascendance of former Republican district attorney Susana Martinez to two terms as governor, ending in 2018.
Albuquerque’s struggle with crime has made Bregman — a tall, goateed 61-year-old grandfather often seen in a cowboy hat — a fixture of local television news reports. Lujan Grisham has handed Bregman a megaphone on crime policy with his appointment to a task force on organized crime, after appointing him in 2023 as district attorney to succeed Raúl Torrez, now the state attorney general.
Republicans on Thursday took issue with Bregman’s record on public safety, arguing that crime has continued to skyrocket under his leadership.
Lujan Grisham called up the National Guard this week in an emergency maneuver to help bolster public safety on Albuquerque’s Route 66 corridor at the request of Albuquerque’s police chief.
As district attorney, Bregman said he has hired more attorneys, launched a team dedicated to the intersection of guns and violent crime, pushed back against pretrial release of defendants that may pose a danger and secured murder convictions against at least 300 people.
“We have started to turn the tide when it comes to crime in general — still a long road to go,” said Bregman, a former private defense attorney.
Get breaking news and analysis delivered to your inbox during baseball season.
Aaron Jawson regularly spends time reteaching the basics to his sixth grade math students.
They often have a bit of a complex around math, said Jawson, who teaches at Ortiz Middle School. They often have a lot going on at home, or a lot of stress about societal problems.
And in many cases they have been behind for years.
Jesus Dominguez ponders the next step in an equation during Aaron Jawson’s sixth grade math class Monday at Ortiz Middle School.
Jesus Dominguez ponders the next step in an equation during Aaron Jawson’s sixth grade math class Monday at Ortiz Middle School.
U.S. Air Force Thunderbirds perform annual Daytona 500 flyover
The USAF Thunderbirds flew over Daytona International Speedway before The Great American Race on Sunday, Feb. 15, 2026.
A retired U.S. Air Force general who once commanded a research division at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base near Dayton, Ohio, has gone missing in New Mexico.
This is what we know.
The Bernalillo County Sheriff’s Office has issued a Silver Alert for Maj. Gen. William Neil McCasland, 68, who has been missing since last week, Newsweek reports. He was last seen on Feb. 27 in Albuquerque. McCasland is 5 feet 11 inches tall and weighs about 160 pounds. He has white hair and blue eyes, and he has unspecified medical issues, per the sheriff’s office, which is worried about his safety.
McCasland was the commander of the Air Force Research Laboratory at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base near Dayton, according to his Air Force biography. He managed a $2.2 billion science and technology program as well as $2.2 billion in additional customer-funded research and development. He joined Wright-Patterson in 2011 and retired in 2013.
He was commissioned in 1979 after graduating from the U.S. Air Force Academy with a Bachelor of Science degree in astronautical engineering. He has served in a wide variety of space research, acquisition and operations roles within the Air Force and the National Reconnaissance Office.
McCasland was described as a key adviser on UFO-related projects by Tom DeLonge, UFO researcher and guitarist for Blink-182, Newsweek reports. The general’s name appears in the 2016 WikiLeaks email release from John Podesta, then Hillary Clinton’s campaign manager.
In emails to Podesta, DeLonge said he’s been working with McCasland for months and that the general was aware of the materials DeLonge was probing because McCasland has been “in charge of the laboratory at Wright‑Patterson Air Force Base where the Roswell wreckage was shipped,” per Newsweek.
However, there is no official record of DeLonge’s claims, and McCasland has neither confirmed nor denied it.
The Dayton Air Force base was home to Project Blue Book in the 1950s and 60s, according to “The Air Force Investigation into UFOs” published by Ohio State University.
During that time, it logged some 12,618 UFO sightings, with 701 of those remaining “unidentified.” The U.S. government created the project because of Cold War-era security concerns and Americans’ obsession with aliens.
Though the alleged sex trafficking on Jeffrey Epstein’s Caribbean island, Little Saint James, has dominated the national discourse recently, another Epstein property has largely stayed out of the news — but perhaps not for long. A ranch outside Santa Fe, New Mexico, that belonged to the disgraced financier has been the subject of on-and-off investigations, and many are now reexamining what role the ranch may have played in Epstein’s crimes.
Epstein first purchased the ranch in 1993, and it made his seven-story Manhattan penthouse “look like a shack,” he said to Vanity Fair in 2003. Recently released photos by the Department of Justice “provide a look inside the tightly guarded gates” of the compound, said the Santa Fe New Mexican, including images that “show Epstein and others posing” throughout the ranch. In addition to the main house, Zorro Ranch also had a “three-bedroom lodge and off-the-grid log cabin as well as a 4,400-foot airstrip with an aircraft hangar and helipad.”
Escape your echo chamber. Get the facts behind the news, plus analysis from multiple perspectives.
SUBSCRIBE & SAVE
From our morning news briefing to a weekly Good News Newsletter, get the best of The Week delivered directly to your inbox.
From our morning news briefing to a weekly Good News Newsletter, get the best of The Week delivered directly to your inbox.
Given the isolated nature of Zorro Ranch, there are numerous allegations about “what role the secluded spot played in sexual abuse or sex trafficking of underage girls and young women,” said The Associated Press. Several of Epstein’s public victims have claimed they were trafficked at the ranch, but “New Mexico leaders say there has never been a thorough investigation of the criminal activity that may have occurred” on the property, said the Times.
There was previously a minimal investigation into the ranch, which was “taken over by federal prosecutors in 2019, and then apparently fizzled, according to New Mexico officials and recently unsealed records,” said the Times. However, unlike Epstein’s other properties, federal agents “did not appear to have ever searched Zorro Ranch,” according to a report from The Guardian. Officials were “paying attention to Paris, Little Saint James, New York and Miami, but they didn’t pay attention to Zorro Ranch,” Eddy Aragon, an Albuquerque radio D.J. and Epstein researcher, told the Times.
Following public pressure related to Epstein, New Mexico Attorney General Raúl Torrez recently “ordered that the criminal investigation into allegations of illegal activity at Jeffrey Epstein’s Zorro Ranch be reopened,” the New Mexico Department of Justice said in a press release. But since Epstein’s 2019 death, the ranch has come under new ownership, meaning an investigation may not be simple.
After the most recent batch of Epstein documents was released, the “claims in the documents have proved impossible to ignore,” said the Times. Most notable is a 2019 email alleging that in the “hills outside the Zorro, two foreign girls were buried on orders of Jeffrey and Madam G,” the latter apparently referencing Epstein’s accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell. “Both died by strangulation during rough, fetish sex.” The sender of the email was “redacted by the DOJ,” said CNN. It is “not clear that those allegations have been investigated by law enforcement.”
Explore More
Exclusive: DeepSeek withholds latest AI model from US chipmakers including Nvidia, sources say
Mother and daughter injured in Taunton house explosion
Setting sail on iceboats across a frozen lake in Wisconsin
AM showers Sunday in Maryland
10 acres charred, 5 injured in Thornton grass fire, evacuation orders lifted
Florida man rescued after being stuck in shoulder-deep mud for days
2026 OSAA Oregon Wrestling State Championship Results And Brackets – FloWrestling
Massachusetts man awaits word from family in Iran after attacks